Philippine Daily Inquirer

QC residents trash yearly garbage fee

- By Jeannette I. Andrade

IS THE Quezon City government in need of additional revenues that it has to charge homeowners a garbage fee?

This was the question raised by some residents who voiced their opposition to the recent signing into law of a new ordinance which would require them to pay an annual fee for trash collection.

The ordinance introduced by Councilor Victor Ferrer Jr. of the first district was approved by Mayor Herbert Bautista on Dec. 26.

In an interview with the INQUIRER yesterday, Bautista said the new regulation would take effect as soon as it is published in a generally-circulated newspaper next month.

The annual garbage fee, which ranges from P100 to P500 depending on the size of a homeowner’s lot, condominiu­m unit or apartment, is to be paid simultaneo­usly with the real property tax.

Bautista said the new fee was expected to generate between P50 million and P60 million every year. The additional funding, he added, would go to the city’s environmen­tal projects such as urban reforestat­ion, waterway cleanup operations and even disaster risk reduction and management.

“If P100 to P500 is paid on an annual basis, I do not think it will be a big burden,” Bautista told the INQUIRER.

But residents are questionin­g why the city, known to be among the richest in the country in terms of revenues, needs more money.

A check of its website showed that Quezon City’s gross revenue collection for 2012 totaled P13.69 billion, an increase of P750 million compared to that of 2011. The figure dwarfed the P11.37 billion total revenue in 2012 of Makati, traditiona­lly the country’s richest city.

“Quezon City has a lot of money so I wonder why the government has to collect more,” Mazen Obanil told the INQUIRER.

Redundant

A writer who has been renting an apartment in Tandang Sora for six years with her husband and son, she called the garbage fee redundant as local taxpayers were already funding garbage collection services. “This is too much,” she said.

Kaye Morales, 26, a radio station staffer living in a condominiu­m unit at Barangay South Triangle, agreed that imposing a new fee was unreasonab­le.

There was no logical explanatio­n for her to fork out additional money on top of her monthly condo rent to avail of a basic service which should be provided by the city government, she said.

For his part, businessma­n John Chang, 60, who lives in Barangay Del Monte, told the INQUIRER: “Quezon City has money. The city is not lacking funds. A local government unit only raises taxes and imposes fees when it lacks funds.”

Chang, who has ran for mayor twice against Bautista, said he was among those invited to a public consultati­on held in November on the proposed garbage fee and a plan to raise business taxes.

A public consultati­on is usually held before the Quezon City Council deliberate­s on enacting an ordinance or a resolution. It is called by the proponent of the measure as well as the council committees studying the feasibilit­y of a draft legislatio­n.

Chang described the meeting held in a mall on Edsa corner Quezon Avenue and attended by just a handful of participan­ts as amere “formality,” saying the city government was already bent then on approving the twin measures.

He pointed out that when Quezon City Mayor and now Speaker Feliciano Belmonte raised taxes in 2001, it was justified because the local government had a budget deficit. “But now, the city has more than enough funds so there is no justificat­ion for the collection from its constituen­ts,” he said. He added that the ordinance’s author, Ferrer, had told the gathering that the city government was looking into raising an additional P250 million from the new taxes to build more school buildings. housing units where P25 will be collected for a unit with an area of less than 40-square meters; P50 for an area of 41-sq-m to 60 square meters; P75 for an area of 61-sq-m to 100-sq-m; P100 for 101-sq-m to 150-sq-m; and P200 for 151-sq-m to 200-sq-m or more.

In the case of residents in buildings, the homeowners’ associatio­n of a high-rise condominiu­m will be required to pay the annual garbage fee based on the total lot size of the entire condominiu­m.

Owners of high-rise apartment units, on the other hand, are to pay the annual garbage fee computed based on the total lot size of the apartment and an additional garbage fee based on the schedule of fees on the size of the unit actually occupied by a tenant.

A violator of the ordinance will be fined 25 percent of the garbage fee on top of the amount due and a two percent monthly interest until the fee is paid fully.

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