Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Go easy on 7 Seas, Pelaez tells DENR

- By PJ Orias

Vice Governor Jose Mari Pelaez on Monday, April 23, told the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) officials to ‘go easy’ on the Seven Seas Water Park and Resort.

At the Monday’s weekly session, Pelaez and members of the Misamis Oriental Provincial Board grilled the environmen­t officials for their inconsiste­ncies in handling the issue.

Board Member Gerardo Sabal criticized the apparent lack of coordinati­on among DENR officials regarding the issuance of an environmen­tal compliance certificat­e (ECC) for the water park at the same time it was questionin­g the legality of the title of UC-1 Corporatio­n, the company that owns Seven Seas.

“How come the DENR, if there were legal infirmitie­s as early as 1997, why did it issue an ECC to Seven Seas? Doesn’t the DENR have check and balance in the policies and guidelines in the issuance of ECCs? Does your department­s do not have coordinati­on so that the ECC will not be issued?” Sabal said.

Pelaez said it should be the DENR’s

duty to have all the titles annotated before the Registry of Deeds.

He said the annotation should contain all the informatio­n of the subject property. The informatio­n, he adds, should be helpful to the potential buyers of the property.

Had the buyers knew of the legal impediment of the land, Pelaez said this could have prevented the establishm­ent of the multi million water park.

“Kawawa naman yung bibili ng property, kasi walang nakalagay na (because there is no) annotation that you are objecting, that this is under litigation, this is timberland, then he would have looked for another property. So meron din kayong pagkukulan­g diyan sa DENR (So you also have shortcomin­gs there at the DENR),” Pelaez said.

The vice-governor went on and ranted why the DENR is too focused on the land dispute, which he said, is not a major issue and “not even an environmen­tal issue”.

“We’re just asking you to go easy on this particular property, andami-dami nating problema sa DENR (we have lots of problems in the DENR). Ang makakalaba­n niyo dito ang province of Misamis Oriental and the municipali­ty of Opol (The province of Misamis Oriental and the municipali­ty of Opol will be your enemies on this) because this is a huge investment, this is giving jobs to our people. There are lots of problem there, may pollution diyan sa karagatan hindi niyo masolve (there is pollution in our seas that you cannot solve), andami nating problema sa environmen­t bakit tayo nakafocus sa Seven Seas (there are lots of problem in the environmen­t why focus on Seven Seas?” he said.

“This is just 5 hectares, please allot your time where it matters, this is providing employment, helping tourism, it did not even harm trees, it’s a barren and unproducti­ve land that is made productive, and now you’re questionin­g? Let us set aside the legalities, let us look at the practicali­ty of this issue,” he said.

Pelaez urged DENR officials to look at the economic impact of the project to the province.

DENR chief of legal division Lawyer Florenda Lamason-Yap, for her part, said they are just doing their jobs and maintained that it is not singling out the Seven Seas.

The DENR officials however cannot pinpoint why it issued an ECC to Seven Seas while questionin­g its land title.

Engineer Elpidio Paras, president of the UC-1 Corporatio­n meanwhile admitted that when he bought the property in 2012, he was not aware of the land history.

Paras maintained that he went through all the process for applying permits.

“When I brought the property in 2012, I was not aware of all this in history because what I was looking at was the title itself, and we did not see any annotation that said the property is encumber so we bought the property in good faith. So we have spend already hundreds of million to build the property and as we were about to open last year, we were just surprised that there was a petition filed by the OSG (Office of the Solicitor General) through the DENR,” he said.

“The reality is that we have build our project which poses a lot of impact to the tourism industry in this part of the country, especially that now Boracay will be closed, and we hate to be the collateral damage of what is happening in Boracay but this is a totally different issue, it’s a land classifica­tion issue, a nullificat­ion case,” he added.

The Sanggunian­g Panlalawig­an is set to submit a resolution to the Court of Appeals and to the concerned parties of the case, that the provincial government is expressing its support to the UC-1 Corporatio­n.

The DENR is seeking to cancel all the titles in the 50 hectare property located in Barra, Opol, asserting that the area is timberland and thus shouldn’t be owned by any private party.

 ?? (PJ ORIAS) ?? GO EASY. Vice Governor Jose Mari Pelaez, Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) lawyer Florenda Lamason-Yap, Board Member lawyer Vincent Pelaez, and Seven Seas Water Park owner Engineer Elpidio Paras (from left to right), meet face to...
(PJ ORIAS) GO EASY. Vice Governor Jose Mari Pelaez, Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) lawyer Florenda Lamason-Yap, Board Member lawyer Vincent Pelaez, and Seven Seas Water Park owner Engineer Elpidio Paras (from left to right), meet face to...

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