Cong. Cari to
refile bill creating Western Leyte province
By Provincial Media
Relations Center (PMRC Leyte)
September 29, 2007
TACLOBAN CITY, Leyte – Leyte
Fifth District Representative Carmen Cari believes she gets the
majority of support from local chief executives in her bill pending
before the Lower House that seeks to create the Western Leyte
province.
She said she is strongly
positive the mayors comprising the eight towns and one city, that is
wholly Leyte’s fifth district, would support her call for a separate
province in order to spur progress.
Congresswoman Cari is taking
into example the separation of Biliran from Leyte province in 1992 and
has come a long way since then when it comes to development.
She said her intentions in
filing for the bill is only for the best of the Leyteńos in the
western side of the island and maintaining that as large as the Leyte
province is now, there are still a number of barangays, especially
those far flung that would be hard for the provincial government to
reach.
Although, she said, her
nephew Gov. Carlos Jericho “Icot” Petilla is doing well in delivering
the services directly to the people in the barangay, the province
still large enough.
Cong. Cari said she has
every intention of filing again the same house bill during the present
Congress and hopes it would be enacted and prevailed upon by the
people before her term ends.
House Bill 03784 pushes for
the creation of Western Leyte, with Baybay, a newly declared city, as
its capital town together with the towns of Abuyog, Hilongos, Hindang,
Matalom, Inopacan, Javier, Mahaplag and Bato, all of the fifth
district.
Early on, a number of mayors
coming from the fifth district expressed opposition to the proposed
bill while Gov. Petilla himself, earlier declared, Leyte province
remains “just the right size to handle” for the provincial government.
On her part, Vice-Governor
Mimiette Bagulaya, who is presently acting as officer-in-charge of the
province, said she is in favor of the bill to lessen the number of
towns, saying the 41 towns comprising the province is “quite big.”