Pd 705 revised code pdf

Continue MALACASANGM n i l PRESIDENT OF THE WORLD No. 19 May 19, 1975 REVISING PRESIDENTIAL DECREE No. 389, Otherwise, THE GOOD OF THE FORESTRY REFORM CODE OF THE PHILIPPINES, the proper classification, management and use of public domain lands to maximize their productivity to meet the needs of our growing population is urgently needed; To achieve the above goal, it is necessary to re-evaluate the many uses of forest land and resources before allowing any use of them to optimize the benefits that can be derived from them; There is also a need to pay special attention not only to their use, but also to the protection, restoration and development of forest land in order to ensure the continuity of their productive status; CURRENT laws and regulations governing forest land are not responsive enough to support refocused government programmes, projects and efforts to properly classify and delimit the public domain, as well as to manage, use, protect, restore and develop forest land; Now, SO, I, FERDINAND E. MARCOS, President of the Philippines, by virtue of the powers vested in me by the Constitution, are now reviewing Presidential Decree No. 389 read as follows: Section 1. The name of this Code. The decree should be known as the Revised Forest Code of the Philippines. Section 2. Policy. The State is now adopting the following policy: (a) the reuse of forest land should be focused on the country's development and progress needs, the development of science and technology and public welfare; The classification and survey of land should be organized and accelerated; The establishment of a woodworking plant should be encouraged and streamlined; and (d) the protection, development and rehabilitation of forest land should be emphasized in order to ensure that they are productive. Section 3. Definition. (a) Public forest is a mass of public domain lands that are not subject to the current classification system to determine which land is needed for forest purposes and which are not. (b) Permanent forest or forest reserves are public domain lands that are subject to the current classification system and are found to be necessary for forest purposes. (c) Foreign and disposable land are land that are in the public domain and are the subject of the current classification system and are declared unnecessary for forest purposes. (d) Forest land includes public forest, permanent forest or forest reserves and forest reserves. (e) Pasture land is a public domain that has been allocated because of the suitability of its topography and vegetation to enhance Livestock. (f) Mineral land is a public domain that has been classified as such by the Minister of Natural Resources in accordance with established and approved criteria, guidelines and procedures. (g) Reservations regarding forests relate to forest land reserved by the President of the Philippines for any specific purpose or purpose. (h) The National Park belongs to the forest reserve, essentially primitive or wild, which has been withdrawn from the settlement or residence and is allocated as such solely for the preservation of landscapes, natural and historical sites and wildlife or plants in them, and to ensure that these functions are carried out in a way that leaves them unsto lifeless for future generations. (i) The bird sanctuary or bird sanctuary belongs to forest land designed to protect against the catching of animals, birds and fish, and closed to hunting and fishing so that excess populations can flow and replenish the surrounding areas. (j) Marine parks are a coastal area inhabited by rare and unique species of marine life. (k) The seaside park belongs to any coastal area delimited for outdoor recreation, sport fishing, water skiing and related recreational activities. (l) The reserve of catchments is a forest reserve designed to protect or improve their yields or reduce deposition. (m) The watershed is a land area drained by a creek or a fixed body of water, and its tributaries have a common outlet for surface runoff. (n) The critical watershed is the drainage zone of the river system, supporting existing and proposed hydroelectric power plants and irrigation works in need of immediate rehabilitation, as it is rapidly denuded, causing accelerated erosion and devastating flooding. It is closed from until fully restored. (o) Mangroves are a term applied to the type of forest that originate on tidal plains along the sea coast, stretching along streams where the water is brackish. (p) Kaingin is part of forest, occupied or not, that is displaced and/or permanently planted and incinerated, which is virtually non-existent to prevent soil erosion. (q) Forest product means wood, pulp, wood, bark, tree top, resin, gum, wood, oil, honey, beeswax, nipu, rattan or other forest resources such as grass, shrub and flowering plant, associated water, fish, game, scenic, historical, recreational and geological resources in forest lands. (r) The Forest of Dipterocarp is a forest dominated by dipterocarp trees such as red lauan, tengil, white lauan, almon, baghtican and canapis of the Philippine mahogany group, apitong and yakala. (s) Pine Forest is a forest made up of Benge pine trees in the mountainous provinces or Mindoro pine trees in mindoro and zambales provinces. t) Industrial tree tree it is any area of forest land specifically and widely planted for forest crops, mainly to supply the raw materials needs of existing or proposed processing plants and related industries. (u) The woodworking farm belongs to any area of forest land specially and widely planted on trees of economic value for their fruits, flowers, leaves, barking or extracting, but not for their wood. (v) Reuse is a concerted use of numerous useful uses of land use, soil, water, wildlife, recreational value, grass and forest wood. (w) Selective felling means the systematic removal of mature, over mature and defective trees in a way that leaves enough and healthy residual trees the desired species needed to ensure future wood harvest and forest cover to protect and preserve soil and water. (x) The seed tree system is a partial felling with seed trees left to regenerate the area. (y) Healthy residual sound or slightly damaged tree commercial species left over from logging. Sustainable crop management involves continuous or periodic production of forest products in the working unit by achieving an approximate balance between growth and harvest or use as soon as possible. This generally applies to commercial forest resources, as well as water, grass, wildlife and other renewable forest resources. (a) I am not a processing plant - it is any mechanical installation, machine or combination of machines used to process logs and other forest raw materials in lumber, veneer, plywood, wall board, block boards, paper board, pulp, paper or other finished wood. No, no, no. Rent is a privilege granted by the state to a person for occupation and ownership, subject to a specific lease, any public domain forest land for any permitted activity in it. cc) The license is a privilege granted by the state to a person to use forest resources as on any forest land, without any right to occupation and possession for the same time, except for other persons, or the establishment and operation of a tree processing plant any activity related to the use of any forest resources. (dd) A licensing agreement is a privilege granted by a State to a person to use forest resources within any forest land with the right of ownership and occupation, except for others except the Government, but with an appropriate obligation to develop, protect and restore the same in accordance with the terms set out in the agreement. The permit is short-term or the right granted by a State to a person to use any limited forest resources or to carry out limited activities with any forest land without any right to occupy and own them. No, no, no. Annual permissible incision incision volume of materials, whether wood or other forest products, which are allowed to be cut out of the forest regularly. I couldn't. The reduction cycle is the number of years between large yields in the same working unit and/or region as part of the rotation. (hh) I do not see The Ecosystem means that the environmental community is treated together with non-mimic factors and the environment as a unit. Sylvia is the creation, reproduction and care of forest trees. (JJ) I'm not a rationalization - it's an organization of business or industry using principles of business management and simplified procedures to improve efficiency. I'm not her. A forest official means any official or staff member of the Bureau who, in accordance with the nature of his appointment or the function of the position to which he is appointed, is delegated by law or the competent authority to comply, implement or enforce the provisions of this Code, other relevant laws, and implement them. The Primitive Tribe is a group of endemic tribes living primitively as a separate part of the people from the common ancestor. mm) Private law means or refers to titled property rights under applicable law and, in the case of primitive tribes, to property rights existing at the time of issuing a licence under the Code, which may include abode and worship, burial grounds and old clearings, but excludes forest production, including prepared areas, commercial forests and established plantations of forest trees and trees of economic value. No, no, no. The person includes both a natural and a legal entity. CHAPTER IORGANIZATION AND JURISDICTION BUREAU SECTION 4. Creation and unification of all forestry agencies in the Bureau of Forest Development. In order to implement the provisions of this Code, the Bureau of Forestry, the Authority, the Reforestation Project in southern Cebu and the Parks and Wildlife Authority, including the relevant appropriations, documentation, equipment, property and personnel that may be required, are integrated into a single agency known as the Bureau of Forest Development, called the Bureau of Forest Development. Section 5. Judicial jurisdiction of the Bureau. The Bureau has jurisdiction and authority over all forest land, grazing land and all forest reserves, including catchment reserves, which are currently managed by other government agencies or instrumental agencies. It is responsible for the protection, development, management, regeneration and reforestation of forest land; regulation and supervision of the operation of licensees, persons, facilitators and persons allowed to receive or use forest products in them, or for their Or use Reuse and sustainable management of forest harvests; protection, development and conservation of national parks, marine marine Game shelters and wildlife; implementation of measures and programmes to prevent caining and managed harvesting of forest and grazing land; In cooperation with other bureaus, an effective, effective and economic classification of public domain lands; and enforcing forestry, reforestation, parks, games and wildlife laws, regulations and regulations. The Bureau regulates the creation and operation of sawmills, veneers and plywood plants and other woodworking plants and conducts research on domestic and global forest markets. Section 6. Director and Assistant Director and their qualifications. The Bureau is headed by a Director assisted by one or more assistant directors. Director and Assistant Directors are appointed by the President. No person may be appointed Director or Assistant Director of the Bureau unless he is a Philippine citizen, at least 30 years old, with at least a bachelor's degree in forestry or its equivalent and a registered . Section 7. Surveillance and control. The Bureau is directly under the control and control of the Secretary of the Department of Natural Resources, who is called the head of the department. Section 8. Reviews. All actions and decisions of the Director are subject to review, motu propio or on appeal of any aggrieved person, the head of the Department, whose decision must be final and executive after thirty (30) days after the aggrieved party receives this decision, if it is not appealed by the President in accordance with Executive Decree No. 19, series 1966. The decision of the head of the Department cannot be considered by the courts, except in a special civil suit against certiorari or a ban. Section 9. Rules and regulations. The Head of the Department, on the recommendation of the Director of Forest Development, will make public the rules and regulations necessary to effectively implement the provisions of this Code. Section 10. Creation of functional departments, regional and district offices. All positions in the combined agencies are considered vacant. Current tenants may be appointed in accordance with the staffing scheme or the organization's plan, which must be prepared by the Director and approved by the head of the Department. Any appointee who fails to enter the service under the approved plan within thirty (30) days of receipt of the notice shall be considered to have been rejected at the appointment, in which case the position may be submitted by any other qualified applicant. In order to effectively and effectively implement the Bureau's programme, the following departments and sections are created: departments and planning for divisionsSections; Performance assessment Forest economy; AnalysisData management and information. Administrative Services. Reforestation and icing department; Planting stocks; Plantation management. Timber Management, Data and Mapping; Sulviculture; Wood inventory - photo-interpretation; Timber management plans; Land classification. Department of UseTumber Operations; Land use; Use. Forest protection and infrastructure protection; Forest EmploymentUms; Watershed management; Infrastructure. Parks, Wildlife Department Parks Management; Rest management; Wildlife Management; Control of the range. Department of Security and Intelligence Forest Training Center Technical Training; Inaccurate preparation. The Head of the Department may, on the recommendation of the Director, reorganize or establish other units, sections of units that may be deemed necessary, and appoint staff there: provided that a staff member appointed or appointed in charge of a newly established unit, a unit or an existing vacancy with a higher salary, must be received from the date of such appointment or appointment until he is replaced or returned to his original post. , the salary corresponding to the temporary position he held. At least eleven regional offices should be established. In each region, there should be as many forest districts as possible, in accordance with the area of forest land, the loads, the need for forest protection, fire prevention and other factors, the provisions of any law to the contrary, despite: provided that the boundaries of such areas should follow the natural boundaries of catchments as far as possible in accordance with the concept of river basin management. Section 11. Workforce development. The Bureau should establish and operate a training centre without work in order to improve the skills and training of its staff and new staff. The Bureau also provides adequate funds to provide staff with special education and training at local or foreign colleges or institutions. Section 12. Performance assessment. The Bureau is developing a system to be approved by the head of the Department to assess the performance of its staff. The system should measure performance in a quantitative and qualitative way to the funded programme of work entrusted to each organizational unit. The system of periodic inspection of district offices by regional offices and regional and district offices by the Central Office is included both in functional areas and in the overall assessment of how each administrative unit implements laws, regulations, policies, programmes and practices related to such a unit. The evaluation system should provide the information you need to progress reports and the determination of civil service bonuses for staff training and referral or disciplinary action. Measures. IICLASSIFICATION AND SURVEY Section 13. Land classification system. The head of the Department studies, develops, defines and prescribes criteria, guidelines and methods for the proper and accurate classification and survey of all public domain lands in agricultural, industrial or commercial, residential, resettlement, mineral, forest or forest land, as well as in other classes, as now or may subsequently be provided by law, rules and regulations. At the same time, the head of the Department simplifies, with the help of the Bureau's inter-bureau, the current system of determining which of the unclassified public domain lands are needed for forest purposes, and declares them permanent forests for the formation of forest reserves. It identifies those who are classified and determined not to be necessary for forest purposes as foreign and disposable land, administrative jurisdiction and management to be transferred to the Bureau of Lands: Provided that mangroves and other marshes not necessary to protect the shore and suitable for the purposes of the fish pond must be released, and be placed under administrative jurisdiction and management, the Bureau of Fisheries and Water Resources. Those that have yet to be classified under the current system remain part of the public forest. Section 14. Existing grazing leases and permits in forested areas. Forest