Author Topic: Villagers buck proposed sanitary landfill in Dumaguete   (Read 222 times)

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Villagers buck proposed sanitary landfill in Dumaguete 
« on: May 29, 2020, 01:33:13 PM »


DUMAGUETE CITY -- The proposed sanitary landfill site at a multi-million peso property in the outskirts village of Candauay here is drawing opposition from residents who cited health, safety and environmental reasons.

During the regular session of the city council last Wednesday, local legislators granted Mayor Felipe Antonio Remollo the authority to purchase a 3.5-hectare lot worth PHP18.7 million from spouses Francisco and Salvacion Divinagracia for the sanitary landfill in Candauay.

The move is in answer to repeated notices from the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) to shut down the city’s existing open dumpsite, also in the same barangay, as it is already outlawed.

At the same time, it also aims to address the worsening problem of garbage collection and disposal in Dumaguete, with City Hall reporting an estimated 70 to 80 tons of waste generated daily.

On Friday, residents in Barangay Camanjac, which is adjacent to Candauay, signed a three-page opposition letter addressed to Mayor Remollo, expressing their objection to the proposal.

Bulk of the proposed landfill site is situated in Candauay while part of it is in Camanjac.

The signature campaign, backed by the Catholic Church in Camanjac headed by Fr. Sulpicio Vincoy, expressly pointed out certain parameters in the law that the residents feel must be complied with by the city government prior to the undertaking of the sanitary landfill, said village resident Marilyn Kays, an active campaigner against the proposed landfill.

Residents in nearby Barangay Camanjac are apprehensive because the proposed site is just 100 meters away from the LCP Bloomingtown housing project and a few hundred meters from the river.

Kays clarified that they are not against the establishment of a sanitary landfill as they understand the necessity to put up the facility to address the garbage problem of the city.

However, she added, their concerns center on basic issues like health, as the proposed site is near a populated, residential area; safety, because the site is a lagnasan or a natural course of the nearby Ocoy River; and environmental hazards, with the site vulnerable to flooding.

The signature campaign aims to get as many signatures as possible and will hopefully be forwarded to Mayor Remollo on Monday.

Meanwhile, Loreto Revac, Provincial Environment Management Unit (PEMU) OIC of the Environmental Management Bureau (EMB) - Negros Oriental, explained Friday afternoon that the establishment of a sanitary landfill will take a lengthy process.

According to him, the first step would be for a technical team of the Mines and GeoSciences Bureau (MGB) in Region 7 to conduct a geological suitability assessment and other processes of the area being proposed for the sanitary landfill.

This will be done in coordination with the EMB and DENR, he added.

Revac further explained that after the joint assessment, recommendations would be made to the regional director for review.

Other processes would include the determination of daily waste generation of the city and social acceptability of the residents/community of the proposed project, environmental impact assessment and environmental compliance certificate, among others, Revac said.

The EMB-Negros Oriental PEMU OIC also assured that a social acceptability would be conducted to determine the sentiments of the residents in the barangays and the community. (PNA)

DECEMBER 2017

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