Philippine Daily Inquirer

SETTLE BOUNDARY DISPUTE WITH BENGUET, BAGUIO TOLD

- By Vincent Cabreza @vincentcab­rezainq

BAGUIO City—farmers with tax declaratio­ns issued by Tuba town, Benguet province, on Monday asked the city government to resolve its boundary conflicts after they were told to leave their homes.

Residents of Sitio Bilis, Pula and Sala in Barangay Sto. Tomas in Benguet told the city council that they were issued notices of violation for settling on part of a 138-hectare property owned by Baguio.

“Our lands were declared as part of Tuba by our fathers,” said Robinson Sadey, who represente­d the residents, many of whom are strawberry gardeners.

Sadey said the notices were issued last week, giving the settlers a week to prove they have legitimate rights over their lands.

“After a cadastral survey, it now appears our lands are in Baguio,” Sadey said. “We know about the boundary dispute [between Tuba and Baguio] so we urge you to settle this [because it] affects our homes,” he said.

The dispute arose from the establishm­ent of Baguio by the Americans in 1909.

The Baguio charter delineated the city’s areas that changed its neighbor’s boundaries. Tuba’s municipal hall, for example, is technicall­y part of Baguio territory.

According to Sadey, their area was considered for Baguio’s sanitary landfill in 2008 until it was scrapped in favor of a waste-toenergy project to be installed at the Baguio dairy farm. The proposed energy facility lies across the main access road to Tuba.

Common boundaries

Both Baguio and Tuba have common boundaries at Mt. Sto. Tomas, a massive forest reservatio­n that straddles the two towns.

But the subvillage­s at Mt. Sto. Tomas that are inhabited by families, who have lived there “since time immemorial,” fall inside Baguio, based on the delineatio­n prescribed by the city charter, according to Councilor Isabelo Cosalan Jr.

Cosalan sponsored an ordinance designatin­g the Sto. Tomas property for the city government’s multiple land use, following a joint survey undertakin­g with the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources, which declared the area vacant.

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