land that has been the subject of land leases and permits continues to be classified as forest land until it is classified as grazing land in accordance with the criteria, guidelines and classification methods to be prescribed by the head of the Department, provided that the administration, management and management of grazing land remain in the possession of the Bureau. Section 15. Topography. No public domain land eighteen percent (18%) in inclination or over should be classified as alien and disposable, nor any forest land fifty percent (50%) in a slope or more like pastures. Land eighteen percent (18%) in inclination or over which have already been declared alien and disposable must be returned to the classification of forest lands by the head of the Department to become part of forest reserves, if they are already covered by existing names or approved public land applications, or actually occupied openly, continuously, negatively and publicly for at least thirty (30) years from the validity of this Code, where the tenant is entitled to a free patent under the Public Lands Act : Provided that said the land, which is not yet part of the established communities, should be kept in a vegetative state sufficient to prevent erosion and adverse effects on lowlands and streams: Provided further that, Public Interest so requires steps to be taken for expropriation, cancel defective titles, reject a government land application, or expel tenants from them. Section Section Areas needed for forest purposes. The following lands, even if they are below 18% (18%) in the slopes required for forest purposes, and therefore cannot be classified as alien and disposable land, wit: 1. Areas of less than 250 hectares that are far from, or are not related to, any certified alien and disposable land; 2. Isolated areas of forest with at least five (5) hectares of rocky terrain or that protect the source for community use; Areas that have already been cut down; 4. Areas under forest concessions that are timber or have good residual reserves to support an existing or approved timber processing plant; 5. The peaks of the ridges and plateaus, regardless of their size, are located in the forestlands where the main waters emanate, or are completely or partially surrounded by them; Properly positioned roads or roads; 7. Twenty-metre strips of land along the edge of the usual high line of rivers and streams with canals at least five (5) metres wide; 8. strips of mangroves or marshes at least twenty (20) meters wide, along coastlines facing oceans, lakes and other reservoirs, and strips of land at least twenty (20) meters wide overlooking lakes; 9. Areas needed for other purposes, such as national parks, national historic sites, nature reserves and wildlife sanctuaries, forest sites and others of public interest; and 10. Areas previously proclaimed by the President as forest reserves, national parks, bird sanctuaries, national shrines, national historical sites: Provided that if the area falling under any of the above categories, will be named in favor of any person, if required by the public interest to say that the name is canceled or changed, or the named area is expropriated. Section 17. Setting the boundaries of forest land. All boundaries between permanent forests and alien and disposable lands must be clearly marked and preserved on land, with infrastructure or roads, or concrete monuments at intervals of no more than five hundred (500) meters in accordance with established procedures and standards, or any other visible and feasible signs to ensure forest protection. Section 18. Reservations of woodland and offshore areas. The President of the Philippines can create within any land of the public domain, a forest reserve and a forest reserve reservation for the system of national parks, for conservation as a major catchment or for any other purpose and to change the boundaries of existing ones. The head of the Department can reserve and establish any part of the state forest or forest reserve as a site or experimental forest for use in the Forestry Institute. When the public interest requires it, any offshore zone necessary to preserve and protect its educational, scientific, historical, environmental and recreational values of values marine life found in it should be created as marine parks. CHAPTER IIIUTILIZATION AND MANAGEMENT Section 19. Reuse. Numerous useful uses of wood, land, soil, water, wildlife, recreational value and grass forest land must be assessed and weighed before allowing the use, exploitation, occupation or ownership of them. without harm or with the least damage to its other resources. All forest reserves may be open for use, not contrary to the main objectives of the reservation: provided that critical catchments and national parks are not subject to logging operations. Section 20. Licensing agreement, license, lease or permit. No person may use, operate, occupy, own or conduct any activity on any forest land, or establish and operate any woodworking plant unless he has been authorized to do so in accordance with a licensing agreement, lease, license or permit. Section 21. Sustainable harvest. All measures are being taken to achieve an approximate balance between growth and harvest or the use of forest products in forest land. A. TIMBER Section 22. Sylviacultural and harvesting systems. Appropriate silviculture and harvesting systems should be practiced in any logging operations in forested forests to contribute to an optimal sustainable harvest. (a) Selective deforestation is practiced in dipterocarrp forests. (b) A planting seed system will be developed for the pine forest if necessary. (c) Other forest species are subject to a silviculture and harvesting system that will be deemed suitable for research. At the same time, a system based on observation and practice abroad could be adopted at an early stage. Any system practiced can be modified or modified based on research. Section 23. Wood inventory. The Bureau runs a programme of progressive inventories for timber and young trees on all forest land, whether covered by any licensing agreement, license, lease or permit, or not, up to one hundred per cent (100 per cent) of the total. Wood inventory has been achieved. Section 24. Necessary stocks before the use of wood in forest land. It is not allowed to harvest wood on any forest land, if it has not been the subject of at least five per cent (5%) wood inventory, or any reasonable wood assessments made no earlier than five (5) years prior to the issuance of a license agreement or license allowing such use. Section 25. The cutting cycle. The Bureau applies a scientific cycle of cutting and rotation to all land, given the age, volume and appearance of healthy residual trees that can be left untouched and intact for the future harvest and forest cover of the indipterocarp area, as well as seed trees and reproduction in pine areas. Section 26. Annual permissible cut. The annual permissible log cabin of any specific forest land is determined on the basis of the established cycle of rotation and felling, as well as the volume and type of harvesting of wood and healthy residues, seed trees and reproduction found in them. Section 27. The validity of the license agreement or license for timber harvesting on forest land. The duration of the privilege of harvesting wood on a forest land in accordance with a license agreement or license is established and determined in accordance with the annual permissible reduction in them, established by the logging cycle, the yield capacity of harvested wood and the capacity of healthy residues for the second growth. The privilege is automatically terminated, even before the license agreement expires, at the time when timber harvesting has been used without leaving any registered area capable of commercial use. The maximum duration of any privilege of harvesting wood is 25 (25) years, renewable for a period not exceeding 25 (25) years, required for the use of all remaining commercial quantities or harvested wood, either from an unfinished or area. The condition of the continued privilege of harvesting wood in accordance with any license or license agreement is that the licensee has tried all the sites that are determined by the Bureau. Section 28. The size of forest concessions. Forest land should not be held indefinitely. The size of the forest land that may be the subject of timber should be limited to those that a person can effectively use and develop over a period of fifty (50) years, taking into account the logging cycle, the applicant's past performance and his ability not only to use but, more importantly, to protect and manage the entire area, as well as the needs of processing plants existing or