2K individual titles for distribution to NegOr CARP beneficiaries

By Mary Judaline Partlow

May 10, 2024, 8:03 pm

<p><strong>LAND OWNERSHIP.</strong> Individual land titles divided from collective Certificates of Land Ownership Awards will go to 2,000 agrarian reform beneficiaries in Negros Oriental on May 20, 2024. The recipients are workers in sugarcane fields, like in this undated photo, that are under the government's Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program. <em>(PNA file photo by Mary Judaline Flores Partlow)</em></p>

LAND OWNERSHIP. Individual land titles divided from collective Certificates of Land Ownership Awards will go to 2,000 agrarian reform beneficiaries in Negros Oriental on May 20, 2024. The recipients are workers in sugarcane fields, like in this undated photo, that are under the government's Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program. (PNA file photo by Mary Judaline Flores Partlow)

DUMAGUETE CITY – Individual land titles will be awarded to 2,000 beneficiaries of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP) in Negros Oriental on May 20, an official of the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) here said Friday.

Negros Oriental provincial agrarian reform program officer Manuel Galon said in an interview that the beneficiaries are from different parts of the province and are holders of collective Certificates of Land Ownership Award (CLOAs).

"They have been tilling the land awarded to them, but this time, they will be receiving individual instead of collective titles," Galon said, adding that the beneficiaries are workers of sugarcane plantations.

DAR's current program is to hand over individual titles to the existing collective CLOA holders, except for about 300 new beneficiaries, he added.

The upcoming distribution forms part of the DAR's Support to Parcelization of Lands for Individual Titling Project, which aims to provide land tenure security to agrarian reform beneficiaries.

Galon said their office's scope of CARP coverage since 1989 includes 44,000 hectares of land that were distributed or for distribution to beneficiaries.

He said one problem faced by local government units is the reduction in tax collection, as not all those included in the collective CLOA can pay their taxes.

For Negros Oriental, a CARP beneficiary is awarded an average of 9,000 square meters or .9 of a hectare, he added. (PNA)

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