Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Lights please

- BY: ORLANDO CARVAJAL

R

ECALLING a recent experience just added fuel to my rage against our legislator­s’ extravagan­t spending for both their personal and official comfort and convenienc­e.

But first the facts. As of July 2016, there were 2.36 million households in the country that had no electricit­y. As of said date, the Philippine­s was only 89.6 percent electrifie­d with many rural areas in the south, in Mindanao, having lower than national average level of electrific­ation.

You wonder why? I’ll tell you why with my experience this year in getting electrical connection for my 4.5-hectare organic farm in Coronobe, Maragusan, Compostela Valley, now Davao de Oro.

To get electricit­y for my farm, which lies some two hundred meters, maybe more, from the road where the main electric distributi­on lines are strung, I had to spend P145,000 for parts and labor to buy and erect three electric posts (P15,000 each because you have to get them only from accredited suppliers), to buy and string electric wires on the posts, to buy and attach all other required gadgets like the electric meter and what have you.

And that was just to bring electricit­y to the farm’s perimeter edge. Connecting my light bulbs, motors and other appliances to the electric meter is still for scheduling and I don’t know how much more I will spend for it. I need electricit­y because I cannot increase the production of high-value vegetables if these have to be watered manually.

Anyway, now I know why households that are far from the main electricit­y distributi­on grid don’t have electricit­y. It simply costs too much to tap into the electricit­y supplied by, in our case, the local electric cooperativ­e, Daneco (Davao del Norte Electric Cooperativ­e).

Daneco was establishe­d in 1971 yet, and I’ve had my farm since 1987, but it took Daneco years to bring electricit­y to Barangay Coronobe of Maragusan town. It will take many more years for outof-the-way households to get electricit­y because of the high connection cost.

This brings me to the question of why government cannot subsidize connection costs to inner barangay households like at least provide free electric posts and wires? How can our senators and representa­tives spend billions of pesos for their comfort and convenienc­e when rural folk do not even have the minimum convenienc­e of electricit­y because of prohibitiv­e connection cost?

Farmers are feeding the nation, yet they are the least served by high government officials who would rather spend P4.5 billion for an office building and billions more for an executive jet, etc. than provide small farmers with housing, water and electricit­y.

Gentlemen, can we give farmers lights please? Can you worry more about them than ninja cops and Edsa traffic?

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