The Freeman

Public told to record debris info

DURING CLEANUP DRIVE

- — Mitchelle L. Palaubsano­n/KBQ

As a young boy, Teofilo Camomot had the nickname “Lolong.” Like most kids, his first teacher was her mother Angela. She tutored the boy how to read and write at home before he was sent to the Carcar Elementary School at the age seven – the mandatory school age under the prevailing American rule then.

At school, Lolong further learned reading, writing, and arithmetic. At the time, native languages had no place in the classroom, and so the boy learned to express himself in English, on top of the Spanish and Cebuano languages that were used back at home. The young Lolong didn’t escape being bullied by bigger boys. But he never fought back – not one single occasion. It was his younger brother Tereso who would rush to Teofilo’s side and get into a brawl to defend him.

Teofilo completed his elementary education in 1928; he was 14 years old. Instead of proceeding to high school, he left school and chose to help his father at the farm. Working in the corn fields he developed a love for agricultur­e. He then wanted to take up

Employees of the Department of Public Works and Highways-Cebu Third District Engineerin­g Office and the Lapu-Lapu City government were among the thousands of volunteers who joined the global celebratio­n of the 32nd Internatio­nal Coastal Cleanup (ICC) yesterday.

The city government workers, along with the police and students, gathered hundreds of sacks of garbage after at least three-hour cleanup drive, which kicked off at the Mactan Liberty Shrine.

The Department of Interior and Local Government, in a statement, said coastal cleanup activities should not just be about picking up litters along coastlines.

DILG said local government units and volunteers should help in identifyin­g and recoding the rubbish collected for analysis by pollution specialist­s.

ICC is unique from other cleanups because aside from removing trash/ debris from beaches, rivers, waterways and ocean surface, the volunteers collect data to help find better solutions to the marine debris problem.

Results will aid in better waste management policies and plans, product packaging designs and in stirring environmen­tal consciousn­ess among the people, according to the ICC website.

Held annually every third Saturday of September, people around the world gather on beaches, coasts, rivers, waterways and underwater dive sites to remove trash and record informatio­n on the debris collected.

ICC is the largest volunteer effort for ocean's health. It started in 1986 in Texas, USA through the initiative of the Ocean Conservanc­y, a non government organizati­on based in Washington D.C., USA.

The LGUs and volunteers are expected to submit the ocean trash data form will to ICC Philippine­s.

Informatio­n from the data analysis will determine the effects specific materials have on the ocean habitat, and in identifyin­g the best remedies and advocacies to counter water pollution.

According to the DILG, the data that volunteers will write down are relevant contributi­ons in ensuring that the young generation will have their fair share of clean and healthy ocean, river or lake in the future.

The DILG has also directed its regional offices to monitor the conduct of cleanup activities in their respective localities and ensure the active participat­ion of their constituen­ts.

Also, in observatio­n of the National Cleanup Month, the Ecowaste Coalition, a waste and pollution watch group, has asked the industry, government and citizens to stop the killing of the world's oceans.

The group cited the dumping of millions of tons of plastic waste that is contaminat­ing the marine ecosystems and lethally threatenin­g aquatic organisms.

To prevent plastics and other discards from spilling from land to water courses and bodies, the group advocating for a zero waste and a toxic-free Philippine­s called for the genuine enforcemen­t of Republic Act 9003, or the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act.

“We want to call attention to the urgent need to enforce R.A. 9003 in all local government units (LGUs) and component barangays to curb global plastic pollution that is killing the oceans,” Aileen Lucero, National Coordinato­r of the Coaltion said in a separate statement.

RA 9003, among a long list of prohibitio­ns, forbids and penalizes littering, open burning, open dumping, the manufactur­e, distributi­on or use of nonenviron­mentally acceptable packaging materials, and the importatio­n of toxic wastes misreprese­nted as “recyclable.”

 ??  ?? Fr. Teofilo Camomot
with his parents
Fr. Teofilo Camomot with his parents
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines