Sei sulla pagina 1di 40

201

BEST PRACTICES IN
MUNICIPAL
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
OF BACNOTAN, LA UNION

PREFACE

In the book of David C Wilson and Anne Scheinberg of the Department of Civil and
Environmental Engineering, Imperial College, London, UK: to be successful, a city must address
all three key drivers/physical components of an ISWM system: public health, with a focus on
waste collection and street sweeping; environment, with a focus on improving disposal to
protect ground- and surface-water and avoid air, water and soil pollution; and resource
recovery, to close the loop of both materials and organics management.
Hereon, the municipality also needs to address three key governance strategies:
inclusivity, allowing the barangays to contribute fully as users, service providers and enablers;
financial sustainability, providing services that are cost-effective and affordable; and doable
and pro-active policies.
Bacnotan engages all stakeholders from the households to policy makers to have the
best-functioning solid waste systems in planning, implementing, and monitoring changes to
the system.
Accordingly, intention and commitment matter. Political commitment is more important
than the availability of financing in contributing to sustainable modernisation of solid waste
management.

This paper presents the best practices on solid waste management by the
municipality. It reflects and acts on the spirit and mandate of RA 9003 or known as the
Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000.
Rule VIII (Implementation of the Ecological Solid Waste Management Systems),
Section 2 (Implementation of the Act), reiterates the provision of the Local Government Code
or RA 7160 stating that the LGUs shall be primarily responsible for the implementation and
enforcement of the ecological solid waste management systems within their respective
jurisdictions.
The integrated solid waste management programme of the municipality commenced
in 2013. Executive Order No. 8 reorganized the Municipal Solid Waste Management Board as
well as the Technical Working Group. The TWG was tasked to assess the current state of SWM
and come up with strategies, plans and activities to address the problems of open burning,
burying, illegal dumping and poor collection and disposal systems.
This document shows the journey of the municipality in improving its SWM by
introducing to the barangays doable systems which are outside the box in the context of RA
9003.
The LGU is guided by the law for the purposes of persuading and compelling
households and barangays, enterprises, private sector and civil society to adopt a system
that is socially acceptable, effective and efficient in addressing the solid waste management.
The system must be simple and doable as well as practical to stimulate participation, create
awareness and the sense of ownership of the system to become sustainable.
The manifesto system is unique with the municipality specifically in the recording and
documenting solid waste collection and disposal. The system is service oriented to attract
participation and ownership of the program.
The new SWM system of the LGUs is conceptualized outside the box by using
alternative indigenous processes, technologies and approaches which have been piloted in
Barangay Cabarsican in 2015 for social acceptability, participation, emulation and adoption
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
by the other barangays.
The LGU initiated the system as a policy reform on SWM specifically at the Purok level
through co-management and the decentralization of authority to support and implement the
new SWM system.
Page 2 of 40

Page 3 of 40

I. MUNICIPAL PROFILE

Bacnotan is a first class municipality in the province of La Union.


Ilocano is
the
language
spoken. English and Filipino are
the
languages used in government and business while English is the
medium of instruction in schools.

Economic activities in Bacnotan mostly involve farming, fishing,


bee-keeping, pebble extraction, tourism and Portland cement
manufacture. Bacnotan is the seat of the beekeeping industry in La
A mining engineer from Bacnotan who saw the limestone deposits in
Dumarang (renamed Quirino) also saw deposits of

Union.

coal and traces of gas.

Bacnotan is 283 kilometres (176 mi) north of Manila and can be reached using the MacArthur Highway,
or by airplane via Canaoay Airport in San Fernando City.

B. Political Boundaries/
Subdivisions

Projected population and number of households


Annual
population
growth 1.33
2010-2007
rate:
%
No Household Growth Rate:
2.54
2007-2000
%

