Wednesday, September 24, 2008

I'D RATHER BE GREEN

SOMETHING SMELLS! 

_________________________________________________________

By Tina M. Monfort

  It does not take a personal flood-experience to get involved.  I, for one, have not experienced my house go under water, having to reupholster practically the entire place and no experience whatsoever getting stranded somewhere.  In fact, I cannot even recall where I was last December 2006, the night Bacolod City went under water. 

Listening to the horrible stories of how Tita Gigi lost most of her family pictures or how Tita Marilyn had to use a dinghy just so they don’t drown when the water rose to 7 feet high was like recalling scenes from Reality T.V.    I CAN ONLY IMAGINE...

Two weeks ago, during our BAHA meeting, Alan G., who heads the Solid Waste Management (SWM) Division, asked for volunteers to write in this column.  With zero experience in writing, I volunteered just the same.  I thought, this was the least I can do to bring about awareness about the rising flood and trash problems of the City.

So, how does one really encourage consciousness to every moment and action when it comes to caring for our environment, which is in a very crucial stage right now? 

Climate change is real but we can still slow it down.  Only if we make our own personal commitment. We should not be overwhelmed with the immensity of the problem and let us not be discouraged either, by how little our contributions may seem like.  For after all, don’t all big things start from something little?     

I started an anti-plastic campaign for BAHA last May, making it possible for us to sell our re-usable grocery and shopping bags at cost.  Thanks to Ichay Bulaong of Luntian Bags for giving us a really good deal (http://luntianbags.wordpress.com).

Plastics, as we all know, don’t biodegrade, they photo degrade - breaking down into smaller toxic bits contaminating soil and waterways and entering the food web when animals accidentally ingest them.   They wrap around living corals, quickly "suffocating" and killing these.  Hundreds of thousands of sea turtles, whales and other marine mammals die every year from eating discarded plastic bags mistaken as food. 

Since water keeps the plastic cool and algae blocks ultraviolet rays, every little piece of plastic manufactured in the past 50 years that made it into the ocean is still there, somewhere.   

You can make a difference by BYOB (Bring-ing Your Own Bag) to your next shopping or grocery trip. We can make this happen and we will!  But we need your help in making this change and your personal commitment never to use plastic again.  It is high time that we get ahead of ourselves – break our own records and stand for what is right!  Get involved!  SAY NO TO PLASTICS NOW!

Hope shines!

BAHA Re-usable Luntian Bags are available at: Bob's CafĂ© - 7091091; Bob’s Big Boy - 4342409 and 4330448; Bank of Commerce - 4334238; For Kids Only - 4352632; Pendy’s - 4340269 / Envirosax is available at Learning Gallery - 4322699; Pink Elephant Robinson’s Place -   4410599 and at Pink Elephant East - 4339280 /   Save a Bag. Save the World (green bags) available at SM Supermarket - BYOB!!!

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

THAT UBIQUITUOUS, FATAL PLASTIC BAG

SOMETHING SMELLS

By: Lourdes Ledesma 


It is such an innocuous thing, the plastic bag.. one hardly notices it. Used in supermarkets to bring home groceries; in the wet markets, to contain fish, meat, vegetables, rice, and fruit; in department stores, to wrap purchases, from threads to shoes, to carpets; in laundry stores, to encase gowns and anything dry-cleaned. The plastic bag in various forms and sizes, is so much a part of our lives, it seems we cannot do without it. It is ubiquitous…everywhere.. a part of our environment …we do not notice it. We even throw it after it has fulfilled its function of carrying our home our purchases…and promptly forget it. Unfortunately, it is not forgettable as part of our garbage. Thought the sanitary engineers collect it along with other refuse, it does not melt away or rot. It has life of its own. It reappears as an unending vista of many colors in our garbage dump.. it litters and clogs our drains, canals and waterways, to our endless frustration when the rains come and the waters rise to our doorstep and even in our living rooms. It appears as a forgettable seascape on our beaches and riverbanks, carrying out malodorous things. It is the main culprit blocking floodwaters from draining to the sea.

 

As much a product of our times and technology, it is a polymer, petroleum-based and rendered in wondrous forms for various needs… tough, transparent, colored, printed, opaque, from filmy to thick, and next to nothing in weight, replacing traditional materials such as wood, metal, and glass. It is photodegradable, but its lifespan is years. And yet, the downsize is, there is just too much of it, to the point that it is threatening to suffocate our lives and our health. If we consider that millions of plastic bags do not rot or go back to Mother Earth, where do they go?

