BEHIND
THE SCENES
Alfred
P. Dizon
BAGUIO CITY – For so
long, officials and residents of Tuba, Benguet have been complaining “imperial”
Baguio City had been treating the town like the way China is treating this Banana
Republic of ours.
For one, the long-standing
boundary dispute between Baguio City and Tuba has still not been settled due to
reported insistence of Baguio officials in having their way over the years.
Baguio is set
to commemorate the founding anniversary of the summer capital on Sept. 1 as a
chartered city but still the problem lingers.
***
It was August
last year that former Baguio City mayor Mauricio Domogan and Tuba town
officials headed by then Tuba Mayor Ignacio Rivera agreed to settle the issue
by exploring legal proceedings to resolve the matter.
Domogan pushed
a compromise settlement where either the city or Tuba can file the case for
boundary issue resolution and in the course of the litigation, both parties can
submit the case for amicable settlement.
He said the
amended technical description of the metes and bounds of the city and Tuba as
established in the agreed settlement that was confirmed by both the city and
the municipal councils as a result of earlier negotiations with the Tuba town
officials will be followed.
***
Under the
agreed settlement, the city property along Marcos highway measuring close to
eight hectares that includes three-fourths of the area where the Tuba municipal
building is erected among other public structures will be ceded to the Tuba
municipal government.
In turn, Tuba
will give to the City a portion of the Sto. Tomas road area leading to the Mt.
Sto. Tomas forest reservation.
Both former
mayors said then they did not want the issue to be blown out of proportion so they
agreed that legal officers of Baguio and Tuba meet to discuss the actions that
will be taken to resolve the matter with finality.
***
Hopes to
settle the dispute years flickered after being included as one of the
amendments in the repeated attempts in Congress to revise the city’s Charter to
no avail.
Aileen
Refuerzo, chief of the Baguio City information office said during the term of
President Noynoy Aquino, the bill passed both Houses of Congress only to be
vetoed eventually by the President for still unclear reasons.
She said apart
from the municipal hall, the Tuba police station and the Tuba Elementary School
also lie within Baguio as shown during the probe done by the Senate committee
on local governments chaired by Sen. Ferdinand Marcos Jr. on the third bill
filed for the purpose back in 2011.
***
Former city
information officer Ramon Dacawi, who passed away two months ago, earlier said
that years back, a former Tuba mayor recalled to him how a municipal judge
insisted that his sala be transferred to the other tip of the municipal hall to
ensure that court proceedings were within legal jurisdiction.
With the
coming Baguio Day celebration, maybe Mayor Benjamin Magalong and Tuba Mayor Clarita
Sal-ongan could meet as equals to discuss the matter and find means to end the
long-lingering dispute.
***
As narrated
by Tuba folks who attended municipal council sessions in past administrations
to discuss the matter with Baguio officials, the latter always insisted on
their ways often with impervious and condescending attitudes that the boundary
dispute was never settled.
***
For so long, Tuba
officials and constituents have been complaining that Baguio had been treating
Tuba as a minion and had been acting like the former’s master.
Take the case
of the Asin hydros. Tuba officials have been saying these should be considered
owned by the Tuba local government considering these sit over ancestral lands
of indigenous peoples of the town.
Historical
annals note it was during the time of the Americans before World War 2 that the
hydros were built in Tuba to supply electricity for Baguio.
Ancestral
land owners are now saying their forebears were hoodwinked by the Americans
when they built the hydros over their lands.
***
The
controversy of ownership of the original Asin Hot Spring Resort is another
case. The Baguio City government under the Domogan administration said it owned
the property. The Tuba municipal government however said the Baguio Government
doesn’t have any property like the Asin Resort registered in Tuba.
Recently, the
Tuba Municipal Trial Court ruled that the area starting from the center of the
big pool as boundary of the original Asin Hot Spring Resort is owned by the
Sinot family.
Despite the
ruling, the city government under the former city administration took over the
resort and allegedly infringed over the property of the Sinots.
The city
government reportedly appealed the decision so we will not comment on the
matter lest we be accused of sub judice.
***
Anyhow, it is
now a new administration in Baguio under Mayor Benjamin Magalong. The mayor had
reportedly proposed to relocate the Summer Capital’s piggeries in Tuba, drawing
opposition from some sectors of the town.
Magalong
earlier said the Dept. of Agriculture will fund the creation of a
technology-based piggery farm in Barangay Nangalisan in Tuba.
Noting
dissent, Tuba Mayor Clarita Sal-ongan said a public consultation should be held
with her constituents first before approving Baguio’s high-tech piggeries in the
town.
Sal-ongan
said the municipal government has not yet committed to Magalong’s proposal.
The Tuba
mayor said the municipal government already had proposed projects at the area
being eyed for the state-of-the-art piggeries.
“We
understand the passion of Mayor Magalong to relocate the piggery owners in
Baguio city to a suitable area but we have to strictly adhere to the prescribed
processes under our existing laws, rules and regulations governing the
implementation of environmentally-critical projects and the need to secure the
free and prior informed consent of the affected indigenous peoples,” Sal-ongan told
the media.
After the
Domogan administration started dumping Baguio waste in Tuba at a so-called
“transfer station,” residents of the town complained. Some are now critical of
the proposal to make the town what they called the “piggery of Baguio.”
“We don’t
want Baguio to make Tuba its toilet bowl and trash site,” a resident said.
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