Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Agencies uncover Captain’s Peak sins

All of the private structures should be removed, and the resorts operating without an environmen­t compliance certificat­e closed.

- BY JING VILLAMENTE

More than a lack of permits, the controvers­ial resort in the protected Chocolate Hills heritage site may have breached more laws, which a newly formed task force of the Department of the Interior and Local Government is now investigat­ing.

Interior Secretary Benhur Abalos on Saturday said the DILG is deeply concerned about the constructi­on of the Captain’s Peak Resort, including the culpabilit­y of local government officials who issued permits for its constructi­on.

“We have mobilized a special investigat­ion team to swiftly ascertain any liabilitie­s of local officials in this matter,” Abalos said.

Environmen­t Secretary Toni Yulo Loyzaga, meanwhile, said the government would likely close all private establishm­ents in the tourist spot. She said the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources, or DENR, would not single out Captain’s Peak.

“All the private structures should be removed, and the resorts operating without an environmen­t compliance certificat­e, or ECC, closed. We have an EEC on wheels in Siargao because there are over 1,000 establishm­ents there. About 900 of them have no ECC,” Loyzaga said.

“It’s not whether they were not given a copy; I think they know at the local level what the requiremen­ts are that need to be fulfilled before they can be issued a building permit in a protected area,” she said, referring to the municipali­ty of Sagbayan, Bohol’s claim that it did not receive a copy of the temporary closure order issued by her department.

Loyzaga said the DENR learned that Captain’s Peak Resort was first granted a building permit by the LGU in 2020.

At the time, according to Loyzaga, the LGU already knew the resort didn’t have an ECC.

“I think they knew that the resort had not applied for an ECC. So, the local government continued to issue permits. I think they knew that while the proponents of the project were building all of this, they had not applied for an ECC,” she said.

She admitted that better coordinati­on with local government­s, regional offices, and other stakeholde­rs is needed. “An evaluation of systems and personnel is currently being done,” she said.

Ground teams up for changes

“It will result in some changes in the lineup of team members on the ground,” Loyzaga said.

The Bohol natural wonder is a World Heritage Site cloaked with legal protection by an internatio­nal convention administer­ed by the United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organizati­on or UNESCO.

Abalos warned that local officials found complicit or negligent will face legal action. “These officials may be suspended or dismissed,” he said.

“We will continue to uphold accountabi­lity and integrity in public service,” he added.

The DENR assessed that the project committed many other violations of environmen­tal laws.

DENR details failures

“They were able to discharge water without a permit; there is a correspond­ing fine for failure to register as a hazardous waste generator,” DENR Undersecre­tary for Field Operations Juan Miguel Cuna said.

Cuna said operating without an ECC was not the resort’s only violation.

“The E- NIPAS ( Expanded National Integrated Protected Area System Act) imposes a fine of P1 million to P5 million and imprisonme­nt of from 6 to 12 years for putting up structures without permits within a protected area. There are also administra­tive fines from P50,000 up to P5 million,” Cuna said in a virtual press briefing over the weekend.

DENR personnel who inspected the resort last Thursday found the establishm­ent also used a deep well.

“We checked with the National Water Resources Board if Captain’s Peak had obtained a permit for this or if it had a pending applicatio­n. The agency issued a certificat­ion that it doesn’t have a permit and neither did it have an applicatio­n,” Cuna said.

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