Philippine Daily Inquirer

Less than 1/10 of ‘Yolanda’ houses up

- By Christine O. Avendaño

LESS than one-tenth of the more than 200,000 houses targeted to be built in communitie­s devastated by Supertypho­on “Yolanda” have been constructe­d by the government almost two years after the calamity struck the Visayas, rendering millions homeless.

The numbers were presented yesterday by housing officials to Sen. JV Ejercito, who led a hearing by the Senate committee on planning, housing and resettleme­nt on the government’s rehabilita­tion efforts, particular­ly the constructi­on of housing for Yolanda victims.

National Housing Administra­tion General Manager Sinforoso Pagunsan said the NHA was targeting to build 205,128 housing units in six regions devastated by the supertypho­on.

At present, only 16,544 houses had been completed, while 72,738 houses were under constructi­on, Pagunsan said.

He said the 16,544 houses included units that were 75-percent completed as of Sept. 15 but which were expected to be finished by now.

He said the 72,738 houses whose constructi­on were started last year and were ongoing were part of the 92,554 housing units covered by the P26.9 billion released by the Department of Budget and Management.

He said the DBM will release an- other P25.6 billion for next year and this will cover the constructi­on of 87,405 additional housing units.

The ongoing constructi­on of over 70,000 houses were in Aklan, Antique, Capiz, Iloilo, Negros Occidental, Leyte and Tacloban, Eastern Samar, Samar and Biliran, the NHA official said.

Depending on budget release

In reply to Ejercito’s query on how many houses were expected to be completed by yearend, Pagunsan said they expected about 45,000 housing units.

The rest of the 92,554 houses already funded by the DBM will be completed by July next year, Pagunsan added.

“The rest of the (constructi­on of) houses will depend on the budget releases,” he said.

He said the entire 205,128 targeted houses might be completed in one more year.

Ejercito asked the NHA for a monthly update on the constructi­on of the houses.

The senator also cited an earlier explanatio­n by housing officials that the delay in the constructi­on of the houses had to do with land acquisitio­n problems.

Replying to Ejercito’s question on the delay of the constructi­on of the houses, lawyer Chito Cruz, chair of the Housing and Urban Developmen­t Coordinati­ng Council, said the challenge was to look for land for the housing units.

Land has to be titled

“According to the Commission on Audit, we just cannot develop a piece of land. The land has to be titled, otherwise COA would not allow it,” Cruz said.

In addition, he said, the NHA had to secure permits from government agencies like the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources, Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology, and the Department of Science and Technology to make sure the land to be developed was safe for the storm victims.

Likewise, Cruz said, the NHA had to seek approval from the local government­s to develop the land.

Asked later by reporters about the pace of constructi­on, Ejercito acknowledg­ed it was slow but said the NHA should inform the public about the long process involved here.

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