The Manila Times

The good guys on the go

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ANGELICA Caballero used to happily push her shopping trolley by the bridgeway that connected her condo to SM North EDSA for her daily needs and supplies. She found the perfect home in Grass Residences — with its walkable access to the mall, a hospital and easy commute to major thoroughfa­res — especially for an elderly lady like her who lives alone.

But with the pandemic and the subsequent lockdown, access to supplies proved to be difficult with many stores closing or operating with limited hours. And, as a senior citizen, she was not allowed to go out nor would she have wanted to venture out of her unit.

Caballero is one of more than 100,000 persons aged 65 years old and above, who are living alone, based on the 2015 Census of Population data.

Commission on Population and Developmen­t Undersecre­tary Juan

Antonio Perez III has called on barangays and community leaders to locate these elderlies so that they can be provided with appropriat­e support. “More than ever, the challenge for inclusivit­y during these trying times calls for the establishm­ent of efficient mechanisms to easily locate vulnerable population­s such as the older persons who are living alone,” Perez said in a statement.

Fortunatel­y for Caballero, The Good Guys care team, composed of employees from SM Developmen­t Corporatio­n (SMDC), calls her every week to assist her with her grocery and medicine needs.

The Good Guys care team is a group of volunteer SMDC employees who regularly call selected residents to provide shopping services for elderlies who live independen­tly. The team takes their orders — along with their Senior Citizen ID cards, prescripti­ons,

Angela Caballero medicine booklets and authorizat­ion letters — and arrange for these to be bought by a team of riders who bring them to the condo’s lobby guard.

At the onset of the lockdown, The Good Guys team immediatel­y got together to identify the challenges that SMDC residents could be facing as a result of the lockdown. Employees were quick to offer a solution to address the needs of elderlies living alone. They did a quick scan of the elderly SMDC residents, who either lived alone or were living with fellowelde­rlies or with minors.

The program has been running for almost two months, servicing nine SMDC properties across the capital.

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