Philippine Daily Inquirer

Consumers seek writ of kalikasan against MWSS

- Jerome Aning

A COALITION of consumer groups in Metro Manila and nearby provinces has asked the Court of Appeals to issue a “writ of kalikasan” to stop the Metropolit­an Waterworks and Sewerage System (MWSS) and its two concession­aires from using a combined sewerage drainage system.

The Water for All Refund Movement (WARM), through its president Rodolfo Javellana Jr. and lawyer Anthony Edsel Conrad Tupaz, said the collection in a single pipe system of rainwater and raw sewage posed a threat to the environmen­t and public health.

A writ of kalikasan would lead to appropriat­e protection orders and mandate court hearings on the environmen­t and health issues.

In its 31-page petition, WARM said there were urgent safety concerns: “[W]hen there is more rainwater than the system can handle, a mixture of raw sewage and rainwater goes directly from the sewer system to a body of water without first being treated. It is the same as dumping highly toxic raw sewage into a natural body of water, an act prohibited by law.”

The overflowin­g of sewage-contaminat­ed rainwater during floods also contribute­s to the spread of waterborne diseases such as leptospiro­sis, dengue and typhoid fever, the groups said.

Warm pointed out that a combined drainage system was already “clearly acknowledg­ed” by developed and developing countries alike as something that would do more harm that good.

The coalition sought a temporary environmen­tal protection order (Tepo) that would direct the MWSS and its concession­aires, Maynilad Water Services Inc. (MWSI) and Manila Water Co. Inc. (MWCI), to implement an adequate sewerage and sanitation plan and to stop collecting “environmen­tal/sanitation” charges from consumers.

WARMsaid the combined drainage and sewerage system used by MWSI and MWCI, which was authorized by MWSS and has clearance from the department­s of Health and Environmen­t, violated “a host of environmen­tal laws.”

MWSI and MWCI also have yet to submit their plans and projects for the constructi­on of wastewater treatment facilities in Metro Manila, Rizal and Cavite up to the year 2037, which the Supreme Court ordered in the 2008 case of MMDA v Concerned Citizens of Manila Bay, also called the Oposa Case.

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