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Broken English, broken
buildings
IT was a perfect killer quake. Just when people thought the danger
lies up ahead at grumbling Mount Merapi, the quake suddenly came
like a thief in the night, claiming the lives of 5,400 people,
and still counting. It happened in Indonesia; it could happen
in the Philippines. The question now is—is the Philippines
ready?
The Philippines practically
suffers a quake each day, almost all of them harmless temblors.
The web site of the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology
(Phivolcs), however, lists about a dozen destructive earthquakes
since the ’60s. Among the most prominent of these were the
magnitude 7.3 quake in Manila that destroyed Ruby Tower and killed
200 in 1968; as well as the 7.9 Moro Gulf quake in Mindanao that
unleashed tsunamis and killed more than 6,000 people in 1976.
In 1990 another killer quake leveled the summer capital of Baguio
City and toppled a school in Cabanatuan City.
Is the Philippines ready
for another big temblor like these ones?
Supposedly, local government
units have their disaster coordinating councils tasked to prepare
for these disasters and mitigate their impact should they arise.
But the recent list of buildings that are considered highly at
risk from earthquakes are no cause for comfort. The list indicates
that 99 percent are school buildings, specifically those of public
school. The list covers Metro Manila, only; we could assume that
the situation could be as worse in other densely populated cities
outside the National Capital Region. Should another Magnitude
7 temblor—God forbid—occurs, school children, most
of them sons and daughters of poor families, are the ones that
are likely to be affected.
Certainly, addressing
natural disasters means that the country should improve its capability
for disaster preparedness, mitigation, relief and rehabilitation.
The government should also review the country’s building
code to determine its relevance to account for changes in urban
land use and development.
The local government
units should play an important role in this process as they are
mandated to do comprehensive land-use and development planning.
But given the situation in the country’s public school system,
its rickety buildings and structures, it might be necessary for
the government to look at the country’s budget for education
from the view of disaster mitigation. This is important considering
that the Senate is currently deliberating the 2006 budget.
In its present form,
the proposed budget allocates only P5.86 billion for basic educational
resources, such as classrooms, teachers, seats and textbooks.
Sen. Mar Roxas has noted that this amount is inadequate to close
the gaps of 41,197 in classrooms, 10,517 in teachers, 1.5 million
in desks, and 41.32 million in textbooks—gaps which DepEd
estimates would need P22.88 billion more to complete. Meaning,
what is proposed in the budget is just a little over a fourth
of what’s needed.
Lately, Senator Roxas
has pushed for the realigning of P9.18 billion from the slashed
items to increase the budget of the Department of Education, insisting
that education and human-resource development should take precedence
over other State priorities. He said the additional P9.18 billion
should go to basic educational resources, teacher training and
private school subsidy.
The senators would be
doing a signal public service, and prove critics wrong that they
are an overpaid, useless bunch, by heeding the realignment proposal.
It would serve justice if they would also provide specific amounts
necessary to refurbish those rickety school buildings.
This is the least that
the government could do. If the country’s school system
is so challenged fiscally and manpower-wise it cannot teach children
proper English—or guarantee basic proficiency needed for
today’s jobs, at least the schools should ensure they are
not maimed, bruised or killed should another perfect killer quake—heaven
forbid—happens.
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