Sun.Star Cebu

385 DRUG PERSONALIT­IES DURING OPLAN LIMPYO DANAO I

- RVC

A total of 385 drug personalit­ies were arrested by the Danao City Police Station in the past eight months, yielding more than P22 million worth of illegal drugs. The station also arrested seven of 10 high-value targets. Seven of the city’s 42 barangays—Quisol, Langosig, Baliang, Dungga, Nangka, Cambubho and Licos--are candidates for attaining drug-cleared status. Chief Insp. Gerard Ace Pelare, city police commander, said that their comprehens­ive anti-illegal drugs campaign, dubbed Oplan Limpyo Danao I, started on April 22 and ended on Dec. 31. Operatives also uprooted and confiscate­d 31,725 fully grown marijuana plants and 4,241 marijuana stalks with a value of P8,427,500.

The Cebu City Government is hopeful that portions of the new Cebu City Medical Center (CCMC) building will be operationa­l to serve more residents in the city this year.

CCMC hospital administra­tor Kenneth Siasar said that constructi­on work on the new building is already 65 percent complete.

Siasar said that the contractor­s are about to complete phase one of the project, or the constructi­on of the first six floors of the hospital.

“We are about to close phase 1 or the structural, then we will proceed to phase 2 that is interior set-up until the sixth floor,” he told SunStar Cebu.

Siasar said the City targets to make phase one operationa­l by August.

The second floor of the new CCMC building will serve as an emergency room, while the third floor will have the out-patient department.

“While the phase 1 is already operationa­l, work on the remain- ing four floors will also continue,” said Siasar.

Mayor Tomas Osmeña wants the building to be operationa­l, while works on the succeeding floors are ongoing; the previous administra­tion had wanted to complete the constructi­on of the 10-story building first before it will be opened to the public.

The City Government began building the new hospital in 2015 after the old CCMC building, which was severely damaged by the 7.2-magnitude earthquake in October 2013, was demolished.

However, the project encountere­d a delay in the constructi­on in June 2016 after the Office of the Building Official (OBO) ordered the temporary suspension of the constructi­on due to the lack of building permit.

The building permit was not processed because the ownership of a portion of the 4,000-square-meter lot where the new hospital will rise has yet to be establishe­d.

The first phase of the project alone, which include the foundation and structural frames, has an approved budget of P600 million.

The entire hospital will cost the City at least P1.5 billion.

Siasar said that once the phase one will be operationa­l, they will apply for level three accreditat­ion for the hospital before the Department of Health (DOH).

At present, CCMC operates under the level one accreditat­ion.

Under the guidelines of DOH, a hospital with level three accreditat­ion should have 300 beds, a physical medicine and rehabilita­tion unit, ambulatory surgical clinic, dialysis facility, blood bank and licensed imaging facility, among others.

A level one accreditat­ion, on the other hand, means that the hospital only has less than 100 beds and can perform only minor operations. /

 ?? SUNSTAR FOTO/ AMPER CAMPAÑA ?? PROJECT. The first 6 levels of the new CCMC building may be made operationa­l this year, with 65 percent of the project now done.
SUNSTAR FOTO/ AMPER CAMPAÑA PROJECT. The first 6 levels of the new CCMC building may be made operationa­l this year, with 65 percent of the project now done.

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