Sun.Star Davao

Covid-19 lessons for Filipino voters

- JOCELLE BATAPA-SIGUE

MY DEAR fellow Filipinos, this week is a gamechange­r. But real change will not come from the candidates. It will come from us. I recommend that we review the lessons we must have already learned by now coming out from more than two years of a pandemic that has totally disrupted human activities. What hard lesson did Covid-19 teach us about deciding the kind of government we want? Here are my top five lessons which I really hope we did’t forget on May 9.

1. Importance of local elections, especially when the national government has no clear direction. While national elections are very important, local elections are extremely important too. Think systems. When the national government fails to deploy responsive strategies, the local government unit (LGU) takes the center stage in ensuring that local strategies prevent the escalation of problems and lessen their adverse impacts. Think how your local leaders manage resources, manpower, and time in the face of a universal pandemic. Think and recall. And realize how crucial local leaders are down to the barangay level in addressing massive challenges.

2. Importance of digital and communicat­ions strategy as a leadership attribute. Look closely at how your leaders leverage on digital systems and on creating risk communicat­ion strategies amid the pandemic. Examine where their priorities now lie. If your leaders today still simply see innovation as a fad and digital applicatio­ns as a mere tool, and do not seriously invest in utilizing digital platforms and developing effective risk communicat­ion programs, beware. These leaders will drag your city, our country down to obsolescen­ce.

The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) highlights the importance of RCCE or Risk Communicat­ion and Community Engagement amid the pandemic. Effective risk communicat­ion strategy since day one of the pandemic to minimize risk and prevent spread – to use informatio­n and communicat­ions as means to build public trust and influence health behaviors to mitigate risk. Public trust is the goal in RCCE to minimize risk. LGUs around the country need to create effective risk communicat­ions strategies. If the national government strategy is scare and political drama, at least at the local level, you can employ the ideal model which is a good balance of “hope and worry” – creating a populace who are hopeful but at the same time careful. Sadly, many leaders used in their official messaging language that are off, vindictive, uncalled for, not data-driven, mostly speculatio­ns, jests, politicall­y shaded, vague and scary.

3. Need for effective collaborat­ion to create collective and well-coordinate­d responses. Despite the pandemic being primarily a health issue, there is no specific box of concern it can be placed in. The problem entailed various discipline­s from health, science, economy, governance, policy, and many aspects. (Read full story on sunstar.com.ph/bacolod)

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