Tuesday, March 7, 2023

Demolitions on at Buyog, Busol watersheds; mayor orders watch

BAGUIO CITY --  Mayor Benjamin B. Magalong ordered city police to conduct round-the-clock patrol over Busol and Buyog watersheds to ensure no new structures will be built within what was left of the forest reservations, two of the few remaining sources of potable water in the city.
    The mayor issued the order amid the demolition activities at the Busol watershed where two concrete structures being built at East Bayan Park part of the reservation were dismantled by a joint team led by the City Buildings and Architecture Office (CBAO) on Feb. 28 and March 1.
    The said structures were previously covered by a temporary restraining order issued by the court preventing the city government from carrying out demolition activities which became possible after the owners’ bid to obtain a court injunction did not materialize.
    The CBAO said demolition operations on structures within the reservations that violate the agreement earlier reached by the occupants and the city government are continuing.
    Last year, the CBAO demolished three existing small structures and had begun the demolition of close to ten huge constructions in Liteng side of the Busol watershed when a TRO was issued by the court.
    “Any new structure being built especially in protected areas should be immediately demolished,” the mayor who earlier issued an executive order to this effect said.
    He was concerned about the Buyog watershed of which forested area had decreased from 19 hectares to only seven hectares.
     During the first term of Magalong as mayor in 2019, he led the conduct of a series of dialogues with the watershed occupants informing them of the city’s demolition of illegal structures even before Covid-19 the pandemic.
    "We need to finally put an end to this decades long problem, we shall continue to take action and remove illegal settlers within our watersheds for the benefit of the people," the mayor said.
     In 2021, the city government had an agreement with around 150 occupants and heads of the four barangays straddling the Busol reservation for them to cooperate with the city by refraining from introducing improvements or expansion of their existing structures, helping guard against further intrusions and undertaking preservation measures for the watershed. However, the mayor said a recent inspection of the site showed stark violation of the agreement as there were expansions undertaken and new structures that mushroomed to the detriment of the forest reserve and water resource of the city.
     The mayor was steadfast in his stand that while the city gives humanitarian consideration to the predicament of occupants – many of whom are ancestral land claimants who claimed to be long-time settlers of the forest reserve – law and order must be respected. – JMPS

No comments:

Post a Comment