Baguio clearing committee ups process of land titling
>> Thursday, January 12, 2023
BAGUIO CITY -- The Administrative Order 504 clearing committee made great strides in clearing applications for land titling in the city. Councilor Leandro Yangot Jr., member of the AO 504 clearing committee, bared this saying a total of 39 applications were cleared this year by the committee.
This is 160% higher than the committee’s target which was 15. Of the 39 applications, one is deferred pending the resolution of the land dispute between the applicant and the concerned barangay.
Yangot said meetings among the committee members had become more frequent than usual to expedite the clearing process.
The AO 504 clearing committee was formed in 1988 and was tasked to screen and evaluate all townsite sales applications (TSAs) within the Baguio Townsite Reservation.
Earlier, he said information drive was held in barangays to encourage the constituents to file their applications for land titling.
The land title, he noted, is an important requirement in processing one’s building permit.
“It is public knowledge that many lands occupied by the Baguio residents are not covered by titles. Taking the cue from the order of our Mayor that our constituents should process their titles, we took time to inform our people to file their applications,” he said.
The councilor noted titling of residential lands in the city would result in the increase of collection in real property tax, thereby increasing the city’s revenue.
Applications
that were cleared by the committee undergo investigation, appraisal,
publication and sale through public auction before the issuance of a sales patent
by the Provincial Environment and Natural Resources Officer (PENRO).
Requirements for
TSA at the AO 504 level are the following: Two blueprint copies of survey
plan (with vicinity map/location map); two copies of 2x2 ID picture with a name
tag; certificate of non-homelot/non-property (from the City Assessor’s Office,
City Hall) one original copy; one photocopy of either a voter’s ID, birth
certificate or marriage contract; one copy each of two different angles of
the pictures of the land applied for including improvements and access
roads; documentary stamp; filing fee of P50; one photocopy of two
government-issued ID; and one long clean white folder and a plastic fastener.
In a forum with
the Baguio City Council last Dec. 19, Rowena Caccam, chief of the Licenses,
Patents and Deeds Division of the DENR-CAR, said the City Government generated
P25.14 million in 2022 and P268.67 million from 1998 to present from the sale
of public lands.
Sales from the
sale of public lands are remitted to the City Treasury Office to finance the AO
504 clearing committee for processing of clearances of applications for land
titling.
Earlier,
CENRO-Baguio conducted a scheduled mass acceptance of applications for titling
of public alienable and disposable lands
to make public land titling more “accessible” and “transparent.”
-Jordan G. Habbiling
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