REPUBLIC ACT No. 7279
AN ACT TO PROVIDE FOR A COMPREHENSIVE AND CONTINUING
URBAN DEVELOPMENT AND HOUSING PROGRAM, ESTABLISH THE MECHANISM FOR ITS IMPLEMENTATION,
AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES
Section 1
Title
This Act shall be known as the "Urban Development and Housing Act
of 1992"
Section 2
Declaration of State Policy
and Program Objectives
It shall be the policy of the State to undertake, in cooperation with
the private sector, a comprehensive and continuing Urban Development and
Housing Program, hereinafter referred to as the Program, which shall:
(a) Uplift the conditions of the underprivileged and
homeless citizens in urban areas and in resettlement areas by making available
to them decent housing at affordable cost, basic services, and employment
opportunities;
(b) Provide for the rational use and development of
urban land in order to bring about the following:
(1) Equitable utilization of residential lands in urban
and urbanizable areas with particular attention to the needs and requirements
of the underprivileged and homeless citizens and not merely on the basis of
market forces;
(2) Optimization of the use and productivity of land and
urban resources;
(3) Development of urban areas conducive to commercial
and industrial activities which can generate more economic opportunities for
the people;
(4) Reduction in urban dysfunctions, particularly those
that adversely affect public health, safety and ecology; and
(5) Access to land and housing by the underprivileged
and homeless citizens;
(c) Adopt workable policies to regulate and direct urban
growth and expansion towards a dispersed urban net and more balanced
urban-rural interdependence;
(d) Provide for an equitable land tenure system that
shall guarantee security of tenure to Program beneficiaries but shall respect
the rights of small property owners and ensure the payment of just
compensation;
(e) Encourage more effective people's participation in
the urban development process; and
(f) Improve the capability of local government units in
undertaking urban development and housing programs and projects.
Section 3
Definition of Terms
For purposes of this Act:
(a) "Affordable cost" refers to the most
reasonable price of land and shelter based on the needs and financial
capability of Program beneficiaries and appropriate financing schemes;
(b) "Areas for priority development" refers to those
areas declared as such under existing statutes and pertinent executive
issuances.
(c) "Blighted lands" refers to the
areas where the structures are dilapidated, obsolete and unsanitary, tending to
depreciate the value of the land and prevent normal development and use of the
area.
(d) "Consultation" refers to the
constitutionally mandated process whereby the public, on their own or through
people's organizations, is provided an opportunity to be heard and to
participate in the decision-making process on matters involving the protection
and promotion of its legitimate collective interest, which shall include
appropriate documentation and feedback mechanisms;
(e) "Idle lands" refers to non-agricultural
lands urban and urbanized areas on which no improvements, as herein defined,
have been made by the owner, as certified by the city, municipal or provincial
assessor;
(f) "Improvements" refers to all types of
buildings and residential units, walls, fences, structures or constructions of
all kinds of a fixed character or which are adhered to the soil but shall not
include trees, plants and growing fruits, and other fixtures that are mere
superimpositions on the land, and the value of improvements shall not be less
than fifty percent (50%) of the assessed value of the property;
(g) "Joint venture" refers to the
commitment or agreement by two (2) or more persons to carry out a specific or
single business enterprise for their mutual benefit, for which purpose they
combine their funds, land resources, facilities and services;
(h) "Land assembly or consolidation" refers to the
acquisition of lots of varying ownership through purchase or expropriation of
the purpose of planned and rational development and socialized housing programs
without individual property boundary restrictions;
(i) "Land banking" refers to the
acquisition of land at values based on existing use in advance of actual need
to promote planned development and socialized housing programs;
(j) "Land swapping" refers to the
process of land acquisition by exchanging land for another piece of land of
equal value, or for shares of stock in a government or quasi-government
corporation whose book value is of equal value to the land being exchanged, for
the purpose of planned and rational development and provision for socialized
housing where land values are determined based on land classification, market
value and assessed value taken from existing tax declarations: Provided, That
more valuable lands owned by private persons may be exchanged with less
valuable lands to carry out the objectives of this Act;
(k) "Land use plan" refers to the
rational approach of allocating available resources as equitably as possible
among competing user groups and for different functions consistent with the
development plan of the area and the Program under this Act;
(l) "On-site development" refers to the
process of upgrading and rehabilitation of blighted slum urban areas with a
view of minimizing displacement of dwellers in said areas, and with provisions
for basic services as provided for in Section 21 hereof;
(m) "Professional squatters" refers to
