VILLASIS, Pangasinan鈥擟ontractors building the stretch of the Tarlac-Pangasinan-La Union Expressway (TPLEx) leading to Urdaneta City have constructed an underpass for a village that protested the loss of its farm-to-market road.
The compromise has helped expedite the project鈥檚 completion, in time for a scheduled December opening.
In October, farmers of Barangay (village) Lipay objected when the expressway crossed their farm road, which had denied them easy access to the Villasis-Asingan national road in Barangay San Blas. The national road leads straight to the town center.
Last week, TPLEx contractors informed the Lipay residents that they began constructing an underpass beside TPLEx to open a new route to the town market, said Andres Borja, one of the residents.
鈥淭hey told us that the tunnel will be 4.2 meters high and 2.1 meters wide,鈥 said Borja.
He said it wasn鈥檛 the best option for the farmers. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 barely enough for tricycles and small cars to pass through. But how about vans and bigger vehicles? We had wanted a wider passageway. Anyway, this is better than closing the road,鈥 he said.
Eustaquio Reotutar, a former village council member, complained that the tunnel was designed as a spillway.
Construction of this TPLEx section that links Rosales town to Urdaneta City has been in full swing since September, following the completion of a viaduct across the Agno River.
TPLEx officials announced that the Urdaneta City exit of the expressway would open in December. When completed, the expressway will stretch to Rosario town, La Union province. Travel time from Balintawak to Rosario will be only two hours, said Mark Dumol, president of Private Infrastructure Development Corp., a subsidiary of San Miguel Corp.
He said TPLEx cost about P24 billion. The government shouldered P3 billion in building TPLEx鈥檚 last stretch, from Urdaneta to La Union, which Dumol described as commercially not viable.
鈥淭hat [stretch] has light traffic. The government asked us to build it but they will give us a subsidy for that,鈥 he said.鈥Gabriel Cardinoza, Inquirer Northern Luzon