established in the region. Forest concessions that have been consolidated should be reviewed and re-evaluated to effectively protect, reforest and manage them in accordance with the concepts of reusability and sustainable harvesting, as well as for locally processed forest resources. B. WOOD-PROCESSING Section 29. Incentives for the woodworking industry. The head of the Department, in collaboration with other government agencies and forestry associations and other private organizations in the country, develop incentives to create an integrated wood industry specifically centers of the timber industry and/or the economic sector. Philippine President, on recommendations The Office of Economic Development and the head of the department may establish timber import and export centres in selected locations: provided that the logs imported for such centres are subject to the precaution that can be introduced by the Bureau in cooperation with appropriate government agencies to prevent pests, insects and/or diseases that damage forests. Section 30. Rationalization of the wood industry. While the establishment of woodworking plants should be encouraged, their location and activities should be regulated in order to streamline the industry. A new processing plant cannot be established until sufficient raw materials are available in the area from which the raw materials will come from. The head of the department may cancel, suspend or phase out all unprofitable woodworking plants that do not respond to the government's rationalization program. Section 31. Wood waste, trees and residues. Wood licensees are encouraged and assisted in collecting and saving wood waste and trees using wood in their concessions, as well as those with processing plants, wood residues, for use and conversion into wood pads and derivatives. Section 32. Production and processing of magazines. If, on the recommendation of the National Economic Development Directorate on the recommendation of the National Directorate of Economic Development on the recommendation of the President, all magazine products will not be processed by all licensees at the local level. A licensee that does not have a processing plant may, subject to the Approval of the Director, enter into a contract with a woodworker to process his logs. Wood processors only accept logs that are cut down or purchased from licensees with good work while cutting logs. C. Section 33-O LESE. Forest land to be cut down. The following should be passed and covered with suitable and sufficient trees to make wit: (a) Bare or grass-covered areas of forest land, at least fifty percent (50%) of the forest land. Slope; (b) Bare or grass-covered areas of forest land with less than 50% (50%) slope, but with soil so strongly eroded to make the grass cover insufficient to control soil erosion; (c) Brushes or areas of forest land are usually brushed, which need to be developed to increase their productivity; (d) Open areas of forest with slopes or gradients tend to exceed 50% (50%), interspersed with areas of forest, each of which is less than two hundred and fifty (250) hectares; (e) derud or insufficient timber, proclaimed by the President as forest reserves and reserves as important catchments, national parks, reserves for national shrines, national historical monuments; Under-supplied forest land under forest concessions; (g) Parts of areas covered by pasture leases or permits slope of at least fifty percent (50%); and (h) river banks, easements, road rights on paths, deltas, marshes, former riverbeds and beaches. Section 34. Industrial tree plantations and tree farms. no more than 25 (25) years, for the creation of an industrial plantation of trees or tree farms can be provided by the Head of the Department on the recommendation of the Director to any person qualified for the development and exploitation of natural resources over the forest or forest lands of the public domain, classified as section 33 of this section, with a minimum area of a thousand hectares (1000 hectares) hectares for industrial plantations trees and one hundred (100) hectares for a woodworking farm; provided that the size of the area that can be provided for each category, in each case depends on the ability of the tenant to develop or convert the area into a productive state during the lease term; provided except that rentals are not available in critical catchments. Scattered areas of less than a hundred (100) hectares can each be leased to create woodworking farms to various qualified individuals, showing that if they are developed as an integrated unit, these areas can be economically exploited: provided that the condition of the lease is the organization of such persons in a cooperative to ensure the orderly management of them. Rents may be provided under conditions such as the head of the Department may prescribe, in particular, the need for raw materials for the forest industry and maintaining a healthy environmental balance. Government reforestation projects, or parts of them that local assessments would be considered more appropriate or could be better developed as industrial plantations of trees or tree farms in terms of benefits to the Government and the environment in general, could be leased under this section. Section 35. Priority. For any suitable area covered by a timber licence agreement or a grazing or permit agreement, priority is given to the owner in the establishment of an industrial forest plantation or tree farm. However, the priority given must be used within a reasonable period of time to be determined by the head of the Department, otherwise the area is declared open to any qualified person and therefore separated from the owner's area. Section 36. Incentives. In order to encourage qualified professionals to participate in industrial tree plantations and/or to grow trees, the following incentives are provided: (a) a nominal application fee of 50 cents (P0.50) per hectare; (b) Rentals cannot be collected within the first five (5) From the day of the lease; from the sixth to the tenth year, the annual rental value is 50 cents (P0.50) per hectare; And and annual rent is one peso (P1.00) per hectare: Provided that tenants of plots long billed as certified by the Director and approved by the head of the Department are exempt from paying the rent for the full term of the lease, which must not exceed 25 (25) years; for the first five (5) years after the lease extension, the annual rental value is 50 cents (P0.50) per hectare; and after that, the annual rental value is one peso (P1.00) per hectare. (c) A must pay forest fees for wood and other forest products grown and cut down or harvested on an industrial tree plantation or farm equivalent to six per cent (6 per cent) of the forest. Current market value (d) The sale of seedlings and free technical advice and assistance to individuals who will develop their private land on industrial tree plantations or tree farms; (e) Exemption from interest tax levied under Section V of the National Tax Code, where timber and forest products are sold, exchanged or exchanged less or not; (f) The Investment Board, despite its requirement for citizenship for natural resource projects, classifies industrial tree plantations and tree farms as the main investment areas in accordance with its annual priority plan, which will be governed by the Council's rules and regulations. Fewer industrial plantations of trees or tree farms can either apply to the Investment Board for tax and other benefits in this case, or take advantage of the following benefits: 1. Amounts spent less in the development and operation of an industrial tree plantation or tree farm before the time when the state of production is achieved, can, according to the version said lessee, be considered as ordinary and necessary business expenses or as capital expenditures; and 2. Deduction from the investor's taxable income for the year, an annual investment allowance equivalent to thirty-three and one-third %(33-1/3%) of the company. its actual investment during the year in an industrial plantation of trees or tree farms: Provided that such investments should not be withdrawn for at least ten (10) years from the date of investment: Provided further, that if the investment is withdrawn during this period, the tax is equivalent to double the amount of the total income tax rebate as a result of the investment allowance paid as a lump sum in addition to the income tax to be paid. (g) Unless the public interest requires change or change, the boundaries of the area covered by an industrial tree plantation or the lease of a tree farm, once established on land, should not change or change; and (h) Maverick is not subject to any prescribed or stemming