individuals or groups who occupy lands without the express consent of the
landowner and who have sufficient income for legitimate housing. The term shall
also apply to persons who have previously been awarded homelots or housing
units by the Government but who sold, leased or transferred the same to settle
illegally in the same place or in another urban area, and non-bona fide
occupants and intruders of lands reserved for socialized housing. The term
shall not apply to individuals or groups who simply rent land and housing from
professional squatters or squatting syndicates;
(n) "Resettlement areas" refers to areas
identified by the appropriate national agency or by the local government unit
with respect to areas within its jurisdiction, which shall be used for the
relocation of the underprivileged and homeless citizens;
(o) "Security of tenure" refers to the
degree of protection afforded to qualified Program beneficiaries against
infringement or unjust, reasonable and arbitrary eviction or disposition, by
virtue of the right of ownership, lease agreement, usufruct and other
contractual arrangements;
(p) "Slum Improvement and Resettlement Program or
SIR" refers to the program of the National Housing Authority of upgrading
and improving blighted squatter areas outside of Metro Manila pursuant to
existing statutes and pertinent executive issuances;
(q) "Small property owners" refers to those
whose only real property consists of residential lands not exceeding three
hundred square meters (300 sq.m.) in highly urbanized cities and eight hundred
square meters (800 sq.m.) in other urban areas;
(r) "Socialized housing" refers to housing
programs and projects covering houses and lots or homelots only undertaken by
the Government or the private sector for the underprivileged and homeless
citizens which shall include sites and services development, long-term
financing, liberalized terms on interest payments, and such other benefits in
accordance with the provisions of this Act;
(s) "Squatting syndicates" refers to groups
of persons engaged in the business of squatter housing for profit or gain;
(t) "Underprivileged and homeless citizens" refers to the
beneficiaries of this Act and to individuals or families residing in urban and
urbanizable areas whose income or combined household income falls within the
poverty threshold as defined by the National Economic and Development Authority
and who do not own housing facilities. This shall include those who live in
makeshift dwelling units and do not enjoy security of tenure;
(u) "Unregistered or abandoned lands" refers to lands
in urban and urbanizable areas which are not registered with the Register of
Deeds, or with the city or municipal assessor's office concerned, or which are
uninhabited by the owner and have not been developed or devoted for any useful
purpose, or appears unutilized for a period of three (3) consecutive years
immediately prior to the issuance and receipt of publication of notice of
acquisition by the Government as provided under this Act. It does not include
land which has been abandoned by reason of force majeure or any other
fortuitous event: Provided, That prior to such event, such land was previously
used for some useful or economic purpose;
(v) "Urban areas" refers to all cities
regardless of their population density and to municipalities with a population
density of at least five hundred (500) persons per square kilometers;
(w) "Urbanizable areas" refers to sites
and lands which, considering present characteristics and prevailing conditions,
display marked and great potential of becoming urban areas within the period of
five (5) years; and
(x) "Zonal Improvement Program or ZIP" refers to the
program of the National Housing Authority of upgrading and improving blighted
squatters areas within the cities and municipalities of Metro Manila pursuant
to existing statutes and pertinent executive issuances.
Section 4
Coverage
The Program shall cover all lands in urban and urbanizable areas,
including existing areas for priority development sites, and in other areas
that may be identified by the local government units as suitable for socialized
housing.
Section 5
Exemptions
The following lands shall be exempt from the coverage of this Act:
(a) Those included in the coverage of Republic Act No.
6657, otherwise known as the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law;
(b) Those actually used for national defense and
security of the State;
(c) Those used, reserved or otherwise set aside for
government offices, facilities and other installations, whether owned by the
National Government, its agencies and instrumentalities, including
government-owned or-controlled corporations, or by the local government units:
Provided, however, That the lands herein mentioned, or portions thereof, which
have not been used for the purpose for which they have been reserved or set
aside for the past ten (10) years from the effectivity of this Act, shall be
covered by this Act;
(d) Those used or set aside for parks, reserves for
flora and fauna, forests and watersheds, and other areas necessary to maintain
ecological balance or environmental protection, as determined and certified to
by the proper government agency; and
(e) Those actually and primarily used for religious,
charitable, or educational purposes, cultural and historical sites, hospitals
and health centers, and cemeteries or memorial parks.
The exemptions herein provided shall not apply when the use or purpose of
the abovementioned lands has ceased to exist.
