DENR forms task force for Metro Manila
THE Department of Environment and Natural Resources ( DENR) has created a new task force that would ensure strict implementation of environmental laws and regulations, and go after environmental offenders in Metro Manila.
Environment Secretary Roy Cimatu said “Task Force DENR Metro Manila” is part of an ongoing effort to strengthen the agency’s law enforcement muscle, which he described as the “weak- agency’s mandate to preserve and protect the environment and natural resources of the country.
“It is ironic that enforcement is still the weakest link to the DENR’s organizational effectiveness despite the sufficiency of existing laws that have been in operation for over a decade now,” Cimatu said during the recent launch of the newly-formed environmental task force.
Soon after he assumed the DENR post in May, Cimatu said the strict enforcement of laws on clean air, clean water and solid waste management would be on top of his agenda.
The task force is divided into four teams assigned to every three to seven cities in Metro Manila. Each team is composed of 12 members coming from different bureaus under the DENR, includ- ing the Environmental Management Bureau, the Forest Management Bureau, and the Biodiversity Management Bureau.
Cimatu branded the members of each task force team as “The Dirty Dozen,” in reference to the handpicked soldiers overcoming overwhelming obstacles to achieve a daunting task through teammanship and shared vision.
“The movie teaches us the truism that a chain is only as strong as its weakest link, the inevitability of embracing the mission as an integral part of the bigger chain that links us all in the DENR,” Cimatu said.
The task force is divided into four quadrants: Quezon City, Marikina, Pasig, San Juan, Caloocan-North, Valenzuela and Mandaluyong; Makati, Pateros and Taguig; Pasay, Paranaque, Muntinlupa and Las Pinas; and Navotas, Malabon, Manila and Caloocan-South.
Cimatu envisioned the task force as a pilot model that would later be replicated in other priority areas in the country that need augmentation of their enforcement capabilities.
“Owing to being the country’s highest population density and concentration of economic activities, Metro Manila has the highest incidence of violations of envi- ronmental laws and that makes it an ideal pilot area for the effort,” Cimatu pointed out.
With the new task force in place, Cimatu urged Metro Manila residents to use all available means of communication, including social media, to report possible violations of environmental laws and regulations.
The DENR chief said he expected the task force to be swamped with reports involving garbage, air pollution, water pollution and even illegal logging since Metro Manila is a traditional transshipment point of undocumented wood products coming from the provinces.