Sun.Star Davao

No house for the poor

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With units the for presentthe poor, Kadamay’sI remember campaignth­is lecturefor housingby my to do social colleague analysis. to When young the campus speaker press asked writers what on could how be poppedthe reasonup an immediatew­hy the poor answer, remain “They’re poor, lazy.”one student

Lazy, the speaker repeated that word. Let me ask you, in a plantation, who toils to make sure the products we get are in good quality? The student replied, the workers. Now then, who earns from selling these goods? The businessma­n, he said. What did the businessma­n contribute to make the product good so that he can earn much? Silence.

It’s a matter of perspectiv­e how we look at the poor. The initial response is to be indignant how the “lazy” poor people can ask for something they haven’t earned for.

But going back to that lecture I pointed out, lazy is not how you describe these people who have contribute­d much to our economy.

Not when you can see thousands of workers building houses and high-rises 24-7 in the name of developmen­t. Not when you have millions of farm workers and factory workers work like machines too to meet the quota.

What you see is how workers are short-changed with minimum wages of around P290 to P310 outside of NCR. That is enough to put food on your plate, but barely enough for clothes, children’s schooling or medicines. That is how much you earn if you can keep your job with Endo hanging on your head every six months. There are 24 million Filipinos who are agency-hired, or working in the non-formal sector. There are 22 million Filipinos living in extreme poverty, earning only about P60 a day.

The government agency National Housing Authority are tasked to look into this issue, but for years they have only delivered empty promises to the urban poor. The participan­ts of the Occupy Pabahay movement in Bulacan themselves attest in an interview with Altermidya how government agencies have been asking them money yet failed to deliver their demand for houses. There is a backlog of six million housing units for the poor. Now who is lazy here.

The lack of decent houses not only plagues the urban poor in Metro Manila, but also among the Typhoon Pablo residents who staged their “occupy movement” in 2,500 housing units in San Antonio Village in Maparat, Compostela in Compostela Valley that were promised to them but never came.

Pablo survivors interviewe­d by Kilab Multimedia have complained that the raffling system by the NHA has been selective. Some said their names were dropped from the list, while those who still have houses were given housing units.

The neglect by government units in the past to do their tasks has forced the poor to go to such lengths to get attention. As National Anti-Poverty Commission chair Liza Maza points out, this is a crisis brought by neglect that needs an urgent response to give decent social housing and services for the poor. We hope this administra­tion can deliver that change, as well as a change in our perspectiv­e on empowering the poor.

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