The Freeman

On reclamatio­n and remedy Mandaue’s first recla

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Get the medicine: The diseases of society

This is in relation to an article published in The

FREEMAN re: Life Irony of Mr. Marco Ouano Toral and I would like to enlighten our readers with documentar­y evidence as a case of public interest - notably donated lots at Mandaue's first reclamatio­n area.

Without malice and offense, Mr. Ernesto C. Ouano was authorized by the Mandaue City Council in the early 70's (when my father was a city councilor) to reclaim the coastal areas of Looc, Mandaue City, up to the old "tulay" involving more or less 100 hectares.

A sharing scheme was formulated, duly approved by both parties; with Mandaue City getting 25 percent and 75 percent to the developer.

Parties had delicadeza to share prime lots and visibly now stands; Mandaue District Hospital, Sports Complex, Fire Department and Engineerin­g building with wide cemented roads for communal use.

That on Oct. 7 1975, a Mandaue City Council Res. No. 173 was passed "authorizin­g City Mayor Demetrio M. Cortes to execute a partition agreement with Mr. Ernesto C. Ouano Sr. of two lots reclaimed by him" where the city jail now stands is part of the 25 percent share in Lot A containing an area of 8,613 square meters belong to BIR which had remained unused after 17 years donated by the city.

The remaining 7,613 square meters is registered in the names of Mandaue City with Title No. 37323 and we can safely assume that where government buildings stand are never donated lots.

History would tell us that the late Mr. Ernesto C. Ouano Sr. and his family are philanthro­pists for he never declined his God-given talents and financial resources - from the sea he loved so much that kept him afloat.

He helped spur economic activity being a foremost developer and sometimes we can ask when can Mandaue City recognize his good deeds and mental calculatio­ns what is Mandaue today connecting to Mactan Island through the sea in his vision of a lifetime. Dr. Danilo C. Dionson

Our society is ill. It is plagued by diseases that ruin its functions. It is bedridden, just waiting for its time to lie down in a casket and say goodbye to the world it knew. Just whose fault is it? Whose fault is it that society is in such a state? The answer is, sad but true, the ones who make up society itself.

Society is made up of people working together, sharing the same ideas, cultures, and whatnot. Society is made stable by its principles, institutio­ns, and the common goal that drives it to perform optimally. Society is alive for it evolves, changes, and adapts as its members change as well. Therefore, when there is something wrong with society, it is in one of these components where we can find the problem.

Most members of the society are in disarray. "United," we may be, but can we really say this when our values teach us not to fully trust a person? We live in times when trust is less and less shown, until we trust no one altogether. The members of society are indifferen­t towards one another, and this clogs their way to progress. It may not seem that bad, but being vital to the society, a setback to the unity of the members of society, like social indifferen­ce, may push society on its back.

Another thing that haunts our society today is the growing number of people who should be the ones serving our society, but instead, use the power they have for their own personal gain. They get heaps of fortune at the expense of the rest of the members of the society. How does the society perform its functions when one of its organs, the social institutio­ns, is working in disorder? It is hard, if not impossible, for society to progress when it experience­s such corruption.

So, what can we do to fix society? What can we, the members of society, do to get society up and running again? Simple. We change our ways. We must purge the social institutio­ns of its pests. We must learn to trust again, and in turn, be trustworth­y. It is only after we overcome these problems that society may prosper. Nichole Anne S. Flores BS Psychology University of San Carlos-Talamban Campus

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