Section 6
Framework for Rational
Development
There shall be a National Urban Development and Housing Framework to be
formulated by the Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board under the direction of
the Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Council in coordination with all
local government units and other concerned public and private sectors within
one (1) year from the effectivity of this Act.
The framework shall refer to the comprehensive plan for urban and
urbanizable areas aimed at achieving the objectives of the Program. In the
formulation of the Framework, a review and rationalization of testing town and
land use plans, housing programs, and all other objectives and activities of
government agencies and the private sectors which may substantially affect
urban land use patterns, transportation and public utilities, infrastructure,
environment and population movement shall be undertaken with the concurrence of
the local government units concerned.
Section 7
Inventory of Lands
Within one (1) year from the effectivity of this Act, all city and
municipal governments shall conduct an inventory of all kinds and improvements
thereon within their respective localities. The inventory shall include the
following:
(a) Residential lands;
(b) Government-owned lands, whether owned by the
National Government or any of its subdivisions, instrumentalities, or agencies,
including government-owned or-controlled corporations and their subsidiaries;
(c) Unregistered or abandoned and idle lands; and
(d) Other lands.
In conducting the inventory, the local government units concerned, in
coordination with the Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board and with the
assistance of the appropriate government agencies, shall indicate the type of
land use and the degree of land utilization, and other data or information
necessary to carry out the purposes of this Act.
For planning purposes, the Housing and Urban Development Coordinating
Council shall be furnished by each local government unit a copy of its
inventory which shall be updated every three (3) years.
Section 8
Identification of Sites for
Socialized Housing
After the inventory the local government units, in coordination with
the National Housing Authority, the Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board, the
National Mapping Resource Information Authority, and the Land Management
Bureau, shall identify lands for socialized housing and resettlement areas for
the immediate and future needs of the underprivileged and homeless in the urban
areas, taking into consideration and degree of availability of basic services
and facilities, their accessibility and proximity of jobs sites and other
economic opportunities, and the actual number of registered beneficiaries.
Government-owned lands under paragraph (b) of the preceding section
which have not been used for the purpose for which they have been reserved or
set aside for the past ten (10) years from the effectivity of this Act and
identified as suitable for socialized housing, shall immediately be transferred
to the National Housing Authority subject to the approval of the President of
the Philippines or by the local government unit concerned, as the case may be,
for proper disposition in accordance with this Act.
Section 9
Priorities in the
Acquisition of Land
Lands for socialized housing shall be acquired in the following order:
(a) Those owned by the Government or any of its
subdivisions, instrumentalities, or agencies, including government-owned or
-controlled corporations and their subsidiaries;
(b) Alienable lands of the public domain;
(c) Unregistered or abandoned and idle lands;
(d) Those within the declared Areas for Priority
Development, Zonal Improvement Program sites, and Slum Improvement and
Resettlement Program sites which have not yet been acquired;
(e) Bagong Lipunan Improvement of Sites and Services or
BLISS sites which have not yet been acquired; and
(f) Privately-owned lands
Where open-site development is found more practicable and advantageous
to the beneficiaries, the priorities mentioned in this section shall not apply.
The local government units shall give budgetary priority to on-site development
of government lands.
Section 10
Modes of Land Acquisition
The modes of acquiring lands for purposes of this Act shall include,
among others, community mortgage, land swapping, land assembly or
consolidation, land banking, donation to the Government, joint-venture
agreement, negotiated purchase, and expropriation: Provided, however, That
expropriation shall be resorted to only when other models of acquisition have
been exhausted: Provided, further, That where expropriation is resorted to,
parcels of land owned by small property owners shall be exempted for purposes
of this Act: Provided, finally, That abandoned property, as herein defined,
shall be reverted and escheated to the State in a proceeding analogous to the
procedure laid down in Rule 91 of the Rules of Court.
For the purpose of socialized housing, government-owned and foreclosed
properties shall be acquired by the local government units, or by the National
Housing Authority primary through negotiated purchase: Provided, That qualified
beneficiaries who are actual occupants of the land shall be given the right of
first refusal.
Section 11
Expropriation of Idle Lands
All idle lands in urban and urbanizable areas, as defined and
identified in accordance with this Act, shall be expropriated and shall form
part of the public domain. These lands shall be disposed of or utilized by the
Government for such purposes that conform with their land use plans.
Expropriation proceedings shall be instituted if, after the lapse of one (1)
year following receipt of notice of acquisition, the owner fails to introduce
improvements as defined in Section 3(f) hereof, except in the case of force
majeure and other fortuitous events. Exempted from this provision, however, are
residential lands owned by small property owners or those the ownership of
which is subject of a pending litigation.