from The National Tax Code on the retention of the tax at the source on interest paid on loans incurred for the development and operation of industrial plantations of trees or woodworkers. The head of the Department may provide other incentives in addition to those provided to promote industrial plantations of trees and woodworking in special areas, such as, but not limited to, those where there are no roads or where roads are inadequate, or areas with rough topography and remote areas far from processing plants. All amounts collected under this section are accrued to the Bureau's special field used to reforestation of critical catchments or degraded areas and other development activities, beyond the general appropriations of the Bureau. D. FOREST PROTECTION Section 37. Protect all resources. All measures are being taken to protect forest resources from destruction, depreciation and depletion. Section 38. Control of the concession zone. In order to effectively protect forest land and their resources from smuggling, illegal occupation, caining, fire, insect infestation, theft and other forms of forest destruction, the use of wood in them is not permitted, except in licensing agreements under which their owners have the exclusive privilege of cutting down all permitted timber harvesting in their respective concessions. and the additional right of occupation, ownership and control over the same, in exceptional all others except the government, but with an appropriate obligation to take all protection and preservation measures to ensure the continuity of the productive state of these areas, appropriate with repeated use and sustainable exit management. If the owner of the forest licence agreement expressly or implying waives the privilege of using any type of conifer, hardwood or mangroves in them, the license may be issued to another person for harvest without any right of ownership or occupation over the areas where they are found, but he must also take protection and conservation measures in accordance with those accepted by the owner of the license agreement in those areas. Section 39. Regulation of wood use in all other classes of land and wood processing industry. The use of timber on foreign and disposable land, private land, civil reservations and all land containing standing or felled wood, including under the jurisdiction of other government agencies, as well as the establishment and operation of sawmills and other timber processing plants, is regulated in order to prevent their use as shelters for excessive and unauthorized harvesting of forest land, and therefore is not permitted, excluding a license agreement, license, lease or permit. Section 40. Wood Woods in other lands containing standing or felling wood. The bureau spends 100% (100%) inventory of wood on alien and disposable land and civil reservations immediately after their classification or reservation. Standing or felled wood is not permitted on foreign and disposable land, private land, civil reservations and all other land, including land under the jurisdiction of other public institutions, unless one hundred per cent (100 per cent) is allowed. There was an inventory of wood. Section 41. Sworn wood inventory reports. All reports on forest timber reserves, alien and disposable land, private land, civil reservations and all land containing standing or felled wood must be signed and sworn in by all loggers who did the same. Section 42. Participation in the development of alien and disposable lands and civil reservations. The privilege of harvesting timber on alien and disposable land and civilian reservations is granted to those who can best assist in the delineation and development of such areas under the management plan of the relevant Government, which has jurisdiction over the same. The degree of participation depends on the amount of wood that can be harvested from it. Section 43. Swamp and mangrove forests. The mangroves bordering the numerous islands that protect the coastline, coastal roads and even coastal communities from the destructive power of the sea during strong winds and typhoons must be maintained and should not be alienated. Such strips should be preserved from artificial obstruction so that flood water flows freely into the sea to avoid flooding or flooding of cultivated areas in the upper reaches. All mangrove swamps set aside for the protection of the coast are not subject to clear cutting. Mangroves and other marshes dedicated to the Bureau of Fisheries and Water Resources for fish cover that are not used or that have been abandoned within five (5) years of such liberation are being returned to the category of forest land. Section 44. Power for visitors. The Head of the Department may, himself or through the Director or any qualified person duly appointed by the Head of the Department, investigate, verify and examine records, books and other documents relating to the activities of any license agreement holder, license, lease or permit, as well as his subsidiaries or affiliates, to determine compliance with the terms of this, present Code and relevant laws, policies, rules and regulations. Section 45. Control of forest officers. In the line of duty, forestry officers or other government officials or employees who are properly authorized by the supervisor or Departments must have free entry to areas subject to a license license license, lease or permit. Forest officials are authorized to take oaths and to accept official matters relating to the functions of their office, as well as to testify in official investigations conducted under the Code and implementation rules and regulations. Section 46. Scale stations. In cooperation with relevant government agencies, the Bureau is setting up control stations or scaling stations in the respective timber and other timber outlets to ensure that they are legally cut or harvested. Section 47. Mining operations. Mining operations on forest land are regulated and carried out in due course the protection, development and use of other surface resources. The location, exploration, exploration, use or exploitation of mineral resources in forest reserves are governed by mining laws, regulations and regulations. No location, exploration, exploration, use or exploitation of mineral resources in forest concessions is permitted unless proper notification of its licensees is filed and the Director is pre-approved. Mine tailings and other pollutants affecting the health and safety of people, water, fish, vegetation, animal life and other surface resources should be filtered into sil traps or other filtration devices, and only clean exhaust gases and liquids should be released from there. Surface areas must be rebuilt near the former natural configuration or approved by the Director before it is abandoned by the mining concern. Section 48. Reservations of minerals. The Bureau administers forests for mineral reserves that are not the subject of mining operations or where operations are suspended for more than five (5) years. Mineral reserves, where mining has been phased out due to the depletion of its minerals, are re-classified as forest land unless otherwise reserved for other purposes. Section 49. Roads and other infrastructure. Roads and other infrastructure in forest land should be built with the least disruption of the cost of resources. Government agencies constructing roads, bridges, communications and other forest infrastructure and structures coordinate with the Bureau, especially in the case of the use or destruction of timber and/or other forest resources, or the disruption of catchments in them, in order to take measures to prevent or reduce damage or damage to the value of forest resources. They should also assist in the planning and development of roads, berths, berths, port facilities and infrastructure in places designated as woodworking centers, or for the convenience of the woodworking industry. In order to match and comply with government plans, programs, programs, and specifications, holders of licensing agreements, licenses, leases and permits must not build or install roads or infrastructure on forest land without prior permission from the Director or on foreign and disposable land, civil reservations and other public lands without the permission of government agencies with administrative jurisdiction over the same. All roads and infrastructure built by the owners of licensing agreements, licenses, leases and permits are owned by the State, and their use and management are transferred to the state as soon as their construction expires or ceases. Until then, the Bureau may authorize their public use if it does not harm forest conservation measures. Where roads are used by more than one commercial