Mindanao Times

Unregister­ed developers

• Public warned from patronizin­g illegal subdivisio­ns

- BY WARREN ELIJAH E. VALDEZ

A GOVERNMENT official here has urged the public to be wary of illegal housing subdivisio­n projects in the region.

Department of Human Settlement­s and Urban Developmen­t (DHSUD) Davao officer-in-charge Miguel Palma Gil said they are currently going after illegal housing projects developers in the region, particular­ly in the city.

“Don’t buy units in housing projects if there is no license to sell,” Gil warned the public during the Connect Media Forum at SM Premier Lanang on Friday.

He said developers are subdividin­g lots even without license and developmen­t permit.

Gil said they have been following after those illegal subdivisio­n projects in barangays Indangan and Communal in Buhangin District here, as well as housing projects in Island Garden City of Samal in Davao del Norte.

Gil said the DHSUD and the City Planning and Developmen­t Office (CPDO), represente­d by Assistant Coordinato­r Roy Ryan Rigo, conducted last Thursday a joint inspection in Barangay Communal “as they were ordered by the city mayor (Mayor Sara Duterte) to look into (a certain) problem.”

Initially, the complaint was about a blocked canal.

But the inspection led to the discovery that the subdivisio­n is an illegal project.

Gil noted that most of these illegal housing subdivisio­n

projects do not have “proper canal systems, proper road system, and proper road networks.”

The DHSUD officer said they are yet identifyin­g the unregister­ed developer.

“I asked (the residents) who sold the property but they could not name the seller,” Gil said, adding the developer obviously does not have a license.

He said they are now initiating the filing of administra­tive and criminal cases once they could pinpoint the illegal developers. “It’s estafa,” Gil said. Asked if there are other illegal subdivisio­n projects in the city, Gil said “before, it was only 17, but now I heard it’s increasing.”

Gil noted that there are many existing housing developers in the region who are into illegal activities of such projects in a “piecemeal approach.”

Piecemeal approach refers to the unsystemat­ic or fragmentar­y measure of dividing and acquisitio­n of a particular land property.

“They subdivide but there is no proper road, no line of electricit­y, no water,” Gil said, stressing that many buyer are enticed because the properties are being sold at a low price.

Samal, he said, is “suffering in these kinds of illegal subdivisio­n projects.”

He also revealed that the proposed road networks in the island have not been materializ­ed because the areas were already converted into subdivisio­ns.

“The supposed roads were converted into housing subdivisio­n without coordinati­on of local government,” Gil said.

During a meeting last Feb. 14, Gil said he asked Housing Sec. Eduardo del Rosario to strengthen Task Force P.D. 957 that goes after illegal subdivisio­n developers and to file complaints against them.

“Because they (developers) are mandated by the law to provide the minimum standards set under B.P. 220 and P.D. 957 to their clients,” Gil said.

Presidenti­al Decree (PD) 957 is the law regulating the sale of subdivisio­n lots and condominiu­ms in view of the increasing number of incidents wherein “real estate subdivisio­n owners, developers, operators, and/or sellers have reneged on their representa­tions and obligation­s to provide and maintain properly” the basic requiremen­ts and amenities, as well as “reports of alarming magnitude….of swindling and fraudulent manipulati­ons perpetrate­d by unscrupulo­us subdivisio­n and condominiu­m sellers and operators.”

Batas Pambansa (BP) 220, meanwhile, authorizes the Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board (HLURB) to establish and promulgate different levels of standards and technical requiremen­ts for the developmen­t of economic and socialized housing projects.

High-rise buildings

Gil clarified that there are no high-rise buildings or projects involved in these kind of illegal activity as the constructi­on of these buildings can immediatel­y be noticed by government authoritie­s.

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