The Municipality of Bacnotan is bounded


in the north by the Municipality of
Balaoan, on the east by the Municipality
CURRENT SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
CONDITIONS
of San
Gabriel, on the south by the
Municipality of San Juan and on the west
by West Philippine Sea. It is politically
The municipality has a limited area of operation insubdivided
the collectioninto
of municipal
waste. It
forty-seven
(47)
has two garbage trucks which collect wastes from the public
market located
the Poblacion, is
barangays.
The at municipality
some areas of the town proper namely Barangay Poblacion,
Nagsimbaanan,
Sta. Cruz
and Raois.
considered
a compact
community
due to
Collection is done twice daily at the public market while thethe
covered
barangays
is
once
fact that practically alla week.
barangays
are connected to each other with farmStarting on May, 2013, collection at the market is limited
to residual
to-market
roads. and special wastes
only. Vendors are advised to bring home their biodegradable waste to be disposed of in their
respective household compost/rotting pit or a communal compost pit in their Purok. This has
drastically reduced the volume of waste collected by as much as 50%. The garbage truck
C. Population
collects only residual wastes, recyclables and special wastes.
The computed annual growth rate of the municipalitys population
YEAR
POPULATION
HOUSEHOLD*
In the
barangays
not
served byisthe
municipal
truck, households
resort to9,233
nonbased on the
2007
and 2010
population
1.33%.
If thisgarbage
population
2010
40,307
compliant
practices
in trend,
an unhygienic
and unsystematic
disposal
Common practices
would
follow the
increase
by year 2022
or after 10 years,
it is of wastes.
2011
40,843
9,468
includethat
thethe
burying
of mixed
wasteswill
such
projected
municipal
population
be busted
47,232.light bulbs, bottles, cartons, waste trimmings,
2012
41,386
9,708
fruits peelings, garden sweepings, etc ; burning of leaves, agricultural wastes and plastics;
2013
41,937
disposing of solid wastes into creeks and rivers. Residents sell to ambulant buyers9,955
their
2014
42,494
10,208
as bottles,
bottles,byetc.
Waste
segregation
is
not a common
practice.
Withrecyclable
average wastes
annualsuch
growth
rate PET
of 1.33,
year
2022,
the
2015
10,467 in
With the will
lackhave
of aa collection
by Barangay
the municipality,
residents
are left 43,060
on their own
municipality
populationsystem
of 47,232.
Poblacion
will
2016
43,632
disposing
of their
solid wastes.
Some
their unsegregated
wastes 10,733
at the
have
the biggest
population
of 4,061
and residents
barangay disposed
Pangpangofwhich
and population
public market.
2017
44,213
11,006
has Plaza
the least
of 231 in 2010 is projected to increase by 271
in 2024- the end planning period.
2018
44,801
11,285
To address the proliferation of prohibited acts under the law the
municipality
obliged
2019
45,397
11,572all
barangay chairmen: to establish a MRF with a composting/rotting pit 2020
in every 46,000
purok; collection
11,866
from households the SWM Local fund of PhP 20.00/ month; the activation
of46,612
Barangay12,167
SWM
2021
Committees; no segregation, no collection policy; among others. The MSWM-TWG was created
2022
47,232
12,476
and tasked to monitor the compliance of the barangays.
2023

47,772

Further, the manifesto system was piloted in Barangay Cabarsican. The48,398


System aims to
record and document the collection and disposal aspect of SWM to enforce segregation at
source, where the sources, types of wastes at the purok level are and determine the waste
diversion of each barangays.
2024

Page 4 of 40

WASTE ASSESSMENT AND CHARACTERIZATION STUDY (WACS)


A. INTRODUCTION

Page 5 of 40

A four-day WACS was conducted for the selected households in the municipality in 2014.
Household co-operators were from Barangays Poblacion (representing the urban area), Baroro
(representing coastal area), Sapilang (representing rural area) and Quirino (representing industrial
area). There were thirty (30) household co-operators selected for the activity.
B. DISPOSED WASTE
Disposed wastes include biodegradable and non-biodegradable; special hazardous and nonhazardous wastes. Based on the WACS conducted and as shown under table 4.1 is the summary of the
quantity of waste disposed on a daily and annual basis as well as their percentage share. As shown in
the table, the LGU disposes 22,679 kg/day or 827.7 tons/year. Households contribute the biggest
volume disposed at 16, 930.23 kg/day or 6,179 tons/year (75%), commercial entities disposes 5,151.34
kg/day or 1,880 tons/year (23%) and institutions 597.53 kg/day or 218.10 tons/year (2.63%). Base line
population of the LGU (2014) is 42,506 with per capita waste generation of 0.5336 kg/day.
Quantity of Disposed Waste, by Sector
SECTOR
kgs/day
Kgs/yr

Tons/year

% Share

Residential

16,930.23

6,179,532.883

6,179.53

74.65%

Commercial

5,151.34

1,880,239.83

1,880.24

22.71%

Institutions

597.53

218099.8188

218.10

2.63%

Total
22,679.10
8,277,872.53
8,277.88
Projected Population 2014:
42,506
Per capita waste generation, LGU level:
0.5336 kg/day

