Sun.Star Pampanga

Mission impossible?

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The Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) led by Secretary Roy A. Cimatu re-launched recently the Manila Bay Rehabilita­tion Project with simultaneo­us activities on all regions in the Manila Bay area. At the main venue in Manila, around 5,000 participan­ts joined the activity mostly personnel from DENR and other ‘mandamus agencies’. In Pampanga, the activity was held in Guagua under the leadership of the DENR- PENRO Office. The EMB Region 3 staff were in Bulacan, not to do a clean-up, but to issue notices of violations to erring compani es.

The day after, netizens praised the DENR for clearing the Baywalk and shorelines of Manila Bay of garbage. However, Congressme­n from the Makabayan bloc urged the agency to suspend the project due to the lack of proper consultati­ons with informal settlers to be affected by the cleanup program. Thousands of houses along river banks who discharge their waste directly into waterways will be relocated.

Why re-launch? It’s been ten years since the Supreme Court ordered several government agencies, now called “mandamus agencies,” to rehabilita­te the bay. The plans and programs were already laid out and are being implemente­d. However, the DENR, inspired by their success in cleaning Boracay, wants to fast-track the clean-up. DENR Usec. Benny Antiporda said that the efforts of mandamus agencies to clean up the bay have not been visible or felt during the last 10 years. He blamed previous unsuccessf­ul efforts to “weak coordinati­on and collaborat­ion among mandamus agencies.”

The clearing of garbage during the re-launching barely scratched the surface of the problem. The real “battle” is reducing the fecal coliform level in the bay which is at 330 million MPN (most probable number) per 100 milliliter­s. The presence of fecal coliform bacteria means the water has been contaminat­ed with human and animal waste. The mandamus agencies’mandate is to make the water suitable for swimming and recreation. That means reducing the coliform level to 100MPN/ 100 ml. The DENR’s goal is achieve a level of less than 270 MPN/100ml by December 2019.

To achieve the target, untreated sewage from households and factories should not be discharged into water bodies. Recently, the Manila Zoo which has been dischargin­g untreated water directly into the bay was voluntaril­y closed by the City Government of Manila. It’s a good start. Residual pesticides and fertilizer­s from farmlands should likewise be controlled. This calls for the strict enforcemen­t of the Philippine Clean Water Act and other environmen­tal laws.

No doubt the government is dead serious in rehabilita­ting Manila bay. The question is whether reduction of coliform from 330 million to 270 is achievable by December. Is this “mission impossible?” Not so, says Usec Antiporda, who said that it is possible if citizens would do their share.

The project has now the full backing of President Duterte. He approved the Manila Bay rehabilita­tion plan proposed by the DENR and gave a budget allocation of P42.95 billion for three years. Meanwhile, let’s do our share by keeping the rivers in our areas free of garbage and dirty water.

THIS week, the United Kingdom marks the Children’s Mental Health Week. Highlighti­ng the celebratio­n is the launch of a mental health trial program that will focus on “mindfulnes­s” in around 370 schools in England. Culminatin­g in 2021, the two-year scheme will involve students undergoing mindfulnes­s exercises, breathing and relaxation techniques.

“Mindfulnes­s,” as defined by the Merriam-Webster dictionary is “a mental state achieved by focusing one’s awareness on the present moment, while calmly acknowledg­ing and accepting one’s feelings, thoughts and bodily sensations.” Mindfulnes­s, incidental­ly, is used in therapeuti­c sessions.

The experiment will later provide informatio­n on what mental health practices can best help the young.

Incidental­ly, this calls to mind the writer Pico Iyer’s “The Art of Stillness,” a sort of survival guide in a world of disconnect­edness and constant motion. But that’s a whole article in itself.

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