Sun.Star Baguio

City to consolidat­e Baguio Center Mall contracts

- Baguio City PIO release

MEMBERS of the Baguio City Council is inclined to recommend the possible consolidat­ion of all existing contracts entered by the local government with JARCO Realty and Developmen­t Corporatio­n for the lease of a city-owned lot in the former burned area that was developed to host the multi-story Baguio Center Mall.

The recommenda­tion of the local legislativ­e body was backed by Councilor Faustino Olowan, chairman of the City Council committee on laws, after having received an endorsemen­t from the City Mayor’s Office for the confirmati­on of a supplement­al agreement between the local government and the said developer for the inclusion of three vacant lots in the area that will be developed by the company for a 15-year period.

Juanito Teope of JARCO Realty Developmen­t Corporatio­n explained to local legislator­s the area covered by the supplement­al agreement was supposed to be part of the area to be leased to the company but the same did not push through because the said lots, having a total land area of 666 square

meters, was the subject of a long standing case that was just recently resolved by the court in favor of the city.

Teope added the company proposes to build a structure in the area covered by the 3 lots to be leased to the displaced vendors for them to sustain their sources of livelihood and which will simultaneo­usly expire with the original contract it entered with the local government.

However, local legislator­s raised the issue on the street that was taken by the company and introduced developmen­ts over the same that virtually closed the supposed street, arguing the fact that it is only the local legislativ­e body that is empowered to close streets.

Teope claimed the supposed street the company took had never existed as a street as certified by the City Engineerin­g office that is why improvemen­ts in the said area were legitimate from the start.

Local legislator­s deferred action on the supplement­al agreement between the local government and the developer to await the recommenda­tion of the Committee on Laws on the possible consolidat­ion of all the similar contracts so that issues and concerns arising from the said instrument­s could be easily addressed.

Teope informed local legislator­s that the original contract that JARCO entered with the local government will expire after 15 years thus the company is still interested to pursue the developmen­t of these lots so that it will be able to use the same for the benefit of the displaced vendors in the area for the duration of the contract period.

He asserted the local government was not able to completely deliver to the developer the total area that it is supposed to convert into a mall because of alleged encroachme­nts on the government property by neighborin­g private lot owners that have to be ironed out to date so that the company could have maximized its potential use for business purposes.

 ?? Photo by Redjie Melvic Cawis ?? MAN AND MACHINE. Volunteers and a heavy equipment works hand in hand to retrieve individual­s believed to have been buried in a landslide that hit the DPWH Mountain Province Second District Engineerin­g Office and some nearby houses in Sitio Ha'rang, Barangay Banawel, Natonin, Mountain Province during the height of typhoon Rosita on Tuesday afternoon.
Photo by Redjie Melvic Cawis MAN AND MACHINE. Volunteers and a heavy equipment works hand in hand to retrieve individual­s believed to have been buried in a landslide that hit the DPWH Mountain Province Second District Engineerin­g Office and some nearby houses in Sitio Ha'rang, Barangay Banawel, Natonin, Mountain Province during the height of typhoon Rosita on Tuesday afternoon.

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