Section 12
Disposition of Lands for
Socialized Housing
The National Housing Authority, with respect to lands belonging to the
National Government, and the local government units with respect to other lands
within their respective localities, shall coordinate with each other to
formulate and make available various alternative schemes for the disposition of
lands to the beneficiaries of the Program. These schemes shall not be limited
to those involving transfer of ownership in fee simple but shall include lease,
with option to purchase, usufruct or such other variations as the local
government units or the National Housing Authority may deem most expedient in
carrying out the purposes of this Act.
Consistent with this provision, a scheme for public rental housing may
be adopted.
Section 13
Valuation of Lands for
Socialized Housing
Equitable land valuation guidelines for socialized housing shall be set
by the Department of Finance on the basis of the market value reflected in the
Zonal valuation, or in its absence, on the latest real property tax
declaration.
For site already occupied by qualified Program beneficiaries, the
Department of Finance shall factor into the valuation the blighted status of
the lands as certified by the local government unit or the National Housing
Authority.
Section 14
Limitations on the
Disposition of Lands for Socialized Housing
No land for socialized housing, including improvements or rights
thereon, shall be sold, alienated, conveyed, encumbered or leased by any
beneficiaries as determined by the government agency concerned.
Should the beneficiary unlawfully sell, transfer, or otherwise dispose
of his lot or any right thereon, the transaction shall be null and void. He
shall also lose his right to the land, forfeit the total amortization paid
thereon, and shall be barred from the benefits under this Act for a period of
ten (10) years from the date of violation.
In the event the beneficiary dies before full ownership of the land is
vested on him, transfer to his heirs shall take place only upon their
assumption of his outstanding obligations. In case of failure by the heirs to
assume such obligations, the land shall revert to the Government for
disposition in accordance with this Act.
Section 15
Policy
Socialized housing, as defined in Section 3 hereof, shall be the primary
strategy in providing shelter for the underprivileged and homeless. However, if
the tenurial arrangement in a particular socialized housing program is in the
nature of leasehold or usufruct, the same shall be transitory and the
beneficiaries must be encouraged to become independent from the Program within
a given period of time, to be determined by the implementing agency concerned.
Section 16
Eligibility Criteria for
Socialized Housing Program Beneficiaries
To qualify for the socialized housing program, a beneficiary:
(a) Must be a Filipino citizen;
(b) Must be an underprivileged and homeless citizen, as
defined in Section 3 of this Act;
(c) Must not own any real property whether in the urban
or rural areas; and
(d) Must not be a professional squatter or a member of
squatting syndicates.
Section 17
Registration of Socializing
Housing Beneficiaries
The Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Council, in coordination
with the local government units, shall design a system for the registration of
qualified Program beneficiaries in accordance with the Framework. The local
government units, within one (1) year from the effectivity of this Act, shall
identify and register all beneficiaries within their respective localities.
Section 18
Balanced Housing Development
The Program shall include a system to be specified in the Framework
plan whereby developers of proposed subdivision projects shall be required to
develop an area for socialized housing equivalent to at least twenty percent
(20%) of the total subdivision area or total subdivision project cost, at the
option of the developer, within the same city or municipality, whenever
feasible, and in accordance with the standards set by the Housing and Land Use
Regulatory Board and other existing laws. The balanced housing development as
herein required may also be complied with by the developers concerned in any of
the following manner:
(a) Development of new settlement;
(b) Slum upgrading or renewal of areas for priority
development either through zonal improvement programs or slum improvement and
resettlement programs;
(c) Joint-venture projects with either the local
government units or any of the housing agencies; or
(d) Participation in the community mortgage program.
Section 19
Incentives for the National
Housing Authority
The National Housing Authority, being the primary government agency in
charge of providing housing for the underprivileged and homeless, shall be
exempted from the payment of all fees and charges of any kinds, whether local
or national, such as income and real taxes. All documents or contracts executed
by and in favor of the National Housing Authority shall also be exempt from the
payment of documentary stamp tax and registration fees, including fees required
for the issuance of transfer certificates of titles.
