Philippine Daily Inquirer

The ‘Brigada’ wars

- ANNA CRISTINA TUAZON aatuazon@up.edu.ph

Children continue to be caught in the crossfire of political maneuverin­g. This week has seen tense stand-offs in multiple public schools in the “Embo” (short for enlisted men’s barrios) barangays as the Supreme Court had ruled in favor of Taguig regarding their jurisdicti­on. As the landmark decision grants 10 barangays to Taguig, a significan­t number of Makati services and buildings suddenly find themselves in alien territory, such as Ospital ng Makati, University of Makati, and Makati Science High School (MSHS). MSHS was one of the schools who find themselves teeming with police and volunteers from both cities laying claim to their jurisdicti­on. Using the “Brigada Eskwela” program as pretense to do a show of force regarding the new jurisdicti­on had sown confusion and fear among students and parents.

Public education has become increasing­ly politicize­d (and militarize­d), first during the transition to face-to-face classes when soldiers and police were seen roaming inside classrooms with their guns. The increase in Department of Education’s (DepEd) apparent focus on curbing communism within schools had led to recurrent seminars to students against the evils of communism which some see as veering dangerousl­y close to Red-tagging. Confidenti­al funds are now being asked for the second time in a row by DepEd, which they claim is for security. The recent incident of a Philippine National Police surveillan­ce drone accidental­ly falling in the parking lot of the administra­tion building in the University of the Philippine­s Diliman is yet another evidence of police incursion of academic spaces. The Brigada wars between Makati and Taguig is the latest sign that politics is valued over the students’ welfare.

Brigada Eskwela is a controvers­ial program to begin with. It calls for the Filipinos’ “bayanihan” spirit of teachers, parents, and volunteers to help prepare school for the new academic year. It is a double-edged service, in that DepEd has been reliant on this program instead of advocating for a government budget to rehabilita­te and resupply classrooms. DepEd continues to assert that it does not have the budget to do all the necessary upgrades and improvemen­ts, including the increase in hiring of teachers and the building of more classrooms. This logic becomes harder to swallow when they have started to request—and to receive—a significan­t budget for confidenti­al funds instead.

The program has also become a favorite photo-op moment for politician­s. Just recently, both the president and vice president made a show of painting some chairs in a public school classroom. Taguig choosing the Brigada Eskwela as its first appearance to their new constituen­ts is also essentiall­y a photo-op set-up. Showing up unannounce­d at a school and insisting entry, even with the purpose of volunteeri­ng, is not bayanihan ;it is simply disrespect and lack of care about the feelings of the new constituen­ts. That their first act was to show up and disrupt the start of the academic year shows that they are not concerned about transition­ing students and the community properly.

The moment I heard that the Embo barangays will now be in Taguig, I already knew that the transition will be painful given the sheer number of constituen­ts as well as the number of services in the area. The transition is unavoidabl­y a gargantuan task. However, the way Taguig seems to be starting off is causing more suffering than is necessary.

The first mistake is to adopt a top-down attitude toward the transition. Taguig, you are not inheriting inanimate objects; you are inheriting human beings with their own rights and agencies. That DepEd National Capital Region issued a memo granting immediate jurisdicti­on of 14 public schools from Makati to Taguig without proper consultati­on among its stakeholde­rs—local government units, teachers, parents, and students—showcases what happens when this transition is done hurriedly by top management.

People generally fear change. It is Taguig and Makati’s job to allay these fears with proper transition phasing and valuing of constituen­ts’ needs and concerns. Instead of barging in with unannounce­d visits, Taguig should have set up an awareness campaign of what the change in jurisdicti­on would mean for people’s daily lives. They should have given the new constituen­ts time to absorb this radical change and allowed them to ask their questions and air their concerns. Taguig should make space for the grief of those who have been enjoying their citizenshi­p with Makati instead of invalidati­ng—or penalizing—their loyalty. Taguig should be in the business of exciting their new constituen­ts with what Taguig can offer instead of simply taking over Makati’s education and social service investment­s.

This whole thing reminds me of Solomon’s dilemma with two mothers claiming a baby. It would have been better if the baby had a say in all of this.

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