 

It is known, though not visible fact, that ocean-going vessels dump their garbage on the high seas. Before reaching national waters, international ships usually dump perishables into the sea, and part of the garbage are plastic bags. Inter-island ferries likewise throw their garbage into the ocean, despite environmental laws that prohibit such practices. It is lamentable that plastic bags are washed ashore our beaches and litter them. Our oceans are now garbage dumps! It is not unusual to see many plastics bags coming in with the tide, along with bamboo twigs, coconut fronds and other flotsam. It is terrible that many sea creatures actually ingest these, mistaking them as food. As indigestible as far as plastic bags are as food, these actually cause the death of these animals, e.g. turtles, dolphins, sea birds. And if these plastic bags actually biodegrade over time and form part of the food chain, may not humans also be at risk, in the food that we harvest from the sea?

 

What is being done now to reverse this situation, one may ask? Regarding dumping in our seas, NOTHING! Who will police the oceans? At his moment, less than five percent of the world’s escalating population are aware of this growing danger, nor are concerned. Government leaders, especially in Third World countries where the danger is greatest, are too busy with politics. It is environmental groups who are raising public consciousness and concern. Government legislation and enforcement are slow to follow and address the problem. Environmental laws decree the proper disposal of garbage, including plastics and non-biodegradable materials. Yet the cure is too slow to curb the rising mountains of plastic bags anywhere. Prevention? Replacement of plastic bags with bio-degradable materials such as cloth or bamboo baskets, cartons, etc. reduction of usage this means market vendors do not voluntarily use plastic bags to put the purchases of their customers in. It follows that people bring their own containers, preferably, non-plastic, to market. It also means melting them down to make stepping stones, bricks, flowerpots, etc. All these practices are actually being done in some communities and towns in the Philippines, as in Kabankalan in Negros Occ. and in the Municipality of Sta. Barbara, in Iloilo, which has become a model community and a learning center for other communities who aim for the goal of zero waste.

 

Yet, this trend is too slow and not enough to correct the situation. Other countries have actually banned the manufacture and use of plastic bags. China, which has a population of over a billion…translate that into plastic bags…has banned free plastic bags! Because its manufacture is oil-based, China has reduced its national consumption of petroleum. Legislation? Why not? It is a drastic step fro a drastic problem. Ireland has taxed the manufacture and use of plastic bags in 2002, and has definitely reduced its consumption considerably. Canada, Israel, Kenya, Singapore, to name a few, have banned the use of plastic bags. The city of San Francisco, is the first U.S. city to ban it in 2007. Other cities are considering following its example.

 

In a democracy, where the market is free and what dictates of its supply and demand, the manufacture and use of plastic bags hinges on demand. If there was no longer any demand, by a consuming society, there would no longer be any need to manufacture it.

 

So, when all is said and done, the ultimate decision lies with us…will we decide today to save ourselves and our environment? Will we choose to leave our children a better future…a clean and safe environment? Like Hamlet faced with the decision…so are we: to use or not to use—that plastic bag!

Saturday, September 20, 2008

300,000 SQUATTERS!

SOMETHING SMELLS

By:   Agnes T. Jalandoni

One warm morning, my friend Nena and I were passing Mandalagan bridge on the way home. From a distance I spotted 3 children running across the road. Suddenly, a speeding truck appeared, missing the three boys ages 6, 4, and 2 by a hairline.  We pulled over to the curb and looked back at them.   The older one grabbed the toddler on to the curb, and then slapped the 4 year old.  I got off and walked toward them thinking, “Go back, go back.  It’s none of your business.”  As the older boy spotted me he looked alarmed, probably noting how I had seen him slap the younger boy.  Filthy, barely clothed and scared the three brothers looked like they hadn’t eaten for days.   I asked them what they were doing running across the bridge like that.  The older one said that he had run after the second brother who decided to look for their mother.  She left early to look for their father. Three days had passed since he too, left to find work.  The youngest just followed the two. Their last meal -  lunch - yesterday! Their home? A shack under the bridge. 

As we drove away we were quiet. How many times had we crossed Mandalagan bridge and not see the hut teetering on the river bank?  How many live in similar, if not worse conditions in our city of smiles?  Who are these people?  What is a squatter?     

Since we started our involvement in BAHA ( the Bacolod Anti – Baha Alliance)   we have walked through many of the squatter areas here in our city.  Starting with one of the bigger areas in Bata and Banago we have seen appalling conditions for the poor in our city. We drive past them daily and somehow, not bother to look and see. We began to realize that these shacks built on the waterways actually cause the flooding. We discovered that all these structures which include pig pens, toilets, basketball courts etc… are illegal. They block the natural flow of water in the creeks and rivers.  Why do many of our settlers continue to build at risk of their safety, and for some, their lives? When the floods hit they make do with temporary relocation sites, receive a bag of rice, noodles and canned sardines from the government, then go back. We have seen toilets split open, human excrement mixing with pig’s dung from the pig pens and worse, children playing a few feet away. This is a real threat to the health of thousands living under these conditions.  The potential for an epidemic to strike or deaths resulting from flooding are all too real to evade.  When this happens, no one will be spared.

2007 NSO statistics report that our population in Bacolod has reached 499,497. In recent interviews BHA Head Josephine Segundino, cited that the current number of informal dwellers or squatters in the city may have already reached 60 to 65 per cent of the city’s population.  300, 000 people in our city do not own homes and are occupying relatively unstable dwelling places. 200,000 squatters!  One out of two people do not own a home!   These are alarming numbers. 

Ms. Segundino has recommended several proposals to meet the staggering demand for housing. The Mayor plans to purchase 30 to 60 hectares for additional relocation sites to provide housing for 1000 households pending ejection. This is roughly enough for 5000 people-  5000 out of the 300,000? If we are growing each year by 1.38 per cent and both the relocation sites in Barangay Handumanan and Vista Alegre are almost filled, Bacolod will soon become the city of the homeless.  Ms. Segundino emphasized further that the purchase of land to accommodate the growing number of people in the city has to be sustained for the next ten years.   

How do we move so many people to the relocation sites?  What livelihood programs will be made available for them to make the transfer attractive? What does the law provide?  Does our city allocate sufficient funds for landbanking?  That is, enough to sustain the recommended plan by the BHA to address the growing population in the city?  Is there a comprehensive city development plan that covers all the critical areas required to allow our city to grow and provide the basic services for all of us? 

RA 7279 is the Urban Development and Housing Act of 1992.   I Googled this and began to read.  The Act was finally passed by the House of Representatives and the Senate on Feb. 3, 1992.  16 years later, Bacolod City has 300,000 squatters and growing! This is simply just not right. I will explain this in my next column.

TRASH AND HOGWASH!

SOMETHING SMELLS

By Gigi M. Campos

 

The time bomb ticks away…  in less than a month the existing  open dump site at Felisa currently being used by the city government will be full. This shocking revelation came from Councilor Greg Gasataya, Chairperson of the Bacolod City Clean and Green Coordinating Action Team during one of the meetings of the Flood Mitigation Committee.  Ten BAHA representatives  sit in this  Committee in the teams of Flood Control, Housing and Legal and Solid Waste Management.

The Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000, or R.A. 9003 mandates  the  closure of all open dumps by February 16, 2006.  The deadline was two (2) years ago!  Unfortunately our City government did nothing towards complying with the provisions RA 9003 since the deadline. Straight from the horse’s mouth came the excuse that like other local governments officials who have not complied, our city mayor was hoping the law would still be changed.   Last July with undue haste and under threat our city  officials hurriedly purchased seven hectares from the Lopez family also at Barangay Felisa for a sanitary landfill under questionable circumstances. Now that the purchase is a done deal, the questions remain – Was it overpriced? Were the barangay residents properly consulted? When will the new property at Felisa be ready as a landfill? In the meantime, where will the garbage be dumped since the open dumpsite is now full?

The problem is serious. It is time for everyone to make necessary though inconvenient decisions --  for this is a matter of survival.   Let’s look at the facts.  We may not realize it, but each of us throws away more than 360 kilos of trash per year.  Studies show that every year, a typical household  of five throws out 1,120  kilos of paper,  240 kilos of metal,  220 kilos of glass and 220 kilos of food scraps, not counting all plastic products. Experts estimate that 500 billion to 1 trillion plastic bags are consumed and discarded annually worldwide—more than a million per minute. Yes, a MILLION A MINUTE!

About 80 percent of all our garbage ends up in landfills—open dumps, as they are more commonly known.  (Of the remaining 20 percent, about half is recycled and half is incinerated.)  One big problem is that we are running out of landfill space—in less than a month the existing open dumpsite in Felisa will be full.  Where will we put all our garbage when that happens?

