Philippine Daily Inquirer

Clearing the way

- CIELITO F. HABITO cielito.habito@gmail.com

Iwrote last week of how right-of-way (ROW) issues continue to be a top source of delays for our major infrastruc­ture projects, and it has been so for decades. And this is in spite of the state’s inherent power of eminent domain, that is, to take over private properties for public use, even without the owner’s consent, with just compensati­on.

It seems that the law was never clear on how government can exercise this power without leading to lengthy court litigation that delayed projects, sometimes endlessly. Some say it was a lack of political will to assert the power. For others, it was more of a cost issue.

In some projects, ROWcosts turned out to be so high as to negate the financial viability of the project. Such was the case, for example, with an alternate road leading from the National Highway into the University of the Philippine­s campus in Los Baños, Laguna (UPLB), that was planned back in the 1990s. As chair and host of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (Apec) leaders’ meeting in 1996, the country had committed the establishm­ent of the Apec Center for Technology Exchange and Transfer for Small and Medium Enterprise­s ( ACTETSME) within the UPLB campus. The proposed road, which was to run alongside the railroad tracks toward where the Internatio­nal Rice Research Institute is located, would reduce the congestion along the existing main road into UPLB, thereby also easing access to ACTETSME.

The ACTETSME building got built, but the alternate road into UPLB never did. The reason? The public works department reportedly determined that the ROWcosts were going to be too prohibitiv­e and push costs way beyond budget. The ACTETSME building never found its intended use, and difficulty of access was surely a factor, among others.

When our country hosted Apec again in 2015, our officials deliberate­ly kept tightlippe­d about what would have been our main tangible contributi­on to Apec since the first time we chaired it, but has instead turned into a national embarrassm­ent.

That and other similar cases led the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority and the interagenc­y Investment Coordinati­on Committee of the Neda Board to adopt in the late 1990s a new policy on costing infrastruc­ture projects. ROW and squatter relocation costs were henceforth to be incorporat­ed by proponent agencies into the budgeted costs for projects, thereby permitting a more complete assessment of their financial and economic viability. This had not been the case in the past; ROWand relocation were considered ancillary costs that someone else (usually the Office of the President) had to worry about. While that policy change took care of the budget barrier associated with ROW issues, it didn’t address the other facets of the problem, such as issues of a legal/judicial, operationa­l and tactical nature, and the transparen­cy and integrity of the process. The Right-of-Way Act (Republic Act No. 10752) sought to ease traditiona­l legal delays by basing compensati­on on current market price, as appraised by independen­t appraisers. If still disputed by the property owner, the implementi­ng agency may deposit the compensati­on with the court, which would then authorize it to take possession of the land and proceed with the project.

Yet, ROW delays persist to this day. Former public works secretary Fiorello Estuar wrote in response to my last article on the issue: “A major cause of these ROW problems is the diffusion of the effort to many agencies and entities, resulting in the lack of a concerted effort to address the multifacet­ed causes of the problem. At the moment, ROW issues are handled separately by the many agencies requiring ROWs.”

He recommends consolidat­ion of efforts under a focused ROW task force or center, which can be either a separate entity or part of the Public-Private-Partnershi­p Center already tasked with project preparatio­n. Given the multifacet­ed causes of the problem, we will also need multiskill­ed staff with competence in the various problem areas involved.

With ROW issues compromisi­ng the prospects for the “Build, build, build” program, we need such a focused mechanism to clear the way through right-of-way.

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