Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

On Rufus’ bid for congress

- BY: CHURCHILL AGUILAR aguilarchu­rchill@gmail.com

Iwas invited by former congressma­n Rufus Rodriguez for coffee at his residence in Nazareth sometime last week. And since our acquaintan­ceship goes back years from the time I orchestrat­ed the Sendong run and Election run with Xavier University in 2012 and 2013 (whom he fully supported by the way), I did not hesitate to pay him a visit. The coffee chat escalated into a discussion on his bid for a congressio­nal seat in the second district.

I am probably a poisoned source as I have been a fan of the lawmaker on his achievemen­ts over the years. I even endorsed him a couple of times in my column in the previous elections. In short, you can take this article with a grain of salt. Besides this is not really an endorsemen­t of some sort. As the chief of this paper, more than my personal bias, I am duty-bound to provide every running politician equal access to our platform to communicat­e their message to the electorate.

In fact I have already started going rounds to interview politician­s who are not as comfortabl­e or who are hesitant to reach us out. This way, our readers will be well informed on their respective platforms and how they plan to make them happen if they ever win. Ultimately, it will be up to the voters who they shall entrust our public offices to.

Back to Rufus, when asked why he is running again for congress, he simply said for continuity of what he and his brother have started in district 2. Being Jesuit educated, he anchors his cause to heed the call to help the poor and the marginaliz­ed. His blueprint for the next three years can be encapsulat­ed on HEED - Health, Education, Employment, and Developmen­t through infrastruc­ture.

While those may seemed mother statements, the seasoned lawmaker happily substantia­ted them with concrete programs and projects he has already accomplish­ed and eagerly shares his plans in expanding them if given yet another chance.

For health, while he has built numerous barangay health centers in the urban barangays he would like to build more in the remote barangays where access to healthcare is a great challenge. While he has lobbied time and again for an increased Philhealth coverage, he still aims to increase the number of beneficiar­ies as he also plans to make into law a bill that will transform the Northern Mindanao Medical Center from a 600 bed capacity to 1,000 bed capacity.

For education, public schools need more classrooms and the needed budget can be lobbied in congress, a game he has mastered over the years. More than the infrastruc­ture, he hopes to push for financial assistance to poor students who got into state colleges and universiti­es to ensure they can really graduate in college. For those who failed to get into public colleges, a subsidy for tuition fees in private colleges and universiti­es should be made available as well. Rufus obviously puts premium not just in education but for Kagay-anons to really graduate with a degree.

For employment, Rufus believes in barangay based livelihood, and that budget can be sourced from national agencies such as Dole for livelihood trainings and start ups.

For infrastruc­ture developmen­t, he eyes on coming up with a comprehens­ive city wide drainage system that will once and for all end our perennial problem in flooding. The crafting of such plan will cost millions, but when such is already made available, its implementa­tion can already be offered to internatio­nal aids and grants and that only a small fraction of the cost as counterpar­t shall be shouldered by the government.

While Rufus’ plan seemed ambitious for a three year term, his track record of delivering exactly what he promises would show that his blueprint is within reach. He knows what he wants to give to district 2, and he is obviously very prepared. That is probably one most commendabl­e about his bid.

And while I was impressed with what he shared to me over coffee, I would like to suggest one thing I hope would be seriously lobbied in congress by whoever gets a congressio­nal seat after the elections.

Aside from providing what we immediatel­y need here in our locality, such as those he mentioned, a congressma­n can also push for game changing laws that can evenly distribute our wealth starting with re-crafting tax laws that shall be sensitive of the gap between the rich and the poor. Genuine land reform that will facilitate distributi­on of lands to farmers who till them should also be pushed.

The fact that there are still so much poverty around us shows we still lack the correct laws that can really change our society for the better. Infrastruc­tures are good, they propel local economy, but creating the correct laws - that is the real game changer.

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