forest management, the Bureau prescribes terms of sharing, including a fair distribution of construction and/or maintenance costs, as well as the use of these roads by other parties and the collection of such fees, which may be deemed necessary. Section 50. Logging roads. There should be indiscriminate construction of logging roads. Such roads should be strategically positioned and their width regulated in such a way as to minimize clear reduction, unnecessary damage or damage to healthy residues, and erosion. Their construction should not only serve the transport needs of the logger, but, most importantly, the requirement to preserve as many healthy residues as possible during cutting and transportation operations. Section 51. Forest occupancy management. From now on, the location of forests should be managed. The Bureau should examine, identify and determine which land might be the subject of settlement and prescribe a programme for the development of agroforestry. The occupiers are taking steps to prevent and protect forest resources. Any location of forest land is not permitted, leading to deposition, erosion, reduced water yields and the deterioration of other resources to the detriment of the community and the public interest. In areas more than 50% on the slopes, occupation should be conditioned by planting desirable trees and/or other environmental measures. Section 52. Census of kaingineros, squatters, cultural minorities and other residents and residents of forest land. From now on, no person shall enter and cultivate forest land without the right of rent or permit. A full census of kaingineros, squatters, cultural minorities and other forest dwellers with or without authority or authorization from the Government is carried out, indicating the extent of their respective occupation and, as a result, damage or disruption of forest resources. The Bureau may call for the participation of other government agencies and holders of licensing agreements, licenses, leases and forest permits Census. Section 53. Prosecution. Kaingineros, squatters, cultural minorities and other occupiers who have entered forest land up to the virtue of this Code, without permits or authority, should not be prosecuted: Provided that they do not increase their clearance: Provided further that they undertake, within two (2) months with notice of them, activities that will be imposed on them by the Bureau under the management plan are calculated for conservation and protection of forest resources. E. SPECIAL USES Section 54. Pastures in woodlands. No forest land, 50% on the slopes or more, can be used for grazing purposes. Forest land used for pastures should be maintained with sufficient grass cover to protect soil, water and other forest resources. If the grass cover is insufficient, the same should be supplemented by trees or vegetation as it may be deemed necessary. The size of forest land that may be permitted for pastures and other special uses is determined by rules and regulations, despite any provision of the law to the contrary. Section 55. Wildlife. Wildlife can be destroyed, killed, destroyed, eaten or otherwise disposed of without the need for permission to protect life, health, safety and property, and for the convenience of people. However, the Director can regulate the destruction and destruction of wildlife in forest land in order to maintain the ecological balance of flora and fauna. Section 56. Stay. In preparing management plans, which are often used, the Bureau must identify and protect scenic areas in all forest areas that are potentially valuable for recreation and tourism, and plan the development and protection of such areas to attract visitors and meet the growing needs of them. The construction and operation of the necessary outdoor recreation facilities is carried out by the Bureau using funds derived from leases and fees for the operation and use of recreational facilities by individuals or operators, in addition to any funds that may be allocated for this purpose. Section 57. Other special uses of forest land. Forest land may be leased for a period of up to twenty-five (25) years, renewable at the end of their validity for a similar period, or held by permit, to create sawmills, sawmills, loggers, logging camps, road rights, or for the construction of sanatoriums, bathing facilities, camps, salt mills or other useful purposes that do not violate forest resources. F. RISSESES Section 58. Diffusion benefits. The privilege of using, exploiting, occupying or possessing forest land, or to conduct any or to establish and operate woodworking plants, should be extended to as many skilled and worthy worthy as much as possible. Section 59. Citizenship. In assessing corporate applications, an increase in Philippine capital and participation is encouraged after a 60 per cent constitutional limit. All other factors are equal, the applicant with more Filipino equity and participation should be preferred. Section 60. Financial and technical capabilities. No licence agreement, licence, lease or permit for forest land is issued to the applicant unless he satisfactorily proves that he has the financial resources and technical capacity not only to minimize use, but also to practice measures to protect, conserve and develop forests to ensure that the forest is protected in a productive state. Section 61. Translations. Unless it is authorized by the Head of the Department, no licensee, tenant or permit representative may transfer, exchange, sell or transfer his licensing agreement, license, lease or permit, or any of his rights or interests in doing so, or any of his assets used in this regard. The licensee, tenant or permit is allowed to transfer or transfer their licensing agreements, licenses, leases or permits only if they have not violated any forestry laws, rules or regulations; faithfully comply with the terms of the license agreement, license, lease or permit; The re- author has all qualification requirements and none of the disqualifications for the licensing agreement, license, lease or permit; there is no evidence that such transfer or transfer is made for the purpose of speculation; and the re-darren must assume all the obligations of the transferer. Transfer will forever be prohibited from acquiring another license agreement, license, lease or permit. Section 62. Service contracts. It may be in the national interest for the head of the Department to authorize licensees, tenants or service permits to provide financial, technical, managerial or other assistance, subject to fees from any foreign person or organization for the exploration, development, operation or use of forest resources covered by their licence agreements, licenses, leases or permits. Existing existing and binding contracts for financial, technical, managerial or other forms of assistance are recognized as such. Section 63. Stock exchange. Each corporation that owns a license agreement, license, lease or permit to use, operate, occupy or own any forest land or carry out any activity in them, or establish and operate a woodworking plant, must, within one (1) year after the introduction of this Code, must formulate and submit to the chief within one (1) year after the introduction of this Code. to approve a sale plan of at least twenty percent (20%) its signature capital in favour of its employees and workers. The plan should be implemented in such a way that the sale of shares is carried out by the corporation, not than the sixth year of its operation, or the first year of implementation of this Code, if the corporation has been in operation for more than 5 years prior to such activity. No corporation may be issued with any licensing agreement, licence, lease or permit after the implementation of this Code unless it submits such a plan and the same is not approved for implementation during the sixth year of its operation. The Head of the Department will make public the necessary rules and regulations to implement the provisions of this section, in particular, determining the manner of payment, factors affecting the sale price, prioritizing the acquisition of shares, and the opportunities of decent workers and workers. Interested industries will be assisted in making policy public on this issue, such as providing all data and information on their operations, HR management and asset valuation. G. REGULATORY FEES SECTION 64. Fees, fees and bonds. The Head of the Department, on the recommendation of the Director, on the recommendation of the Director, records the amount of fees, rents, bonds and fees for various uses, exploitation, occupation, ownership or activity on forest land, filing and processing of applications for them, issuing and extending license agreements, licenses, leases