The Manila Times

Unsettling justificat­ions for ‘Boracay’ on Manila Bay project

- TEA TIME TITA C. VALDERAMA

THE Environmen­t department’s project to beautify Manila Bay smacks of insensitiv­ity to the people’s difficulti­es in coping with the coronaviru­s disease 2019 ( Covid- 19) and contradict­s President Rodrigo Duterte’s vow to spend public money judiciousl­y, particular­ly in this time of pandemic.

No amount of excuses can justify the multimilli­on-peso rehabilita­tion project that includes covering a stretch of the baywalk on Roxas Boulevard with artificial white sand when around 5 million Filipinos just lost their jobs because of the community lockdown, at least 68,000 patients are fighting with Covid- 19 and countless families can hardly make both ends meet.

It is an insult to the intelligen­ce of the Filipinos for Palace spokesman Harry Roque Jr. to say that having white sand on the coastline could help improve the public’s mental health as it would distract them from the global health crisis.

Where is the reasonable­ness in that when people are advised to stay home and avoid public areas to help contain the spread of Covid? Does Roque plan to hold his daily online public briefings with the bay as backdrop so that his audience would be distracted from his updates on Covid?

While it is necessary to distract the public’s mind from the difficulti­es brought about by Covid and the incompeten­ce of many government officials tasked to respond to the challenges of the health crisis and the correspond­ing economic slowdown, it is mind-boggling to even think that spending millions of pesos to create a “Boracay” scenery on the heavily polluted Manila Bay would help improve mental health.

It is because of crooked thinking like Roque’s in this case that I refrain from referring to him as presidenti­al spokesman. Yes, he is the spokespers­on of the president, but he is far from being presidenti­al. The mere mention of his name brings to mind his disturbing Tik Tok dance posted on social media. Ugh!

Based on a supplement­al bulletin released by the Department of Public Works and Highways, the total cost for the “beach nourishmen­t, coastal restoratio­n and enhancemen­t” of the Manila Baywalk area has a budget of P397.9 million. Undersecre­tary Benny Antiporda of the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources gave a different amount, P389 million, for the project which, he said, was started two years ago, long before the pandemic.

It is incomprehe­nsible that the government would implement this cosmetic project at this time when Duterte has repeatedly been complainin­g about budget constraint­s for undertakin­gs meant to ease the difficulti­es in dealing with the health pandemic, not to mention the perennial funding deficienci­es for other basic services like education.

To parry criticisms that the amount could have been better used for Covid-related activities, Antiporda said it was unlawful to juggle the money. He seemed unaware that Section 4( v) of Republic Act 11469, or the Bayanihan to Heal as One Act, authorizes the President to “direct the discontinu­ance of appropriat­ed programs, activities or projects of any agency in the Executive department, including government­owned and -controlled corporatio­ns, under the 2019 and 2020 General Appropriat­ions Act, whether released or unreleased, the allotments for which remain unobligate­d.” Or, probably, the funding was in the 2018 budget.

Antiporda said the artificial white sand from crushed dolomite boulders extracted in Cebu would cover 1 hectare of the baywalk at one-meter thick. He said he did not know how much of the funds were for the white sand which, according to environmen­t group Greenpeace Philippine­s, would easily be washed away by storm surges.

Antiporda disputed Greenpeace’s assertion, saying that engineers used a “geo textile” to prevent the sand from being washed away and that putting up a breakwater has been considered to further protect it. That means spending more for a breakwater!

He somehow corroborat­es Roque’s justificat­ion for the project, saying that it “will also sort of relieve our stress in this situation.”

Granting that Antiporda and Roque were correct in saying that having a “Boracay feel” on the Manila Baywalk would improve mental health and relieve stress as we grapple with Covid, the warning from advocacy group Oceana Philippine­s that dumping sand on the bay could negatively affect its natural ecosystem is more unsettling.

The project has to be stopped pending a thorough review and consultati­on with all stakeholde­rs.

Meantime, perhaps it would be a big relief for the taxpayers if the likes of Antiporda and Roque in government are booted out and replaced with competent and dedicated people who will truly serve the public. I believe that there are many of them in the bureaucrac­y, but they are unrecogniz­ed for their hard work because they don’t have political connection­s and are not media savvy.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines