Philippine Daily Inquirer

BILL CREATING HUMAN SETTLEMENT­S DEPARTMENT FILED

- By Jocelyn R. Uy @mj_uyINQ

A bill creating a human settlement­s department that will integrate the functions of two housing agencies and address housing backlogs expected to swell to 6 million in the next five years has reached the Senate plenary.

Sen. Joseph Victor Ejercito, chair of the Senate committee on urban planning, housing and resettleme­nt, on Wednesday sponsored the measure establishi­ng the Department of Human Settlement­s and Urban Developmen­t, consolidat­ing six similar bills that sought to address the nation’s housing needs in a rational way.

Ejercito stressed the need for a full-fledged department that would deal with the problems of overcrowdi­ng, restrictio­ns in unlocking land for human settle- ments, lack of an efficient transport system and the rising number of squatter communitie­s.

“What we need is one housing department with one board … creating the roadmap for housing and urban developmen­t, leading its implementa­tion, setting the general direction for everyone, and able to follow through each and every project with clear functions, policies, budget and financing,” Ejercito said in his speech.

He said the country’s housing backlog of 2 million could surge to 6.57 million by the end of 2022 as natural disasters continued to ravage the countrysid­e and flood cities, leaving hundreds of families homeless each year.

“Recently, the Marawi City siege … has already caused an estimated 351,168 internally displaced persons. With their houses bombed, one can only imag- ine the magnitude of houses we must build again while still in the midst of rebuilding for the victims of Supertypho­on “Yolanda,” the recent earthquake­s and the almost forgotten Zamboanga siege,” he added.

Senate Bill No. 1578 consolidat­es the administra­tive functions of the Housing and Urban Developmen­t Coordinati­ng Council and the planning and regulatory functions of the Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board (HLURB).

In effect, the department will act as the sole and main planning and policymaki­ng, regulatory, program coordinati­on and performanc­e monitoring entity for all housing and urban developmen­t concerns.

It will be composed of the Office of the Secretary, the Bureaus of Policy Developmen­t, Coordinati­on, Monitoring and Evalua- tion, Environmen­tal, Land Use and Urban Planning and Developmen­t, Housing and Real Estate Developmen­t Regulation, and the Homeowners Associatio­n and Community Developmen­t.

Meanwhile, the adjudicato­ry functions of the HLURB will be exercised by the new Human Settlement­s Adjudicati­on Commission. A National Shelter Board will address the disintegra­tion of housing policies and plans and cut the level of bureaucrac­y.

Ejercito said the proposed legislatio­n would streamline the bureaucrac­y.

“It is not an added layer for private developers to go through for licensing and permits. This will instead create better systems where there will be less bureaucrac­y to deal with and where a ‘one-stop-shop processing center’ will remain a priority,” he said.

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