100%

The table on the summary of quantity of disposed waste per sector


C. DIVERTED WASTE
The table below depicts the ten-year waste diversion of the municipality. It emphasizes the
projected population, daily waste generation, the percentage of diversion and the weight of
waste diverted. The waste diversion of the municipality is 50% in its first year (11,339.55 kg/day)
which is also the basis. The minimum waste diversion during the plan period is 50% up to a high
off 87% on the 10th year.
Year

Waste Gen/
Capita/day
based on WACS

2014 (Base Year)


2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024

0.53355
0.54378
0.55478
0.56661
0.57933
0.59302
0.60775
0.62358
0.64062
0.65894
0.67865

Projected
Population

Daily Waste
Generation based
on Population
(kg/d)

Target
Waste
Diversion
%

Weight to be
Diverted
(kg/d)

42,506
43,071
43,644
44,225
44,813
45,409
46,013
46,625
47,245
47,873
48,510

22,679.10
23,421.21
24,212.79
25,058.06
25,961.63
26,928.49
27,964.11
29,074.41
30,265.88
31,545.56
32,921.13

50.00%
55.00%
60.00%
65.00%
70.00%
72.00%
74.00%
76.00%
80.00%
87.33%
87.33%

11,339.55
12,881.66
14,527.67
16,287.74
18,173.14
19,388.51
20,693.44
22,096.55
24,212.70
27,548.74
28,749.38

(kg/d)

D. WASTE GENERATION

Table of Diverted Waste

The table below represents the percentage of waste composition from major sources namely
residential, non-residential and total of the municipality. The table discusses the waste composition in
table 1; the percentage share of residential and non-residential sources are presented in tables 2 and
3. Accordingly, residential sources contribute 74.65% (16.9 tons/day) and non-residential at 25.35%.
Notably, biodegradable wastes comprise the bulk of wastes composition from both sources which
account for 53.41%
In terms of recyclable wastes, residential sources contribute more (15.56%) compared to
non0residential at 9.76%. Recyclable wastes contribute 25.32% (5.7 tons/day) to the total waste
composition. Residential sources have more residual wastes with potential for diversion at 6.91%
compared to 1.69% from non-residential sources.

Page 6 of 40

Waste Composition

Residential

Non Residential

Percentage

Biodegradable
Recyclable
Residual with Potential for Diversion
For Disposal
Special
TOTAL

43.20%
15.56%
6.91%
6.38%
2.61%
74.65%

10.21%
9.76%
1.69%
3.49%
0.19%
25.35%

53.41%
25.32%
8.6%
9.87%
2.80%
100%

Percentage of Waste Composition by Major Source, CY 2014


E. WASTE GENERATION TEN-YEAR PROJECTION 2014- 2024
The population growth of the LGU is at 1.77% and waste generation increases by % annually.
From baseline year (2014) daily waste generated is 22,679.10 kg while the current year (2016) is 24,
212.79 kg/day. To illustrate the composition of wastes and their proper management 2016 data is
stratified. For 2016, the LGU generates 24,212.79 kg/day of mixed waste.
Year

Waste Gen/ Capita/day


based on WACS
(kg/d)

Projected
Population

ff2014 (Base Year)


2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024

0.53355
0.54378
0.55478
0.56661
0.57933
0.59302
0.60775
0.62358
0.64062
0.65894
0.67865

42,506
43,071
43,644
44,225
44,813
45,409
46,013
46,625
47,245
47,873
48,510

Daily Waste
Generation based
on Population
(kg/d)
22,679.10
23,421.21
24,212.79
25,058.06
25,961.63
26,928.49
27,964.11
29,074.41
30,265.88
31,545.56
32,921.13

