Mindanao Times

Water concession­aire contract - Onerous?

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na muna after the storm, the calm. Digong shoud STOP(?) demonizing

Ayala (MLA Water) and M.V. Pangilinan (Maynilad). Remember that this contract was drawn up and first approved by FVR, the solicitor general then BEFORE this was approved by the two concession­aires. If you were Ayala or MVP, would you not approve a contract very FAVORABLE to your companies? Common sense, yes. So why blame THEM? So if Digong is going to play the blame game, he should aim this at FVR – and at GMA (for extending it from 2022 to 2037). For now, while the DOJ is investigat­ing, let’s STAY CALM and await the results. In the meantime, let’s give the benefit of the doubt to FVR, GMA, Ayala, and MVP.

Letʼs put this agreement within the context of 1996/7 – when Metro MLAʼs water supply was dry – and the govʼt coffers were practicall­y nil as the Asian Financial Crisis (AFC) was rearing its ugly head. FVRʼs team was looking for a quick solution – and they found this in “privatizin­g.” The problem was, none of our big companies were not interested because the AFC-business climate did not encourage big investment­s then.

So FVRʼs team had to really SWEETEN the deal – thus, the so called “onerous” provisions were included. What are “onerous” now may have been NECESSARY then. And why did GMA EXTEND it? So that the water rates could be LOWERED since the massive INFRA-cost could be amortized over a longer period of time.

But letʼs all wait for the results of the DOJ or congress investigat­ions.

Garbage and trash crisis

Iʼve lived and worked in California for close to 30 years, coming back home for good to Davao in the mid90ʼs. Iʼve also travelled and visited many cities in Asia and Europe then and now, and it truly SADDENS me to finally say that our country is one of the DIRTIEST, and our hometown, Davao City, is one of the DIRTIEST city in the world, and my own neighborho­od, JUNA, is one of the dirtiest in our city. Every morning, I walk around my neighborho­od in Juna and it appalls me to see so much trash just carelessly strewn about. Our streets, sidewalks, canals, esteros, beaches, are garbage-filled – and somehow we’ve become immune accepting this situation as our new normal. Unacceptab­le!

Our govertnmen­t – national and LGUs – talk about a ban on plastic, perhaps, we should be considerin­g a war on litterers. Throw them in jail or have them do community service – cleaning up our city. We talk about our students doing poorly in PISA – they are doing worse in “value formation. In the meantime, let’s be responsibl­e for the streets or canal in front of our homes. Catholics – Quo vadis?

Having been educated by the Jesuits from grade school, high school, college, then grad school, Iʼve been raised a Catholic all my life. Thatʼs why I think I have the right to openly question whether my religion – and her religious leaders and her lay organizati­ons (BCBP, Knight of Columbus, Womenʼs Catholic League, El Shaddai, etc.) – remain relevant in our times – and in my own spiritual life. Hereʼs where Iʼm coming from: the other day SunStar DVO has a front page about the Diocese of Tagumʼs bishop ex-communicat­ing 26 priests and 18 more undergoing investigat­ions for sexual misconduct. That’s a lot of priests from a smaller (than Davao) diocese. I wonder what’s happening to our priests here. But perhaps they are shielded by “Omerta”! These cases are isolated situations since there were news reports about sexual offenses, pedophilia in the Vatican(!), Argentina, Australia, the U.S., and other countries. Perhaps, priest or nuns should be allowed to marry. I think the BCBP – and the other lay groups – should take a very strong stand and demand reforms against these abuses. But maybe, “OMERTA” also engulfs them. An exemplary catholic leader I’ve met

personally and greatly admire is Mother Teresa, now a Saint. She was genuinely helping the downtrodde­n poor. I don’t see this quality in our bishops or cardinals who dress up in costly vestments and get driven in expensive SUV’s.

There is so much poverty, drugs and corruption in our country – but I donʼt see the Catholic Church and her lay organizati­ons having concrete programs in winning the wars. There is so much more they can do to help the poor in our country.

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