MANILA, Philippines – Malabon Mayor Jeannie Sandoval assured her constituents on Thursday that the local government struck a deal with the management of the sanitary landfil in Rodriguez, Rizal which allowed the city to dump its trash there after the landfill in Navotas closed down.
“I am now reassuring my constituents that there is no need to worry that we can experience possible garbage crisis in the city after the closure of the Navotas sanitary landfill where Malabon dumps its trash,” Sandoval said.
“We have anticipated its closure and we were able to find a quick solution by closing a deal with the Rodriguez sanitary landfill in Rizal and we trust our private haulers to carry out the tasks,” Sandoval told The Manila Times., This news data comes from:http://ktg.ycyzqzxyh.com

City Administrator Alexander Rosete, in a separate interview, said Malabon has its own transfer station where the garbage collected all over the city was hauled by several big trucks before its disposal into the Rizal landfill.
Malabon shifts garbage disposal to Rizal landfill after Navotas closure
“We make it clear that the new system would not give any additional cost to the city coffers as it is part of the city government’s contract with the private haulers,” Rosete said.
The two top city officials then appealed to residents to cooperate with the local government in its clean and green program by doing their share of practicing segregation and not wantonly throwing garbage elsewhere.
- Nepal to block unregistered social media platforms – govt
- Modi: India, Japan to 'shape the Asian century'
- Chery Tiggo survives Creamline in cardiac five-setter in PVL Invitationals
- Remulla pledges transparency and impartiality as Ombudsman
- DPWH engineer in bribery scandal placed under preventive suspension
- DPWH exec asked lawmaker to make budget insertions — Lacson
- 100K Pakistanis flee amid flood threat
- France seized by fears of new political crisis
- HEADLINES: 15 drug war victims cleared to join Duterte's ICC case | Sept. 7, 2025
- Tokyo logs record 10 days of 35 C or higher