LGUs duty-bound to implement solid waste management law

By Catherine Teves

September 22, 2019, 1:53 pm

<p><strong>CLEAN-UP DRIVE.</strong> Thousands of volunteers and students join the 34th International Coastal Cleanup (ICC) at the Baseco Beach, Port Area in Tondo, Manila on Saturday (Sept. 21, 2019). The Department of Environment and Natural Resources urged the local government units nationwide to be prime solid waste management movers in their respective areas.<em> (PNA photo by Avito C. Dalan)</em></p>

CLEAN-UP DRIVE. Thousands of volunteers and students join the 34th International Coastal Cleanup (ICC) at the Baseco Beach, Port Area in Tondo, Manila on Saturday (Sept. 21, 2019). The Department of Environment and Natural Resources urged the local government units nationwide to be prime solid waste management movers in their respective areas. (PNA photo by Avito C. Dalan)

MANILA -- The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) welcomed volunteers’ for coastal clean-up activities on Saturday (Sept. 21) but maintains that local government units (LGUs) nationwide must still be the prime solid waste management movers in their respective areas of jurisdiction to address the garbage problem.

Rey Aguinaldo, chief of DENR-National Capital Region (NCR) regional office’s Coastal Resources and Foreshore Management Section, said LGUs are duty-bound to implement Republic Act 9003, known as Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000.

“That function has been devolved to LGUs already,” Aguinaldo said on the sidelines of the 2019 International Coastal Clean-up Day (ICCD) celebration in Pasay City on Sept. 21, 2019.

He noted with such devolution, LGUs must ensure compliance with the law requirements like waste segregation, reduction, reuse, and recycling.

“Voluntary cleanups are just support for efforts of LGUs to address waste,” he said.

He said the magnitude of the waste problem in Manila Bay highlights need for intensifying LGU action against garbage in NCR, Central Luzon, and Calabarzon regions which are along this water body.

Decades-old waste lies beneath Manila Bay's surface while new garbage continues flowing from land into this water body, noted Aguinaldo.

“There’s (an) increasing number of volunteers who help clean Manila Bay but garbage in this water body is plenty also,” he said.

Aguinaldo said DENR can provide LGUs nationwide the technical assistance on addressing solid waste.

He clarified volunteers’ coastal clean-up activities must not dull LGU action on waste.

Proclamation 470 series of 2003 declared the third Saturday of September every year as ICCD to promote public vigilance against waste on land and water.

Compared to previous years, Aguinaldo said more volunteers registered to join the 2019 ICCD coastal clean-up activities in Manila Bay.

He expects the DENR to soon release data on the number of volunteers who participated in the 2019 ICCD and the quantity of trash recovered during the celebration’s coastal clean-up activities.

In NCR, the DENR designated Baseco Beach and Polytechnic University of the Philippines in Manila, Gloria Maris-Cultural Center of the Philippines and SM by the Bay in Pasay City, Marine Tree Park in Navotas City and Las Piñas-Parañaque Critical Habitat and Ecotourism Area as the 2019 ICCD clean-up sites.

The 34th ICCD coastal clean-up activities complement rehabilitation work in Manila Bay.

The government is rehabilitating Manila Bay so this water body can be fit again for swimming and other forms of contact recreation as the Supreme Court ordered in 2008. (PNA)

 

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