QC homeowners:
No to Marikina dump
By Katherine Adraneda
Publish Date: [Saturday, December 14, 2002]
Residents of Quezon City villages affected by the stench emanating
from a garbage dump in Barangay Concepcion Uno, Marikina City
are up in arms.
Members
of the Alliance of Quezon City Homeowners Association Inc.
(AQCHAI) are set to take their gripes to authorities once
they finalize their position on the existence of the Doña
Petra dump near the border of Marikina and Quezon City.
AQCHAI
members affected by the stench include Ayala Heights,
Alpha Village, Pentagon Village, Capitol Hills Golf and Capitol
Homes villages.
AQCHAI
secretary and Alpha Village Administrator Consuelo Sison said
the alliance will take up the issue in their next meeting.
She added that the stench affects the quality of life
of residents in these villages.
Homeowners
in the posh Ayala Heights have been complaining of the "horrible
smell" which filled the air just a few months
ago.
"Hindi
ko nga akalain na may dump diyan... only this year, until
we started to smell the stench kasi ang lakas talaga ng amoy,"
lawyer Jose Sison told The STAR.
Sison,
a resident of the village and director of the Ayala Heights
Village Association (AHVA), said the stench is particularly
intense at the low-lying portion of their community.
He pointed
out that since the Doña Petra dump is adjacent
to the Marikina River, the waste will pollute the river as
well as the air.
Sison
said the river usually overflows during heavy downpours and
that the floodwaters may find its way into the Quezon City
water system.
The stench
also ruins the "ambiance" of the villages near the
site, he said.
"Malinis
nga ang paligid nila (Marikina) pero napeperwisyo naman ang
mga nearby cities," Sison said.
While
the local government of Marikina dumps its waste in its Materials
Recovery Facility (MRF), some 60 percent of the garbage labeled
"unrecyclables" are dumped at the back portion of
the site.
Based
on the latest inspection of the DENR’s National Solid
Waste Management Commission (NSWMC), the dump has already
reached 10 meters high.
The NSWMC
also said operation of the dump in the area was illegal, as
it violates the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000
that prohibits open sites for garbage.
But Marikina
City Mayor Ma. Lourdes Fernando insisted that the operation
of the dump is legal and part of the local government’s
program to achieve an "organized and healthy city."
She added
that the operation of the dump in her jurisdiction is a "controlled
site."
NSWMC
executive director Albert Magalang has advised the mayor to
stop operations and to conduct an immediate rehabilitation
of the Doña Petra dump.
A letter
by Magalang to the Marikina mayor dated Oct. 21 said the contested
area "is not suitable for garbage disposal." Magalang
also noted that a site in the area poses health hazards and
can pollute nearby bodies of water.
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