Waste Generation Ten-Year Projection 20c14- 2024

Page 7 of 40

III. BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES IN SOLID WASTE


The Solid Waste Management System of the municipality rests on the five pillars of
SWM namely environmental organization, engineering, enforcement, education and equity.
The focus of this documentation is on the enforcement aspect highlighting our best
management practice on solid waste specifically on waste segregation, collection and
disposal.
ENVIRONMENTAL ORGANIZATION
Municipal Solid Waste Management Board
Municipal Solid Waste Management Technical Working Group (TWG)
Municipal Ordinance No 481 (Environment Code)
Municipal Ten-Year Solid Waste management Plan 2014-2024
Barangay Solid Waste Management Committees
Barangay Solid Waste Management Coordinators created
Purok Listahan of Residents and institutions
ENGINEERING
Sanitary Landfill
Central MRF/ Containment Facilities
Composting Facility
Heavy Equipment
Bio-waste Shredder in every Barangay District (9Districts)
MRF in every purok (134 MRF in the 47 barangays + DMMMSU and Holcim
Plant)
Public Private Partnership with Holcim in Developing the Landfill
ENFORCEMENT
Corrective and Preventive Action Notice (CAPAN)
Search for the Cleanest, Greenest and Safest Barangay
Citation Ticket for Violators of Environmental Laws
Blotter Book for Violators
The use of the various Manifesto in Recording Solid Waste
Purok MRF Waste Type Collection Form
Barangay Waste Type Collection Form
Municipal Garbage Truck Collection Manifesto
Landfill Waste Type Acceptance Form
Heavy Equipment Operator Daily Operations Record/Report
Junk Shop Waste Type Form
EDUCATION
Barangay Solid Waste Management Training
School Solid Waste Management Training
Information, Education and Communication Campaign
Environmental Literacy
EQUITY
Provision under the AIP of Annual Solid Waste Management Fund
Creation of Barangay Solid Waste Management Fund/ Local Fund
The collection and disposal process from sources especially households down to the
sanitary landfill is one of the best practices mainly with the use of various forms or manifesto
for recording purposes. This forms/manifesto is presented on the preceding pages.
Further, other support to the system such as infrastructure and soft components like
education are presented as well to compliment the success of the program/system.

Page 8 of 40

Page 9 of 40

THE SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM OF BACNOTAN LA UNION BEST


PRACTICES

The figure above presents the environmental organization of the municipality wherein in the municipal mayor has full jurisdiction and chairmanship of the
Municipal SWM Board and the MSWM-TWG. The latter is the enforcement, monitoring and evaluation arm of the Board directly emerged in the barangays.
The TWG visits the barangays at least 2x a year to look into the implementation of SWM programs and projects of the municipality.
Every barangay have a SWM Committee
Every barangay have a SWM Coordinator assigned by the Barangay Chairman
All institutions, business and commercial establishments as well as industries must assign their SWM Coordinator

Page 10 of 40

THE ROLES OF THE MUNICIPALITY AND BARANGAYS IN SWM

The figure above presents the roles of the municipality and the barangay in SWM.
The municipality is tasked to collect residual, special and hazardous wastes; must provide a waste disposal facility;
Provide technical assistance to the barangays
The barangays shall implement the segregation of wastes from the sources such as households
The barangays are tasked to collect biodegradable wastes and shall practice recycling and composting.
The barangays shall operate a Material Recovery Facility (MRF) or Residual Containment Facility (RC

Page 11 of 40

THE SYSTEM OF SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT FROM HOUSEHOLD TO


DISPOSAL

Waste segregation starts from sources such as households


Biodegradable wastes are not collected by the municipality but composted or rotted in backyard rotting pit, fed to pets or livestock
Barangay officials collect segregated waste from houses
Residual wastes and special wastes are stored at the Purok MRF
Garbage truck collects segregated waste from the purok or barangay central MRF
At the landfill, special and hazardous wastes are retained at the Bodega
Biodegradable waste are shredded and fed into Bioreactor for composting
Composted wastes are not yet in commercial scale.
Compost is used as soil conditioner or rotting material at the dumping area
Page 12 of 40

Residual waste are dumped at the working face of the SLF observing proper spreading, leveling, compacting and primary soil covering

THE SYSTEM OF RECORDING AND DOCUMENTING COLLECTION TO DISPOSAL

Page 13 of 40

MANIFESTO USED

PURPOSE OF MANIFESTO

IMPACT

Determine the number of dwellers providing household members and their sex,
age, work and waste generated as well as to types of waste
The Purok Listahan of
Determine collection of SWM fee
all dwellers
Know equipments needed in SWM
Have an overview of the communitys behavior and culture
Barangay Blotter Book

Violators shall be recorded in the blotter book

The MRF Waste Type


Collection Form

used by the Kagawad in checking/inspecting the types of waste collected and

retained at the MRF

The Barangay Waste


Type Collection Form

The Municipal Garbage


Truck
Waste
Type
Collection Form

Sanitary Landfill Waste


Acceptance Form
Sanitary Landfill
O & M Daily Operations
Record
Junk shop Waste Type
Form