and permits, and other services; Provided that all fees and fees currently collected under existing laws and regulations will continue to be charged and charged until otherwise provided; In addition, provided that timber removed and removed from private land for commercial purposes is exempt from forest fees. Section 65. The authority of the head of the department to introduce other fees. In addition to fees and fees imposed in accordance with applicable legislation, rules and regulations, the Head of the Department, on the recommendation of the Director and in consultation with the representatives of the affected industries, provides for the introduction of other fees for protection, forest management, reforestation and development, the proceeds of which, as soon as the Bureau becomes a special deposit, as its revolving fund for the aforementioned purposes. Section 66. Collection and payment. It is the responsibility of the Director or his authorized representative to collect the above fees and fees. The Director must, within the first ten (10) days of a successful month, hand over to the Treasurer of the Philippines his monthly collection of fees and fees mentioned in section 64; Provided that the proceeds from the collection of fees imposed under article 65 and the special deposit to the present view required of licensees must be made in a revolving fund for this purpose and deposited with the Philippine National Bank as a special deposit of the Bureau. Budget and the National Treasurer administers quarterly emissions from the general fund fee at the request of the Director, based on the consolidated annual budget of the work programme approved by the Head of the Department and the President. In the case of a special deposit working stock, withdrawals are made by the Head of the Department on the basis of a consolidated annual budget prepared by the Director of the work programme for specific purposes mentioned in section 65. Section 67. The basis of the assessment. The measurement of trees should be the basis for the assessment of government fees and other fees for deforestation and removed from forest land, foreign or disposable land, as well as civil reservations; Provided that the current scaling method provided in the National Tax Code is used until the mechanics of measuring trees are developed and made public in the rules and regulations. The Director may, with the approval of the Head of the Department, prescribe a new method of assessing forest products and collecting fees based on the results of production costs and market research conducted by the Bureau; Provided that such fees should not be lower than those currently imposed. CHAPTER IVCrimINAL CRIME AND PENALTY Section 68. Cutting, collecting and/or collecting wood or other products without a license. Any person who cuts down, collects, collects or removes timber or other forest products from any forest land, or timber from foreign and disposable public lands, or from private land, without any authority under the license agreement, lease, license or permit, is guilty of skilled theft, as defined and punishable by Articles 309 and 310 of the Revised Criminal Code; Provided that, in the case of partnerships, associations or corporations, officials who have written off the reduction, collection or collection are liable, and if such staff are foreigners, they shall, in addition to the punishment, be deported without further proceedings by the Immigration and Deportation Commission. In addition, the court decides to confiscate in favor of the government wood or forest products for cutting, collecting, collecting or removing, as well as equipment, equipment, and tools used in them, as well as confiscating its improvements in the area. The same penalty plus the revocation of his license agreement, lease, license or permit and indefinite disqualification from the acquisition of any such privilege are imposed on any licensee, tenant or permit who cuts wood out of the licensed or leased area of another, without compromising any civil action that the latter may file against the offender. Section 69. Illegal occupation or destruction of forest land. Any person who enters and occupies or or makes kaingin for his personal use or for other any forest land land authority under a license agreement, lease, license or permit, or in any way destroys such forest land or part of it, or causes any damage to the wooden stand and other products and forest bunks found in it, or who assists, assists, or incites any other person to do so, or waits, or carelessly resolves a fire that will be set in any forest land, must after conviction, be fined at least five hundred pesos (P500.00) or more than twenty thousand pesos (P20,000.00) and imprisoned for a minimum of six (6) months, no more than two (2) years for each such crime, and be liable for paying ten (10) times the rent and other fees that would have been accrued if the occupation and use of land had been authorized under the licensing agreement , Rent, license or permit: Provided that in the case of the offender found guilty of committing kaingin, the penalty of imprisonment for at least two (2) or more (4) years and a fine equal to eight (8) times regular forest fees, drugd by forest products destroyed, without compromising the payment of the full cost of the restoration of the occupied territory as defined by the Bureau. The Court will further prepare the eviction of the offender from the ground and the confiscation to the Government of all improvements made to the Government and all vehicles, pets and equipment of any kind used in the commission of the crime. If these vehicles are not suitable for use by the Bureau, they are sold at public auctions, the proceeds of which come as they enter the Bureau's Development Fund. If the offender is a public servant or employee, he is, in addition to the above penalties, automatically dismissed from office and permanently disqualified from any elected or appointed position. Section 70. Livestock herding. Prison sentences for a period of at least six (6) months, no more than two (2) years and a fine of ten (10) times regular rent, in addition to the confiscation of such livestock and all improvements imposed in the area in favour of the Government, are imposed on any person who must, without the authority to rent or permit, graze livestock or cause it on forest land, pastures and alien and disposable land that have not yet been disposed of under the Public Lands Act; Provided that if the offender is a corporation, partnership or association, officials and directors are responsible. Section 71. Illegal occupation and vandalism of national parks and recreational areas. Any person who, without permission, must occupy any part of the national park system for a period of time or in any way cut, destroy, damage remove wood or any type of vegetation or forest cover and other natural resources found in it, or maim, destroy or destroy objects objects natural beauty or scenic value in areas in the national park system, must be fined at least two hundred (P200.00) pesos or more than five hundred (P500.00) pesos solely from the value of the item damaged; provided that if the area requires recovery or recovery in accordance with the Director's decision, the offender is also obliged to repair or repair the damage; In addition, provided that any person who, without proper authorization, hunts, captures or kills any species of birds, fish or wildlife in any area in the national park system, shall be punished equally; Finally, provided that the Court prepares the eviction of the offender from the land and confiscation in favour of the Government of all timber or any type of vegetation and other natural resources collected or removed, as well as any construction or improvement made in this area by the offender. If the offender is an association or corporation, the president or manager is directly responsible and responsible for the actions of his employees or employees. If the city or municipal authority is primarily responsible for identifying and condemning the violator of this Section, 50% (50%) of the public. the collected fine is awarded to such a municipality or city for the development of local parks. Section 72. Destruction of wildlife resources. Any person who violates section 55 of this Code, or the provisions currently in law, is less fined at least one hundred pesos (P100.00) for each such violation and is also denied permission for three (3) years from the date of the violation. Section 73. An unauthorized person's survey. Prison sentences for at least two (2) or more than four (4) years, in addition to confiscating the funds used in the violation of this section, including the revocation