Philippine Daily Inquirer

MAJOR BORACAY RESORT BOWS TO DENR DRIVE

As Environmen­t Secretary Roy Cimatu sweeps through the resort island warning violators of environmen­tal laws, one resort has agreed to demolish structures it illegally built on rock formations.

- STORY BY NESTOR P. BURGOS JR. AND JAYMEE T. GAMIL

The owner of a controvers­ial resort on Boracay Island on Friday agreed to voluntaril­y destroy illegal structures after Environmen­t Secretary Roy Cimatu threatened to tear down part of the property.

Crisostomo Aquino, owner of Boracay West Cove resort, volunteere­d to demolish the structures he had built on top of rock formations and those not covered by a lease agreement with the government starting on Feb. 24.

Cimatu, who brought along a demolition team with him, rejected Aquino’s request to complete the demolition on five rock formations in 30 days, saying he would return on Saturday to ensure the work was being implemente­d.

Two other resorts that have deficienci­es in permits and requiremen­ts also have voluntaril­y closed until they met all government requiremen­ts.

The Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) had previously issued a 25-year Forest Land Use Agreement for Tourism Purposes (FLAgT) to West Cove covering 998 square meters at Barangay Balabag in Boracay.

FLAgT allows the temporary use, occupation and developmen­t of any forestland for tourism purposes for a period of 25 years renewable for another 25 years. The agreement covers forestland­s to be used for bathing, campsites, ecotourism destinatio­ns, hotel sites and other tourism purposes.

But the DENR canceled West Cove’s FLAgT on Sept. 12, 2014, for violating the terms of the agreement by putting permanent structures outside the allowed area.

No permits

Aquino had appealed the ruling with the Office of the President. There was no immediate word on what action had been taken on his appeal.

The resort became controvers­ial for building structures on natural rock formations and operating for years without business and building permits.

In 2014, government agencies and Malay municipali­ty, which has jurisdicti­on over Boracay, demolished illegal portions of the resort but West Cove went to the courts to stop the demolition.

Aquino has repeatedly denied the violations, alleging that he was being singled out.

Cimatu met Malay Mayor Ciceron Cawaling and Aklan Gov. Florencio Miraflores to discuss efforts to address sewage connection problems.

Rowen Aguirre, executive assistant for Boracay concerns of the Malay municipal government, said two small resorts had offered to temporaril­y shut down.

One was not connected to the sewage system and the other had no business permit, according to Aguirre.

The DENR has found at least 842 establishm­ents that were violating environmen­tal laws on the world-famous island, including those that built structures within 30 meters from the high-tide waterline and outside their allowed property limits.

In a statement on Friday, the DENR said it had issued showcause orders to 85 establishm­ents occupying protected forestland, giving them 15 days to explain why they should not be shut down. At least 89 more such show-cause orders had already been signed and would soon be handed down by the local DENR office.

The DENR also said 300 other establishm­ents committed violations, mostly of the Clean Water Act, or had failed to con- nect to the proper sewage facilities, and 51 had so far been issued show-cause orders.

Cimatu said the crackdown would also cover violations on the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000.

Earlier this week, he deployed “mission teams” to serve the notices and show-cause orders and to draw up an updated list of all violators in the three barangays in Boracay—Balabag, Manoc-Manoc and Yapak. Around 140 DENR personnel and members of the teams were assisted by the military and police in this mission.

At Station 1 in Barangay Balabag, Cimatu said he saw the “rampant disregard” by almost all beachfront resorts of the required 30-meter easement. Cimatu also observed a wetland occupied by houses in the same barangay.

Island cleanup

He lamented that only two of Boracay’s nine wetlands were unoccupied by people, citing a report by the National Mapping and Resource Informatio­n Authority.

A materials recovery facility at Barangay Manoc-Manoc that Cimatu had previously cleared of garbage was again being used as an open dumpsite.

The crackdown began after President Duterte gave Cimatu six months to clean Boracay, which the President described as a “cesspool” or else he would shut down the entire island.

“We will do our best to accomplish this mission. We can and we will do it,” Cimatu told members of the teams during a send-off ceremony held in the town of Nabas in Aklan, 25 kilometers from Boracay, earlier this week.

Farther to the southeast of the world-famous island, a DENR team was checking compliance of the Clean Water Act, the Solid Waste Management Act and the “no-build” zone regulation in timberland­s by establishm­ents on Bohol province’s Panglao Island.

“We have learned our lessons in the problems concerning Boracay,” Cimatu said. “We have to strictly enforce environmen­tal laws in order to protect the country’s tourism sites so that the future generation­s will be able to enjoy them as well.”

“Wewill comb through all the establishm­ents in Panglao and impose a crackdown on environmen­tal violators. What happened to Boracay is a wake-up call to others,” Cimatu added.

 ?? —LYN RILLON ?? Environmen­t Secretary Roy Cimatu and his staff inspect natural and man-made features at the controvers­ial West Cove resort, which volunteere­d to demolish its own illegal structures.
—LYN RILLON Environmen­t Secretary Roy Cimatu and his staff inspect natural and man-made features at the controvers­ial West Cove resort, which volunteere­d to demolish its own illegal structures.
 ?? —LYN RILLON ?? The owner of West Cove resort on Boracay Island, one of the local establishm­ents cited for violations of environmen­tal laws, has agreed to dismantle structures built on rock formations and those not covered by a lease agreement with the government.
—LYN RILLON The owner of West Cove resort on Boracay Island, one of the local establishm­ents cited for violations of environmen­tal laws, has agreed to dismantle structures built on rock formations and those not covered by a lease agreement with the government.

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