• Property and Development

  • 01.Apr
  • Manila’s U-Belt site of heritage conservation
  • MANILA, Philippines – Unknown to many, the Central University Belt or “U-belt” area in Sampaloc, Manila, is home not only to several universities and colleges but to several heritage sites as well.
    But these sites, which include the 101-year-old Gota de Leche building and the ancestral homes of famous personalities like Jose Maria Basa, a businessman […]

  • Economics and Investments

  • 11.Mar
  • QC reduces tax for micro business
  • The Quezon City government in its desire to support the development of micro enterprises in the city is now pushing for the full implementation of the BMBE Act (Barangay Micro-Business Enterprises and RA1978).
    Nathan Zulueta, consultant to the office of the city mayor said by virtue of Ordinance 1576 approved by Mayor Feliciano Belmonte, Jr. the […]

  • Management and Governance

  • 27.May
  • ‘Too much autonomy’ makes RP cities less business friendly
  • Major cities in the Philippines generally take longer to issue business-related permits and licenses compared to most cities in the world, thus constraining their growth and competitiveness, a recent study shows.
    Twenty-one cities in the country are able to authorize numerous and varying procedures in starting businesses in their jurisdictions because, according to a private sector […]

  • Other Urban Centers

  • 23.Mar
  • NUEVA ECIJA: 40% drop in index crimes reported in Ecija
  • The Nueva Ecija police recorded a total of 69 index crimes in the first quarter of the year, a 40 percent drop compared to the 116 cases during the same period last year.
    Senior Superintendent Napoleon Taas, Nueva Ecija police director, credited the drop to the strict implementation of the Mamang Pulis project of Philippine National […]

Bad news for landfill users

STARTING Monday, all garbage trucks entering the 14-hectare landfill in Rodriguez, Rizal, must each pay on the spot about P1,000 in levies and hosting fees to the municipal government.
“This is a fair and just system of compensation for a municipality and its residents who are hosting the landfill and bearing with the social, health and […]

By John Lucero

STARTING Monday, all garbage trucks entering the 14-hectare landfill in Rodriguez, Rizal, must each pay on the spot about P1,000 in levies and hosting fees to the municipal government.

“This is a fair and just system of compensation for a municipality and its residents who are hosting the landfill and bearing with the social, health and other adverse costs for being the dumping ground for Metro Manila’s solid waste,” Rodriguez Mayor Pedro Cuerpo said in a statement yesterday.

The implementation of what Cuerpo called the “Pay as you discharge” pre-payment scheme coincides with the Rodriguez government’s formal takeover of the landfill after the original private contractor agreed to turn over the facility to the municipality.

The new mode of payment, however, is expected to result in problems because at present, local governments using the landfill course their payment through the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority.

read the rest of the story from Inquirer.net

Post a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Etc.

You could put something here. Edit this in bottom.php.

Click

You could put an ad here. Edit this in bottom.php.

Tag Cloud