of the license, if any, are imposed on any person who, without permission to examine with the Director, enters any forest land, regardless of which the license agreement, lease, license, or permit, or not, shall be carried out or conducted for any purpose. Section 74. Non-classification and questioning of a government official or employee. Any public servant or employee who knowingly inspects, classifies or recommends the release of forest land as alien and disposable land contrary to the criteria and standards established in this Code, or the rules and regulations currently made public, after the appropriate administrative proceedings is exempt from service with a preconception of reemful employment, as well as on the verdict of the court of competent jurisdiction, to be in prison at least one year.1 (P1,000.00) peso. classification or release of forest land should be void and Section 75. Tax return on property. Prisons for a period of at least two (2) or more than four (4) years and indefinite disqualification from an optional or appointed position are imposed on any public official or employee who must issue a tax return on non-property without the permission of the Director of Forestry Development and the Director of Land or their duly appointed representatives, that the area declared for taxation is alien and a one-time land if the property was not entitled or was occupied and possessed by members of national cultural minorities until July 4, 1955. Section 76. Coercion and influence. Any person who coerces, influences, incites or persuades a public servant or employee mentioned in the previous two sections to commit any of the acts mentioned in it, incur a prison sentence of at least one (1) year and pay a fine of five hundred (P500.00) pesos for each hectare or share, so mis- examined, classified or released. Section 77. Illegal possession of tools and devices used by loggers. Imprisonment for a period of at least (2) and no more than four (4) years and a fine of at least one thousand pesos (P1,000.00), as well as more than ten thousand (P10,000.00) pesos in addition to the confiscation of such funds and devices, and the automatic revocation of the license agreement, lease, license or permit, if the offender is its owner, is imposed on any person who, without the authority of the Director or his authorized representative, produces produces or has at its disposal any government marking, or other labelling or any markers, posters or other devices officially used by Bureau staff to label or identify wood or other products, or any duplicates, forgery or imitation, or to make or apply a government mark on wood or any other forest product using any genuine or counterfeit device, or to change , desecrate, or remove state signs or signs, from trees, logs, stumps, firewood or other forest products, or destroy, desecrate, remove or disfigure any such sign, sign, poster or warning notices, established by the Bureau to mark the boundaries of areas of deforestation, municipal or urban forests or pastures, classified forest lands, forest reserve and areas on which the national park system is located, or to make any false sign or sign Listed in the present. Provided that if the offender is a corporation, partnership or association, officials and directors are responsible. Section Payment, collection and transfer of forest fees. Any person who does not pay the amount paid and paid in accordance with the provisions of this Code, the National Tax Code, or the rules and regulations currently made public is liable for payment of payment 25% (25%) surcharge amount to be paid and payable. Any person who cannot or refuses to provide the relevant authorities says that forest fees are collected in accordance with the provisions of this Code or the National Tax Code, or who detains, prevents or prevents the same, or who orders, causes or diverts funds for purposes not specified in this Code, for each such offence, is punishable by a fine of no more than one hundred thousand pesos (P100,000.00) and/or imprisonment for a period of no more than six (6) years at the discretion of the court. If the offender is a public servant or employee, he must also be dismissed from the service with a preconception of reinstatement and disqualification from any elected or appointed positions. If the offender is a corporation, partnership or association, officials and directors are responsible. Section 79. Selling wood products. No person shall sell or offer for sale a magazine, lumber, plywood or other produced wood on the international or domestic market unless it complies with classification rules and is not established or established by the Government. Failure to comply with established classification rules and standards or any act of falsification of logs, lumber or other forest products is sufficient grounds for suspending exports, sawmills or other licences or permits to produce or sell such products for a period of at least two (2) years. A properly accredited representative of the Bureau certifies the licensees' compliance with classification rules. Each lumber merchant and other building materials covered by the Code invoice each sale of such material, and in such an invoice it is established that the type, standard and size of the material sold to each buyer is exactly the same as described in the invoice. Any violation of this Section is sufficient grounds for suspending the dealer's license for a minimum of two (2) years, and in addition, the dealer is punished for each such offence with a fine of at least two hundred pesos (P200.00) or the total value of the invoice, whichever is greater. Section 80. Arrest; The Institute of Criminal Action. A Forest Office officer or a Bureau officer arrests, even without a warrant, any person who has committed or committed in his presence any of the offences identified in this chapter. It also seizes and confiscates in favour of the Government the tools and equipment used in the commission of the crime, as well as forest products cut down, collected or seized by the offender in the process Crime. After that, the arrested forest officer or officer must deliver within six (6) hours from the time of arrest and arrest, offender and confiscated forest products, tools and equipment to file a complaint with the relevant official appointed by law for preliminary investigations and to submit information to the court. If the arrest and confiscation are made in the forests, away from the authorities appointed by law to conduct a preliminary investigation, delivery and filing of a complaint, the latter is made within a reasonable time frame, sufficient for the usual passage from the place of arrest to the place of delivery. The seized products, materials and equipment must be immediately disposed of in accordance with the forestry administrations issued by the head of the department. The head of the Department may extradite any member or unit of the Philippine police, a police agency, a barangay or barrio official, or any qualified person to protect the forest and exercise the authority or authority provided in the previous paragraph. Reports and complaints regarding the commission of any of the offences identified in this chapter, not committed in the presence of a forest or employee, or any of the officials or officials, officials, are directly investigated by a forest officer appointed in the area where the crime is alleged to have been committed, which must then obtain evidence supporting a report or complaint. If there is prima facie evidence to support a complaint or communication, the Forest District Investigator files the necessary complaint to the relevant official authorized by law to conduct a preliminary investigation of criminal cases and to submit information to the court. SPECIAL CLAUSES Section 81. Separation clause. If a provision in this case is subsequently declared unconstitutional, the same will not affect the validity or legality of the other provisions. Section 82. Cancellation of the Clausela. Presidential Decree No. 330 and 389, K.A. No 452, R.A. No. 4715 and all laws, regulations, rules and regulations or any part of it that are incompatible with this are annulled or amended accordingly. Section 83. The date of action. The Code is effective immediately after its adoption. Made in Manila, on this 19th day of May, the year of our Lord, nineteen hundred and seventy-five. Lawphil Project - Arellano Law Foundation pd 705 revised forestry code summary. pd 705 revised forestry code of the philippines pdf. pd 705 revised forestry code pdf. ano ang pd 705 of revised forestry code. pd no 705 revised forestry code. pd 705 revised forestry code of the philippines

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