The manifesto is used to collate and summarize all MRF manifesto indicating
types and weight or volume of waste collected from all the MRF
The form is presented by the Barangay Secretary to the Municipal Treasury
Office for payment of tipping fee.
The official receipt is presented to the garbage truck driver and set the
schedule the date and time of collection among the MRF

The driver of the truck uses this form as real time recording of all collections
from different sources
At the barangay MRF, the truck crew inspects the waste for collection at the
MRF based on the Barangay manifesto
No segregation, no collection policy applies
The landfill supervisor insects incoming waste for dumping and storage versus
the garbage truck manifesto
Use to record incoming waste from other sources

The heavy equipment operator records fuel used, volume of soil covering,
conditions of facility and equipment, accidents, among others

Junk shops submit this report on a monthly basis to determine waste diversion

Page 14 of 40

Managing by the numbers help the implementers and officials in


planning, enforcement and monitoring of SWM at the Purok level

Reduced number of offenders and violators


Waste segregation is properly implemented
Non-segregation leads to non-collection of waste
Kagawad have the sense of responsibility in managing their waste
Prevent burning, burying and use of garbage pit
Sense of awareness on environmental protection
Participatory management at the household level in proper and
systematic management of waste
Clean and sanitary surroundings
Purok dwellers the services provided by the municipality and the
barangay

Proper operations and management of SLF is properly


observed

Sanitary and hygienic waste disposal facility


Responsible personnel
Lengthen life span of the facility

Responsible junk shop owners


Waste diversion through waste recovery and recycling
decreases waste ending at the landfill

THE LISTAHAN OF PUROK


DWELLERS

THE PUROK MRF WASTE COLLECTION


TYPE DATA
Page 15 of 40

THE BARANGAY SUMMARY OF GARBAGE COLLECTION WASTE TYPE

Page 16 of 40

THE MUNICIPAL GARBAGE COLLECTION TRUCK DAILY WASTE


TYPE DATA FORM

Page 17 of 40

Page 18 of 40

THE SLF DAILY WASTE TYPE

Page 19 of 40

THE SLF DAILY WASTE ACCEPTANCE


REPORT FROM

THE SLF OPERATION AND MANAGEMENT DAILY

Page 20 of 40

JUNK SHOPS MONTHLY WASTE TYPE RECOVERED DATAFORM

Page 21 of 40

Page 22 of 40

THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE MANIFESTO SYSTEM IN


BARANGAY CABARSICAN
AS PILOT BARANGAY OF THE SYSTEM IN 2015

The Barangay Kagawad schedules the

day and time of waste collection


in his Purok. On the day of
collection, the Kagawad together
with the tanod and BHW conduct
house to house collection. Using
the manifesto of waste type
collection form, he inspects the
segregated waste, weighs and
records the collected waste.

The barangay was able to


purchase two tribikes through
the Barangay SWM Fund for
the transport of collected
wastes from houses to the MRF

No segregation, No
collection policy always
apply

Page 23 of 40

The barangay purchases clear


trash bags and distributed to
households for storage of
residual waste. Clear bags are
used being transparent and
makes the content visisble

The collected wastes: properly


weighed and recorded at the purok
level are transported using the
tribike for storage at the purok MRF

When the MRF are full, the Barangay


Secretary collates all purok manifesto
and summarizes into the barangay
waste manifesto. The barangay
manifesto is presented when paying
the tipping fee of PhP 1,500. The
garbage truck driver will schedule the
day and time of collection

Urban barangays have waste


collection from their MRF at least
once a month. Rural barangays
usually have their waste collected
every 2-3 months,
THE INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT
Municipal Solid Waste Management Board and Creation of
MSWM -TWG
Page 24 of 40

Municipal Ordinance No 481 (Environment


Code)

Page 25 of 40

Municipal Ten-Year Solid Waste Management Plan 2014-2024

Page 26 of 40

Barangay Solid Waste Management Committees

Page 27 of 40

Barangay Solid Waste Management Coordinators

Page 28 of 40

Page 29 of 40

The List of the Barangay SWM Coordinators of the 47


Barangays

Page 30 of 40

SANITARY LANDFILL, HEAVY EQUIPMENT AND FACILITIES The


municipality is operating a Sanitary Landfill Category 1 with complete
amenities, facilities and heavy equipment. It has an Eco-Park atop the 7.0 ha
property of the LGU
Page 31 of 40

