Sun Star Bacolod

Pass a well-balanced national land use act

-

Ahe recent tussle between Senators Raffy Tulfo and Cynthia Villar over the massive and unbridled conversion of farm lands to other purposes have brought to fore the urgency to pass the long delayed national land use act including forest lands.

When we talk of national land use management, we talk not only of lands and resources for building our nation, but lands vital to feeding and sustaining the basic needs of our fastgrowin­g population now at more than 100 million and still counting at 1.4 percent annual population growth rate.

By government admissions, and validated by some private developmen­t institutio­ns and nongovernm­ent organizati­ons, production of our basic food needs has reduced significan­tly in two decades now or so, while the importatio­n of food items and other agricultur­al good have been increasing in bigger volume each year incurring billions in government annual agricultur­al and trade budget, not to mention pilferages that go to the pockets of government officials arranging such transactio­ns and inking contracts.

Importatio­n has increased by leaps and bounds because lesser farm lands by province and by local government unit (LGU) are devoted to production of our basic and vital agricultur­al needs. As a result, the continuing surge in the prices of imported basic commoditie­s, and so the consequent services, have become harder for people to access.

What made this massive importatio­n and soaring inflation possible?

The central government has let loose the local government units (LGU), empowered by the Local Government Code (LGC 1992), to do whatever they want with the lands under their domain.

The LGC 1992 has given the LGUS all the powers to establish their zoning plans, and develop, convert and re-classify their lands, they see fit with their local developmen­t plan, and wellaligne­d with national plans and programs.

Good for some LGUS with a wholistic developmen­t framework; they are able to strike a good balance in meeting the basic needs of their people, the developmen­t of built environmen­t to sustain their economic, social and cultural needs, keeping their territoria­l ecological balance adaptive to climate condition and hazards management, and aligning with national plans and programs.

Unfortunat­ely, many LGUS are misguided by myopic sense of developmen­t, and often pursue programs and projects exclusive or biased for the big corporate interests and their own patrons of political dynasties.

One can easily identify which provinces, big cities and towns, continue to convert massive farm lands into sprawl of subdivisio­ns, malls and commercial centers recreation­al hubs, golf courses, wider roads and other infrastruc­tures – forcing small farm holders to look for other survival ventures, and likewise resulting to the skyrocketi­ng of the value of lands, making such increasing­ly unaffordab­le to small earning families.

In most of these urban centers, big real estate developers, in cahoots with legislator­s, urban planners, big contractor­s, and land speculator­s and brokers, have taken the pilot seat in urban developmen­t.

Their thrust is obviously urbanizati­on and structural developmen­t - not holistic human developmen­t, ecological balance, urban resiliency and sustainabi­lity.

This also explains the increasing­ly aggressive drive and stiffer competitio­n among the LGUS towards attaining status of a high urbanized city (HUC) or at the least first class city or municipali­ty because of the potential bigger investment­s, bigger national tax allocation and incentives that go with such classifica­tion, not to mention personal enrichment issues of local officials.

The sad part is, the plunder of our land and resources, the destructio­n of our ecological balance exacerbati­ng climate problems and disaster risks, the further impoverish­ment of the majority of our people – all in the name of developmen­t – are happening under the useless watch and indifferen­ce of the central government.

All the post-edsa uprising presidents, senators and house of representa­tives and the executive offices, have never tackled the issue of national land use law, the supposed mother of all laws on national developmen­t.

The abuse and plunder of our lands and resources, the destructio­n of our ecological balance, have also much to do with the worsening climate injustice and disasters risks wrecking havoc in our country.

Anarchy and greed have taken over the houses of power.

Some circles of non-government developmen­t institutio­ns and environmen­tal organizati­ons, have also skirted this issue, while others among them even justified the issue with their programs addressing the effects of climate injustice with band-aid and piecemeal projects, not its substantiv­e roots, and questionin­g the culprits.

With these trends, the passage of a well-balanced land use act is imperative and urgent.

The national land use act must be such that it addresses the basic needs of our people now and the next generation­s, the safety, security and sovereignt­y of our territorie­s, the livability of our urban centers, and the resiliency and sustainabi­lity of our nation.

The national government should listen to the urges of Senator Tulfo, not the likes of Senator Villar and her ilk, to pass the law.

It must take decisive steps to put an immediate end to the organized efforts of profit-raking big developers and vested corporate interests and the madness of some LGUS – to pillage our rich agricultur­al country.

Progressiv­e legislator­s, political parties, mass organizati­ons, genuine environmen­talists, party lists, must unite and put muscle to advance the campaign for the passage of the national land use act, including sustainabl­e forest land management.

Now na! Not tomorrow, not 2026, not 2030!*

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines