The fallen tree in barangay Balod tied up traffic on the national highway for at least four hours, vehicle congestion that stretched for several kilometers last week.
This also gave some contractors and the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) reason to renew their argument to immediately cut down remaining roadside trees even without clearance from the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR).
There’s a clear public safety issue involved.
Mirasol Bartido who lives next to the tree scrambled out as it fell, dragging her daughter to safety. The tree fell on a passing delivery truck and injured one passenger.
Don’t be so fast with the chainsaw.
Let common sense and science determine the next move.
An inventory is in order to determine exactly which of the trees are decaying and unsafe, and which should remain to provide a green canopy, shade, oxygen, comfort and tourism-worthy beauty for passing motorists, visitors and residents alike.
The fallen acacia should not justify another binge of indiscriminate cutting of trees by contractors or DPWH personnel eager to meet deadlines for road development projects.
If anything, it provides further impetus for local government units to take better care of these trees to ensure that they won’t collapse without warning on hapless residents or passersby.
The DENR said the collapse of century-old trees is due to several factors.
Aside from age and decay, there’s the disturbance caused by vehicle vibrations, road construction, and even the burning of leaves beneath it by residents, and the smoke which eventually erodes its trunk.
Another culprit is the use of nails driven into the bark to hang streamers or posters of candidates during election season.
(What happened, by the way, to complaints filed against candidates who defaced trees this way in the last election, a campaign done by environmental groups like the Philippine Earth Justice Center have teamed up with the Commission on Elections?
The Cebu provincial government would do well to create its own team to look after the welfare of these aging trees that are part of the heritage and rural charm of southern Cebu.
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Fallen acacia paralyzes traffic