 

But trash presents more than a space problem.  Between 5 and 15 percent of what we throw away contains hazardous substances--substances that can seep into the ground and contaminate air, water, and soil, eventually injuring people and other living things.  Batteries, plastics, inks used on packages, and disposable diapers are just some of the things we throw away that contain hazardous substances that can cause serious problems. 
 

 

One of the things we throw away most often is packaging.  Think about the products you and your family buy.  From detergent powder to shampoo sachets, from snack foods to compact discs, -- many products contain a great deal of packaging.  Some have four or five layers, including several layers of plastic, far more than may be necessary.  If your household is typical, about one-third of the packaging you buy will be thrown away immediately upon opening a package.

Excessive packaging also adds to the cost of a product, so you pay extra for products that have a lot of wrapping.  We also pay for garbage in other ways--through higher taxes needed to create new landfills, for example, and through higher medical bills and health insurance costs required to cure the illnesses caused by pollution. 
 

The real tragedy behind the mountains of trash we produce is that a lot of what we throw away can actually be reused or recycled.  Not everything is recyclable, and some materials are more easily recycled than others.  But recycling makes perfect sense in any case.  After all, why throw away what we can reuse?

Burning trash without making energy is the last thing we want to do with our trash. Burning trash at home and in open spaces harms human health and the environment and is now illegal under RA 9003. No single step can solve our waste disposal problems. Each option has side effects that must be considered when we're selecting the best solution to each solid waste problem.

      We used to think that after we discarded something into a landfill that it would eventually biodegrade--that is, it would rot and disappear completely.  But we have come to learn that this doesn't really happen.

When things are buried in a landfill, where there is little if any air or sunlight, things do not break down.  In fact, burying things in a landfill tends to preserve trash rather than dispose of it! 
 

You probably already know about the "three R’s"--reading, 'riting, and 'rithmatic.  But there are three more R’s we should know to help us Green our environment. 
 

Refuse to buy things that are excessively packaged, that are made of plastics or other materials that are not fully recyclable, that are wasteful in other ways, or that you don't really need.

Reuse whatever you can.  And buy products made of or packaged in reused (recycled) material.

    Recycle as much as you can.  This allows us to get the most use of out of our precious resources.

Being involved in this advocacy has been an insightful though at times jolting learning experience for me . One revelation is how much money there is in trash, but I will tell you more about  this in the next column. For now, as residents of this city, let us be aware of the issues. And let us dismiss all these lame excuses for not implementing laws that affect our well-being and health as hogwash. It’s time for us to get involved.  More and more I have realized that if we are not part of the solution then we are part of the problem.   Whether,  as a private citizen or as someone in government, I truly believe it is never too late to make a difference.

 

TODAY, WE ALSO MAKE HISTORY!

SOMETHING SMELLS

By Alan S. Gensoli

Welcome to Something Smells, the column of the Bacolod Anti-Baha Alliance that will run three times a week, MWF. So first off, we would like to thank the Editorial Board of the Negros Daily Bulletin for giving us space. Considering how some media have been hushed for carrying our cause, this column is much needed breathing space. Alas, something smells.

The Bacolod Anti-Baha Alliance, or Baha, is a non-political organization of citizens concerned about the worsening flooding problem of the city. We aim to impel our local government to implement the following flood-mitigating solutions: construction of new floodways and rehabilitation of old waterways; the dignified resettlement of illegal dwellers who have been allowed by government to build structures on our waterways and pollute it with their garbage; and the education of all towards the practice of solid waste management.

In order for us to bring the matter about flooding to the consciousness of everyone, the Baha has decided to take on this column. Nine members have signed up to write, taking turns. We are Gigi Campos, Agnes Jalandoni, Ma-e Jalandoni, Lourdes Ledesma, Sally Ledesma, Tina Monfort, Nena Rossello, Marilyn Soliven, and myself. More will be joining us soon.

For this maiden column, let me attempt to bring you up to speed on the three flood-mitigating efforts mentioned earlier. These updates are not meant to be complete. We will be chewing on them in future columns.

Bacolod has over a dozen natural waterways. Through the years, these have become obstructed. Illegal structures straddle the waterways, including squatter homes and buildings, too. Latest survey estimates that there are less than five rivers and streams functioning.

