Hows of housing

Credit to Author: Tempo Desk| Date: Mon, 25 Mar 2019 16:20:16 +0000

 

jullie yap daza - medium rare

 

WHEN the water concession­aire reminds you of your late payment and you don’t take heed instantly, it’s “Putol!” – they cut off the service immediately. Ergo, shouldn’t we expect them to com­pensate us, ahora mismo, after they left us high and dry with no water for days, with no end in sight?

Those are not my words but Rep. Albee Benitez’. As head of the House committee on housing and urban development who authored the law creating the Department of Housing, could Rep. Benitez all the more ascertain that when such a department is finally standing on its feet, it will build not just houses but houses with water and elec­tricity? Hundreds of houses for the masses built by government have been and are totally unlivable for want of air, water, and light, blame a gang of state agencies messing up the system under not one roof but many.

When was the last time a gov­ernment housing project looked home-sweet-home enough? (I think BLISS in the ‘80s.) The con­struction of shoeboxes masquer­ading as houses for Yolanda and Marawi victims, the controversies hounding NHA, HUDCC, Pag-Ibig, etc. in the past (but not forgot­ten), the rise of Kadamay shelter snatchers, and other instances of corruption built to last should cau­tion us against looking at the new department as a dream-prema­turely-come-true.

As my father-in-law’s adorable rather than despicable squatter for many years, I understand the pessimism afflicting millions of homeless families, but Rep. Ben­itez assured me, “The law will hold the department accountable for all housing concerns.” It would be logical to expect him to head the department – reward or punish­ment? – but who knows whom the President has in mind?

The objective of the Benitez law is “decent and affordable housing” for those who cannot own a home constructed by the profit-driven private sector, in contrast with government’s mandate to build NOT for profit. “Decent and afford­able” go together like doors and windows, it’s key to understand­ing the failure of mass housing hereabouts. If we could duplicate Singapore’s housing projects for government employees, we’d be the 50th happiest nation on earth! (More on Thursday.)

http://tempo.com.ph/feed/