The composting equipment include a 500 kg capacity electric run Bio-Reactor and a
shredder provided by Department of Agriculture

Page 32 of 40

Bio-waste Shredder in
every Barangay District
(9Districts)

Rule XI (Materials Recovery Facilities and Composting), Section 1(Operations of a Materials


Recovery Facility) of the IRR of RA 9003 states that barangays shall be responsible for the
collection, segregation, recycling of biodegradable, recyclable, compostable and reusable
wastes. MRFs will be established in every barangay or cluster of barangays.
In the case of Bacnotan, there are 135 MRFs in the 47 barangays or 350% compliance of the
law. Each barangays have an average of seven (7) puroks or zones wherein each area must
have a MRF. The rationale of such practice is to make the facility service-oriented and
accessible. The accessibility of a MRF or Residual Containment Facility deters open burning,
burying or illegal dumping.

Page 33 of 40

The coordinates of the 134 MRFs in the 47


Barangays

Page 34 of 40

THE ENFORCEMENT SUPPORT


The Corrective and Preventive Action Notice (CAPAN) is an Environmental
Management System (EMS) tool in improving work systems. This is also applicable in
SWM by correcting a mistake and preventing occurrence of the same. The CAPAN is
issued by the Mayor and served by the local PNP. The violations are cited in the CAPAN,
the causes of the problems and suggested solution for their immediate action. The
recipient is given 5 days to act on the CAPAN and a physical audit will follow. NonPage 35 ofCAPAN.
40
compliance to solutions results to another
Recidivists are fined. The impact is
more of persuasion towards compulsion to comply with the law.

Search for the Cleanest, Greenest and Safest Barangay aims to recognize the
efforts of the barangays in the enforcement of environmental laws especially RA
9003 and RA 10121. The contest challenges the barangays to be innovative,
participatory and sustainable

CITATION
TICKET
FOR
VIOLATORS
OF
ENVIRONMENTAL
LAWS
RULE
XIX (Administrative and Enforcement Procedures) Section 4 (Enforcement at the Local
Government Level) states that LGUs shall be required to legislate appropriate ordinances to
aid in the implementation of the Act and in the enforcement of its provisions.

Page 36 of 40

Page 37 of 40

THE EDUCATION SUPPORT RULE XXI (Research and Public Information), Section 3
(Public Education and Information) provides that a) The Department of Interior and Local
Governments (DILG) and its leagues, in coordination with the National Ecology Center
and its local counterparts, shall ensure active education and public information on waste
management of every local government unit, down to the barangay levels and b) that
the local government units, down to the barangay levels, shall allocate a portion of their
funds, to public education and information activities on ecological waste management
particularly biodegradable and non-biodegradable wastes including, but not limited to,
installation of billboards on collection days for specific waste types, other outdoor
signage, stickers, flyers, conduct of seminars, and other effective non-traditional
information strategies.

THE FINANCIAL SUPPORT Rule XV (Financing of Solid Waste Management Initiatives),


Section 5 (Establishment of Local SWM Fund) of the IRR of RA 9003 provides that
Barangay councils may issue council resolutions to establish ordinances for the creation of
a Local Solid Waste Management Fund (also known as the Local Fund), pursuant to the
relevant provisions of RA 7160. Further, Section 3 (Collection of Fees) provides that the
Barangay may impose fees for collection and segregation of biodegradable, compostable
and reusable wastes from households, commerce, other sources of domestic wastes, and
for the use of Barangay MRFs.
For the LGU, every household is mandated by Municipal Ordinance 481 or the Environment
Code to pay PhP 20.00/ month. The collection translates into the Local Fund of the
38activities
of 40
Barangay which shall be used for projectsPage
and
on SWM of the barangay.
Cited below is the monitoring list of payment update of the households at the purok/sector
level

THE FINANCIAL SUPPORT


.

Creation of the Barangay SWM Local Fund through


the collection of PhP 20.00/month per household

The collection Monitoring report is posted on the


wall of the barangay hall to show updated
payments of households

THANK YOU
Page 39 of 40

Prepared by:
CHARLIE FEDENCIO O. BALANON
Administrative Aide VI
SWMO-Designate

Noted by:
FRANCISCO ANGELITO L. FONTANILLA
Municipal Mayor

Page 40 of 40

Potrebbero piacerti anche