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Philippines
Tuesday, December 3, 2024

Angeles seeks DENR help to save 150-ha. watershed

Angeles City Mayor Carmelo Lazatin Jr. has asked the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) to clear all illegal structures in the 150-hectare Sapangbato Watershed Protection area in the city.

In a letter to DENR Secretary Maria Antonia Yulo Loyzaga, Lazatin sought the agency’s “assistance and intervention in taking the necessary enforcement actions, including the issuance of cease-and-desist orders, investigation of violations, and clearing of all illegal structures within the Watershed Protection Area of Angeles City.”

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The mayor said illegal structures had cropped up in the upland areas of the protected watershed area.

 “The city government of Angeles is prepared to coordinate with your office and other relevant agencies to ensure strict compliance with environmental laws and to safeguard the watershed for future generations,” Lazatin told Loyzaga.

“Our recent field inspection identified several unauthorized structures built in areas with a slope greater than 18 percent. This violates key provisions of environmental regulations, specifically, Section 15 of Presidential Decree No. 705 (Revised Forestry Code of the Philippines) and other laws aimed at the protection of watershed areas. The development of structures in such steeply sloped areas greatly increases the risks of landslides, soil erosion, and long-term degradation of vital natural resources,” Lazatin noted.

He said the protection and preservation of the watershed is crucial in ensuring the future of Angelenos and the whole of Pampanga. 

Angeles City was already experiencing flooding during the rainy season, and if the trees in the Sapangbato watershed disappeared, the city and its nearby environs such as Mabalacat and the low-lying areas of the San Fernando City could likely become catch basins.

During his first term in 2019, Lazatin partnered with the Abacan River and the Angeles Watershed-Advocacy Council Inc. led by businessman Renato Tayag Jr., to replant the area to protect the water aquifer which is being affected by the presence of golf courses in the adjacent communities.

The Angeles government has spearheaded the planting of more than 100,000 trees along with various organizations such as Converge ICT Solutions, Angeles City Water District, Balibago Waterworks System, Porac Bank, Holy Family Academy Batch ’80, Philippine Academy of Family Physicians Angeles chapter, De La Salle Alumni Association, Inc., ScrubbedNet, Angeles Rotary Club Kuliat, Jocson College, Ocampo’s Jewelry and DKL Manufacturing.

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