The Pen Speaks
By Danny O. Sagun

WHAT happened to the ballyhooed waste segregation system in Dagupan City?

After the normal publicity gimmicks, the system seems to have been discarded and the old waste disposal practice returned to its “crowning glory” as evidenced by the growing volume of trash being dumped at the garbage site right there in Tondaligan, the city’s beach and picnic area.

Reggie Ubando of the Waste Management Division could only shake his head on why the dump there is now about 10 meters high and the heavy equipment at the site is already having difficulty moving the great volume of trash. We thought that practically no trash would ever land there anymore as much of the garbage, about 90 percent, would go to recycling and other useful means.

That was actually Ubando’s claim before when he made his pitch for the full implementation of the waste segregation system in this city of bangus.

We would usually pass by the Bonuan road every Thursday morning on our way to Radyo ng Bayan-DZMQ for our weekly Pantongtongan Tayo program. We could smell the stench coming from the site. Afternoons, we could see black smoke, apparently, from the trash being burned.

Why? Is it not illegal to burn even a little trash in our backyard now per the Clean Air Act?

We heard Ubando one morning over radio chiding the community environment and natural resources (CENRO) office for failing to take action against the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Dagupan branch for the agency’s act of burning trash, i.e. the fallen leaves of the trees which abound in its compound. He also took to task the BSP for violating the law.

Now, might we ask: Just who’s burning those garbage at the Tondaligan dumpsite anyway?

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Barangays are supposed to dispose of their own garbage, right? How would they do it other than burning those that could not be recycled? At this point we really do not know if all of the city’s barangays have adopted the method used by a barangay in Calasiao which has earned national attention.

No amount of publicity will make the waste segregation system work unless it is strictly and fully implemented. We could not just allow the old practice to return, considering the city’s sad experience on waste disposal particularly at the dumpsite.

And to think that up to now, the proposed modern landfill type in barangay Awai in San Jacinto is yawning from unuse. It seems the city government has changed its mind on how to make use of that land. Convert it into a watershed and forest park? Well, just do it. Residents there will pose no objection, we suppose.



Windows
By Gabriel L. Cardinoza

To date, I still have to actually see a traffic enforcer apprehend a tricycle or jeepney driver glaringly defying the city’s traffic rules.

I say this because everytime I’m stopped by the red light in an intersection, I obediently stop right before the pedestrian lane marked by two thick white lines. But as I patiently wait for the green light, a tricycle, and even a jeepney, suddenly appears from nowhere and occupies the space right in front of me, blocking the pedestrian lane in the process.

Isn’t this is a clear traffic violation? Unfortunately, to the city’s traffic enforcers, this is not because this has been happening everyday right under their very noses and they did not do anything.

At the intersection of Burgos St. and Perez Blvd. one early evening, I was tailing the vehicle of then city executive Elmer Lorica. I supposed he was going to turn left to Perez Blvd. while I was on my way to Guilig St.

From the left lane of Burgos, outside the iron railings, a white van suddenly appeared. He is not supposed to be there, I thought.

But just when I was looking for the traffic enforcer to see if he noticed the vehicle, Elmer got out of his vehicle and called for the traffic enforcer to direct him to apprehend the driver of the erring white van. At that moment, I had wished Elmer would always be at that intersection.

To my mind, most tricycle and jeepney drivers violate traffic rules simply because they do not know that what they are doing are violations. Or, if they do know, they do it simply because they know that they can run away with it.

The Land Transportation Office should partly get the blame for the emergence of this road culture. This is because the LTO does not have a stringent process in the issuance of driver’s licenses.

For instance, drivers do not even have to go through actual driving tests before they are issued their licenses. And with fixers still hounding the LTO, getting a driver’s license is still as easy as buying cigarettes. Somebody I know did not even know how to drive when he got his professional driver’s license.

On the part of law enforcers, they should be more aggressive in enforcing traffic rules. Those repeatedly apprehended for the same offenses should be made to undergo an honest-to-goodness seminar on road courtesy.

There has to be a way to discipline erring drivers. Otherwise, even if we fill up our streets with concrete barriers and iron railings and install traffic light in every intersection, our traffic will continue to worsen if we have drivers who think they are above the law.

ENDNOTES: It was Bayambang Mayor Leo de Vera’s birthday last Thursday, August 11. I missed his party at his residence in Barangay Bical. But those who were there swore that his spacious compound was teeming with guests that included Police Regional Director Freddie de Vera. I’m sure everybody left Mayor De Vera’s house happy… The Rotary Club of Dagupan led by Vice Mayor Alvin Fernandez had a bloodletting activity last week. The vice mayor himself, after passing the screening, donated blood and it was almost immediately used to save a dengue fever victim confined at the Region1 Medical Center. Mabuhay ka, Vice!

QUICK QUOTE: To live is so startling it leaves little time for anything else. — Emily Dickinson

(You can reach Gabriel L. Cardinoza at windows@digitelone.com)




Region 1 Medical center personnel, with Dr. Gloria Balboa (left panel photo) leading them, do their regular start-of-the weekday exercises to keep fit and healthy for their rigorous public services. The Pangasinan Tri-Media Association (Patrima) has signed an agreement with R1MC to provide information dissemination support to medical and health services for better public appreciation of public health care. ( PStar Photo by Butch F. Uka)