Section 20
Incentives for Private
Sector Participating in Socialized Housing
To encourage greater private sector participation in socialized housing
and further reduce the cost of housing units for the benefit of the
underprivileged and homeless, the following incentives shall be extended to the
private sectors:
(a) Reduction and simplification of qualification and
accreditation requirements for participating private developers;
(b) Creation of one-stop offices in the different
regions of the country for the processing, approval and issuance of clearances,
permits and licenses: Provided, That clearances, permits and licenses shall be
issued within ninety (90) days from the date of submission of all requirements
by the participating private developers;
(c) Simplification of financing procedures; and
(d) Exemption from the payment of the following:
(1) Project-related income taxes;
(2) Capital gains tax on raw lands used for the project;
(3) Value-added tax for the project contractor
concerned;
(4) Transfer tax for both raw completed projects; and
(5) Donor's tax for lands certified by the local
government units to have been donated to socialized housing purposes.
Provided, That upon application for exemption, a lien on the title of
the land shall be annotated by the Register of Deeds: Provided, further, That
the socialized housing development plan has already been approved by the
appropriate government agencies concerned: Provided, finally, That all the
savings acquired by virtue of this provision shall accrue in favor of the
beneficiaries subject to the implementing guidelines to be issued by the
Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Council.
Appropriate implementing guidelines shall be prepared by the Department
of Finance, in consultation with the Housing and Urban Development Coordinating
Council, for the proper implementation of the tax exemption mentioned in this
section within one (1) year after the approval of this Act.
Property owners who voluntarily provide resettlement sites to illegal
occupants of their lands shall entitled to a tax credit equivalent to the
actual non-recoverable expenses incurred in the resettlement, subject to the
implementing guidelines jointly issued by the Housing and Urban Development
Coordinating Council and the Department of Finance.
Section 21
Basic Services
Socialized housing or resettlement areas shall be provided by the local
government unit or the National Housing Authority in cooperation with the
private developers and concerned agencies with the following basic services and
facilities:
(a) Potable water;
(b) Power and electricity and an adequate power
distribution system;
(c) Sewerage facilities and an efficient and adequate
solid waste disposal system; and
(d) Access to primary roads and transportation
facilities
The provisions of other basic services and facilities such as health,
education, communications, security, recreation, relief and welfare shall be
planned and shall be given priority for implementation by the local government
unit and concerned agencies in cooperation with the private sector and the beneficiaries
themselves.
The local government unit, in coordination with the concerned national
agencies, shall ensure that these basic services are provided at the most
cost-efficient rates, and shall set as mechanism to coordinate operationally
the thrusts, objectives and activities of other government agencies concerned
with providing basic services to housing projects.
Section 22
Livelihood Component
To extent feasible, socialized housing and resettlement projects shall
be located near areas where employment opportunities are accessible. The
government agencies dealing with the development of livelihood programs and
grant of livelihood loans shall give priority to the beneficiaries of the
Program.
Section 23
Participation of
Beneficiaries
The local government units, in coordination with the Presidential
Commission for the Urban Poor and concerned government agencies, shall afford
Program beneficiaries or their duly designated representatives an opportunity
to be heard and to participate in the decision-making process over matters
involving the protection and promotion of their legitimate collective interest
which shall include appropriate documentation and feedback mechanisms. They
shall also be encouraged to organize themselves and undertake self-help
cooperative housing and other livelihood activities. They shall assist the
Government in preventing the incursions of professional squatters and members
of squatting syndicates into their communities.
In instances when the affected beneficiaries have failed to organized
themselves or form an alliance within a reasonable period prior to the
implementation of the program of projects affecting them, consultation between
the implementing agency and the affected beneficiaries shall be conducted with the
assistance of the Presidential Commission for the Urban Poor and the concerned
nongovernment organization.
Section 24
Consultation with Private
Sector
Opportunities for adequate consultation shall be accorded to the
private sector involved in socialized housing project pursuant to this
Act.
Section 25
Benefits
In addition to the benefits provided under existing laws and other
related issuance to occupants of areas for priority development, zonal
improvement program sites and slum improvement and resettlement program sites,
such occupants shall be entitled to priority in all government projects
initiated pursuant to this Act. They shall also be entitled to the following
support services:
(a) Land surveys and titling at minimal cost;
(b) Liberalized terms on credit facilities and housing
loans and one hundred percent (100%) deduction from every homebuyer's gross
income tax of all interest payments made on documents loans incurred for the
construction or purchase of the homebuyer's house;
(c) Exemption from the payment of documentary stamp tax,
registration fees, and other fees for the issuance of transfer certificate of
titles;
(d) Basic services as provided for in Section 21 of this
Act; and
(e) Such other benefits that may arise from the
implementation of this Act.
