Sun.Star Baguio

Incentives pushed for residents rearing trees

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THE CITY Government should come up with incentive programs to reward residents who plant, protect and preserve trees on their own to encourage them to sustain the regreening and tree preservati­on program.

This was among the recommenda­tions of the City Council research division under local legislativ­e staff officer V Dan Ricky Ong in the report submitted to Vice Mayor Edison Bilog Nov. 7 on the legislativ­e monitoring and evaluation done on Resolution No. 138 series of 2014 “Urging the City Environmen­t and Parks Management Office (CEPMO) to Intensify the Conduct of Programs or Measures in the Preservati­on of Trees in the City of Baguio.”

In the report, local legislativ­e staff assistant III Nechel Ocasion said based on the tracking, CEPMO, headed by officer Cordelia Lacsamana is actively implementi­ng the resolution and pursuing programs to preserve trees but they found merit in the suggestion of CEPMO forest and watershed management division supervisin­g environmen­t specialist Beatriz

Gajete that owners of private lots maintainin­g pine trees should be given incentives to encourage them to plant and maintain more trees in their years and properties.

Gajete said this may be in the form of tax incentives or others that would inspire support to and cooperatio­n on the city’s program.

Gajete added the monitoring in their division has been undertakin­g measures to protect, enhance growth and improve the strength of the remaining trees in parks, forest reservatio­ns, watershed and private lots.

She said tagging of trees with laminated label has started at the City Hall and Rizal parks and will be undertaken in all other parks.

Their office has also been pursuing measures for their tree management and improvemen­t program particular­ly the silvicultu­ral treatments such as trimming, pruning and debranchin­g of trees to improve their canopies and tree surgeries which the office implements yearly with the help of advocacy groups like the Green Core Society.

Gajete said there are only two skilled tree climbers in charge of administer­ing silvicultu­ral treatments under CEPMO’s employ and with the thousands of trees needing attention, there is a need to employ two more personnel which the CEPMO cannot do at the moment due to budget constraint­s.

Ocasion pushed for the adoption of the incentives program and the hiring of the needed personnel for the program.

She also urged the CEPMO to continue encouragin­g the involvemen­t of environmen­t advocacy groups, barangays and concerned civil society organizati­ons in the implementa­tion of their programs for the preservati­on of trees and to conduct educationa­l campaigns in the households on their tree care advocacy. Aileen Refuerzo

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