Meanwhile, the P18 Million floodway project in Banago is a third of the way done. When we visited the project a month ago, I observed that the construction of the length of the floodway is interrupted by illegal homes that have yet to be vacated and demolished. Because of this, there are at least three floodway portions that have yet to be connected. In effect, instead of one long floodway, we now have Jurassic-size bath tubs with stagnant, dirty water. A rise in the incidence of dengue in the area should not surprise us then. Mind you, these illegal structures that remain along the path of the floodway have been declared nuisance, and some of its residents have received financial assistance to leave. One of our writers, Nena Rosello, sits in the flood control committee. She and our other writers will have more to tell you, including how these illegal dwellers are able to dwell illegally, complete with Baciwa connections. Indeed, something smells.

Meanwhile, Agnes Jalandoni, who sits in the housing committee, is raring to share stories about the city’s efforts to resettle illegal dwellers. By way of sneak preview, I am told that some illegal dwellers in Banago have been allowed to resettle themselves by the shoreline, it would seem, just waiting to be swept away by a sudden rise in sea level. Others have been given lots in Abada-Escay, the government’s latest resettlement project in Vista Alegre. Over there, you dig your own drainage, you find your own water, and dinner is always by candlelight because there is no electricity. Back in Banago, the GK is building 25 duplexes for 50 families. But with the floodway far from being finished, drainage is impossible. Awarding these homes will only condemn people into a life of misery and smell.

My pet peeve is garbage. Fellow writer Gigi Campos and I, together with other Baha members, sit in the solid waste management committee. Fundamental to our concern is this: RA 9003, or the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000 (Art. 37, Sec. 1), the Implementing Rules and Regulations of R.A. 9003 (Rule XIII, Sec. 1), and the National Solid Waste Management Commission (Resolution No.5), the country’s lead agency for SWM implementation created under R.A. 9003, all require that “open dumpsites” in the country must be converted to “controlled dumpsites” by Feb, 16, 2004. And that by Feb. 16, 2006, all controlled dumpsites must be closed. Henceforth, garbage will be collected in “sanitary landfills”. By providing a time line for the transformation of open dumpsites into eventual sanitary landfills, the national government gave all LGUs enough time to build the sanitary landfill. And yet, to this day, in Bacolod City, we are still using an open dumpsite. We never even complied with the controlled dumpsite deadline (2004), let alone the sanitary landfill deadline (2006).

Who’s responsible for implementing solid waste management? The city or the barangays? I shall tell all in my next column. Till then, hold your breath because there again, something smells.

Friday, August 29, 2008

Vista Alegre: Pilot Barangay of Anti-BAHA Alliance SWM education drive

Vista Alegre is the pilot barangay chosen by the Bacolod Anti-BAHA Alliance for its Solid Waste Management education drive.

Jean Trebol, Agnes Jalandoni, Alan Gensoli and several members of the BAHA Alliance went out of their way to help in the SWM education campaign so that others will also contribute in the prevention of flooding in Bacolod City.

Vista Alegre Punong Barangay Jose Antonio Gensoli, purok leaders and the youth welcomed BAHA in its effort to help improve the solid waste management of Bacolod City.

Jalandoni said the Solid Waste Management group in the Mitigating Committee was requested to help in the education campaign and Alan Gensoli chose Vista Alegre as the pilot barangay for the education campaign.

Vista Alegre

If this will succeed in Vista Alegre, this can be replicated in other barangays, she said.

Jalandoni said that it's time to share to others about proper waste disposal and how it can be converted into money out of garbage segregation.

"We need to teach people how important are their contribution to this effort. We have to know how much garbage we dispose everyday. We all know that a lot of people contribute why our canals and surroundings get dirty simply because they are not doing their share. We have to educate ourselves on proper waste disposal. We should not throw our garbage carelessly. We should refrain from using plastics; we need to recycle bottles and cans so that only residual waste is left to be collected," she said.

Vista Alegre

She added that if she can do it, she urged others to also do their share so that the effort could mushroom, which will eventually lead to the benefit of the general public as well as our city.

She said that the education campaign will literally start from the uphill. And then hopefully it can be replicated. We just need to help one another in changing our attitude towards garbage. It's difficult but it is possible when we are all determined to do our share in making our city truly clean, green and floodless," she said.

She added that in foreign countries, people are disciplined in the proper disposal of garbage. Other Filipinos who worked overseas also adopted such practice. Their streets are clean because people follow the rules.

Punong Barangay Gensoli said that solid waste management is his priority program.

Vista Alegre

He said that Vista Alegre has many rivers. The river in Villa Angela started to get dirty because garbage and plastics are being thrown there.