Section 26
Urban Renewal and
Resettlement
This shall include the rehabilitation and development of blighted and
slum areas and the resettlement of Program beneficiaries in accordance with the
provisions of this Act. On-site development shall be implemented whenever
possible in order to ensure minimum resettlement of the beneficiaries of the
Program from their existing places of occupancy shall be undertaken only when
on-site development is not feasible and after compliance with the procedures
laid down in Section 28 of this Act.
Section 27
Action against Professional
Squatters and Squatting Syndicates
The local government units, in cooperation with the Philippine National
Police, the Presidential Commission for the Urban Poor (PCUP), and the
PCUP-accredited urban poor organization in the area, shall adopt measures to
identify and effectively curtail the nefarious and illegal activities of
professional squatters and squatting syndicates, as herein defined.
Any person or group identified as such shall be summarily evicted and
their dwellings or structures demolished, and shall be disqualified to avail of
the benefits of the Program. A public official who tolerates or abets the
commission of the abovementioned acts shall be dealt with in accordance with
existing laws.
For purposes of this Act, professional squatters or members of
squatting syndicates shall be imposed the penalty of six (6) years imprisonment
of a fine of not less than Sixty thousand pesos (P60,000.00) but not more than
One hundred thousand pesos (P100,000), or both, at the discretion of the court.
Section 28
Eviction and Demolition
Eviction or demolition as a practice shall be discouraged. Eviction or
demolition, however, may be allowed under the following situations:
(a) When persons or entities occupy danger areas such as
esteros, railroad tracks, garbage dumps, riverbanks, shorelines, waterways, and
other public places such as sidewalks, roads, parks, and playgrounds;
(b) When government infrastructure projects with
available funding are about to be implemented; or
(c) When there is a court order for eviction and
demolition.
In the execution of eviction
or demolition orders involving underprivileged and homeless citizens, the
following shall be mandatory:
(1) Notice upon the effected persons or entities at
least thirty (30) days prior to the date of eviction or demolition;
(2) Adequate consultations on the matter of settlement
with the duly designated representatives of the families to be resettled and
the affected communities in the areas where they are to be relocated;
(3) Presence of local government officials or their
representatives during eviction or demolition;
(4) Proper identification of all persons taking part in
the demolition;
(5) Execution of eviction or demolition only during
regular office hours from Mondays to Fridays and during good weather, unless
the affected families consent otherwise;
(6) No use of heavy equipment for demolition except for
structures that are permanent and of concrete materials;
(7) Proper uniforms for members of the Philippine
National Police who shall occupy the first line of law enforcement and observe
proper disturbance control procedures; and
(8) Adequate relocation, whether temporary or permanent:
Provided, however, That in cases of eviction and demolition pursuant to a court
order involving underprivileged and homeless citizens, relocation shall be
undertaken by the local government unit concerned and the National Housing
Authority with the assistance of other government agencies within forty-five
(45) days from service of notice of final judgment by the court, after which
period the said order shall be executed: Provided, further, That should
relocation not be possible within the said period, financial assistance in the
amount equivalent to the prevailing minimum daily wage multiplied by sixty (60)
days shall be extended to the affected families by the local government unit
concerned.
This Department of the Interior and Local Government and the Housing
and Urban Development Coordinating Council shall jointly promulgate the
necessary rules and regulations to carry out the above provision.
Section 29
Resettlement
Within two (2) years from the effectivity of this Act, the local
government units, in coordination with the National Housing Authority, shall
implement the relocation and resettlement of persons living in danger areas
such as esteros, railroad tracks, garbage dumps, riverbanks, shorelines,
waterways, and in other public places as sidewalks, roads, parks, and
playgrounds. The local government unit, in coordination with the National
Housing Authority, shall provide relocation or resettlement sites with basic services
and facilities and access to employment and livelihood opportunities sufficient
to meet the basic needs of the affected families.
Section 30
Prohibition against New
Illegal Structures
It shall be unlawful for any person to construct any structure in areas
mentioned in the preceding section.
After the effectivity of this Act, the barangay, municipal or city
government units shall prevent the construction of any kind of illegal dwelling
units of structures within their respective localities. The head of any local
government unit concerned who allows, abets or otherwise tolerates the
construction of any structure in violation of this section shall be liable to
administrative sanctions under existing laws and to penal sanctions provided for
in this Act.