The garbage collection was done once every month or two and now it was done once every two weeks. It started to get dirty as some residents just asked a poor kid with his trisikad to throw a sack of garbage and they were not aware that this is being thrown in the rivers. They just pay the kid and their garbage is thrown directly to the rivers.

He told his Purok Presidents to prohibit dwellers within the 50 meter distance from the river.He also thanked the Anti-BAHA Alliance for their concern and willingness to help educate the people about proper waste disposal. The first time that I met the BAHA members, they asked me about the first step that they will do to help in the SWM and I told them, help educate the people about solid waste management," he said.

He planned to make Vista Alegre as the model barangay for all the 61 barangay in terms of cleanliness. There is a Clean and Green competition for the barangays and the evaluation started this month until next month.

He said that he does not need the competition because he always sees to it that their barangay is regularly clean. "They can come here anytime and they will see how clean our roads are."

Since he became the Punong Barangay, solid waste management is his priority which particularly includes Abada-Escay, the resettlement area of the City Government of Bacolod.

He said that "We will continue to educate the people in Abada Escay because the dwellers there came from the 36 different barangays in the city and these people don't care about proper waste disposal. If you are looking for mountainous garbage, go to Abada Escay," he said.

He also instructed the barangay tanods to make rounds at night at Abada Escay because there are private individuals from outside the barangay who threw their garbage at night.

Moreover, Alan Gensoli said that the city government has allocated P3 million for its SWM, which was divided in all the 61 barangays.

The city has used the year 2000 Census as its basis with a formula of area x population.

But in 2000, Abada Escay was not yet been developed.

Now, Abada Escay has a population of 7,500 individuals.

Other barangays still receive the same SWM budget as if these 7,500 people are still there in their barangays and there was no increase of the SWM budget for Vista Alegre.

According to Councilor Greg Gasataya, the new SWM budget will take effect in 2010, Gensoli said.

He added that the situation in the Abada Escay is very difficult due to the absence of proper utilities like power, water and drainage. People were just transferred there even if it lacks preparation of the site.

Even the Gawad Kalinga in the Abada Escay also lacks these basic utilities.

Alan Gensoli said, "We need to educate the people about SWM because of health and ecology. Ecology is a Greek word which means home. If we clean our own home, why can't we clean our ecology, the earth, which is also our own home?"

He added that based on the RA 9003, City Ordinance 310, and solid waste management is the responsibility of the barangays. "We need to segregate at source. The Material recovery facility must be established in the barangay level so that the city will just collect the residual waste which will be  placed in a sanitary land fill. However the city has not yet started in its SWM education campaign.

The implementing agencies are DENR and National Solid waste management commission. Under NSWC Resolution 9, they categorize the Local Government unit on how many volumes of garbage are being disposed in a locality. Bacolod City is under category 4 because it has more than 200 tons of garbage being generated a day and it needs to have a sanitary land fill with a treatment pond.

According to the law, by February 16, 2004, the open dumpsite should be converted into a controlled dumpsite. But by Feb. 16, 2006, all controlled dumpsites should be closed. February 17, 2006 the use of sanitary land fill should start, "We are more than 2 years and a half delayed, that alone is against the law. The government is liable for that under the law.

Government swore to protect and preserve the integrity of the law. But here we are, just ignoring the law."

He said that the 7-hectare property which the city bought from Lopez is just beside the existing dump site and in two months from now, it will be fully filled up. "Do you think we could make a sanitary land fill immediately? It takes a year to do it. We need to teach our people to segregate so that the volumes of garbage could be reduced tremendously. There is so much money which can be made out of the trash. I have seen no reason why we will not segregate.

Meanwhile, Mrs. Trebol said they also conducted a waste characterization in Vista Alegre to determine what kind of waste they generate, and from there they can determine what kind of material recovery facility they will need.

After this, they will conduct a two day seminar, which is going to be more intensive for the SWM group in Vista Alegre.

She said that Alan Gensoli, head of the Alliance SWM Committee chose Vista Alegre because the success factor is high. The Punong Barangay and the Council are very eager to implement SWM.

She said that it's not easy to change people's attitude towards garbage. But if the city shows that they mean business, it will be easy. It has to start from them. "We are just here to help and show them the examples and hopefully it will be successful. And if it is, it can be something that everyone can follow. We want to show to all that's its doable if we all do our share and contribution to make the city clean, green and floodless."