Section 31
Definition
The Community Mortgage Program (CMP) is a mortgage financing program of
the National Home Mortgage Finance Corporation which assists legally organized
associations of underprivileged and homeless citizens to purchase and develop a
tract of land under the concept of community ownership. The primary objective
of the program is to assist residents of blighted or depressed areas to own the
lots they occupy, or where they choose to relocate to, and eventually improve
their neighborhood and homes to the extent of their affordability.
Section 32
Incentives
To encourage its wider implementation, participants in the CMP shall be
granted with the following privileges or incentives:
(a) Government-owned or -controlled corporations and
local government units, may dispose of their idle lands suitable for socialized
housing under the CMP through negotiable sale at prices based on acquisition
cost plus financial carrying costs;
(b) Properties sold under the CMP shall be exempted from
the capital gains tax; and
(c) Beneficiaries under the CMP shall not be evicted nor
dispossessed of their lands or improvements unless they have incurred
arrangements in payments of amortizations for three (3) months.
Section 33
Organization of Beneficiaries
Beneficiaries of the Program shall be responsible for their
organization into associations to manage their subdivisions or places of
residence, to secure housing loans under existing Community Mortgage Program
and such other projects beneficiaries to them. Subject to such rules and
regulations to be promulgated by the National Home Mortgage Finance
Corporation, associations organized pursuant to this Act may collectively
acquire and own lands covered by this Program. Where the beneficiaries fail to
form an association by and among themselves, the National Home Mortgage Finance
Corporation shall initiate the organization of the same in coordination with
the Presidential Commission for the Urban Poor and the local government units
concerned. No person who is not a bona fide resident of the area shall be a
member or officer of such association.
Section 34
Promotion of Indigenous
Housing Materials and Technologies
The local government units, in cooperation with the National Housing
Authority, Technology and Livelihood Resource Center, and other concerned
agencies, shall promote the production and use of indigenous, alternative, and
low-cost construction materials and technologies for socialized housing.
Section 35
Transport System
The local government units, in coordination with the Departments of
Transportation and Communications, Budget and Management, Trade and Industry,
Finance, and Public Works and Highways, the Home Insurance Guaranty
Corporation, and other concerned government agencies, shall device a set of
mechanisms including incentives to the private sector so that a viable
transport system shall evolve and develop in the urban areas. It shall also
formulate standards designed to attain these objectives:
(a)
Smooth flow of traffic;
(b)
Safety and convenience of travel;
(c)
Minimum use of land space;
(d)
Minimum damage to the physical environment; and
(e)
Adequate and efficient transport service to the
people and goods at minimum cost.
Section 36
Ecological Balance
The local government units shall coordinate with the Department of
Environment and Natural Resources in taking measures that will plan and
regulate urban activities for the conservation and protection of vital, unique
and sensitive ecosystems, scenic landscapes, cultural sites and other similar
resource areas.
To make the implementation of this function more effective, the active
participation of the citizenry in environmental rehabilitation and in
decision-making process shall be promoted and encouraged. The local government
units shall recommend to the Environmental and Management Bureau the immediate
closure of factories, mines and transport companies which are found to be
causing massive pollution.
Section 37
Population Movements
The local government units shall set up an effective mechanism,
together with the appropriate agencies like the Population Commission, the
National Economic and Development Authority and the National Statistics Office,
to monitor trends in the movements of population from rural to urban, urban to urban,
and urban to rural areas. They shall identify measures by which such movements
can be influenced to achieve balance between urban capabilities and population,
to direct appropriate segments of the population into areas where they can have
access to opportunities to improve their lives and to contribute to national
growth and recommend proposed legislation to Congress, if necessary.
The Population Commission, the National Economic and Development
Authority, and the National Statistics Office shall likewise provided advanced
planning information to national and local government planners on population
projections and the consequent level of services needed in particular urban and
urbanizable areas. This service will include early-warning systems on expected
dysfunctions in a particular urban area due to population increases, decreases,
or age structure changes.
Section 38
Urban-rural Interdependence
To minimize rural to urban migration and pursue urban decentralization,
the local government units shall coordinate with the National Economic and
Development Authority and other government agencies in the formulation of
national development programs that will stimulate economic growth and promote
socioeconomic development in the countryside.
Section 39
Role of Local Government
Units
The local government units shall be charged with the implementation of
this Act in their respective localities, in coordination with the Housing and
Urban Development Coordinating Council, the national housing agencies, the
Presidential Commission for the Urban Poor, the private sector and other
nongovernment organizations.
They shall prepare a comprehensive land use plan for their respective
localities in accordance with the provisions of this Act.
Section 40
Role of Government Housing
Agencies
In addition to their respective existing powers and functions, and
those provided for in this Act, the hereunder mentioned housing agencies shall
perform the following:
(a) The Housing and Urban Development Coordinating
Council shall, through the key housing agencies, provide local government units
with necessary support such as:
(1) Formulation of standards and guidelines as well as
providing technical support in the preparation of town and land use plans;
(2) In coordination with the National Economic and
Development Authority and the National Statistics Office, provide data and
information for forward-planning by the local government units in their areas,
particularly on projections as to the population and development trends in
their localities and the corresponding investment programs needed to provide
appropriate types and levels of infrastructure, utilities, services and land
use patterns; and
(3) Assistance in obtaining funds and other resources
needed in the urban development and housing programs in their areas of
responsibility.
(b) The National Housing Authority, upon request of
local government units, shall provide technical and other forms of assistance
in the implementation of their respective urban development and housing
programs with the objective of augmenting and enhancing local government
capabilities in the provision of housing benefits to their constituents;
(c) The National Home Mortgage Finance Corporation shall
administer the Community Mortgage Program under this Act and promulgate rules
and regulations necessary to carry out the provisions of this Act; and
(d) The Home Insurance Guaranty Corporation shall design
an appropriate guarantee scheme to encourage financial institutions to go into
direct lending for housing.
Section 41
Annual Report
The Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Council and the local
government units shall submit a detailed annual report with respect to the
implementation of this Act to the President and the Congress of the Republic of
the Philippines.
Section 42
Funding
Funds for the urban development and housing program shall come from the
following sources:
(a) A minimum of fifty percent (50%) from the annual net
income of the Public Estate Authority, to be used by the National Housing
Authority to carry out its programs of land acquisition for resettlement
purposes under this Act;
(b) Proceeds from the disposition of ill-gotten wealth,
not otherwise previously set aside for any other purpose, shall be applied to
the implementation of this Act shall be administered by the National Home
Mortgage Finance Corporation;
(c) Loans, grants, bequests and donations, whether from
local or foreign sources;
(d) Flotation of bonds, subject to the guidelines to be
set by the Monetary Board;
(e) Proceeds from the social housing tax and, subject to
the concurrence of the local government units concerned, idle lands tax as
provided in Section 236 of the Local Government Code of 1991 and other existing
laws;
(f) Proceeds from the date or disposition of alienable
public lands in urban areas; and
(g) Domestic and foreign investment or financing through
appropriate arrangements like the build-operate-and-transfer scheme.
Section 43
Socialized Housing Tax
Consistent with the constitutional principle that the ownership and
enjoyment of property bear a social function and to raise funds for the
Program, all local government units are hereby authorized to impose an
additional one-half percent (0.5%) tax on the assessed value of all lands in
urban areas in excess of Fifty thousand pesos (P50,000).
Section 44
Moratorium on Eviction and
Demolition
There shall be a moratorium on the eviction of all program
beneficiaries and on the demolition of their houses or dwelling units for a
period of three (3) years from the effectivity of this Act: Provided, That the
moratorium shall not apply to those persons who have constructed their
structures after the effectivity of this Act and for cases enumerated in Section
28 hereof.
Section 45
Penalty Clause
Any person who violates any provision of this Act shall be imposed the
penalty of not more than six (6) years of imprisonment or a fine of not less
than Five thousand pesos (P5,000) but not more than One hundred thousand pesos
(P100,000), or both, at the discretion of the court: Provided, That, if the
offender is a corporation, partnership, association or other juridical entity,
the penalty shall be imposed on the officer or officers of said corporation,
partnership, association or juridical entity who caused the violation.
Section 46
Appropriations
The amount necessary to carry out the purposes of this Act shall be
included in the annual budget of implementing agencies in the General
Appropriations Act of the year following its enactment into law and every year
thereafter.
Section 47
Separability Clause
If for any reason, any provision of this Act shall be included in the
annual budget of implementing agencies in the General Appropriations Act of the
year following its enactment into law and every year thereafter.
Section 48
Repealing Clause
All laws, decrees, executive orders, proclamations, rules and
regulations, and other issuances, or parts thereof which are inconsistent with
the provisions of this Act, are hereby repealed or modified accordingly.
Section 49
Effectivity Clause
This Act shall take effect upon its publication in at least two (2)
national newspapers of general circulation.
Approved:
March 24, 1992
March 24, 1992
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