Improved quality of life
Safe water, road safety, waste management top Nanay’s legislative
agenda
No other Pampanga governor
– aye, all of them combined – has initiated, implemented, and impacted as much health
programs, projects, and services to the Capampangan as much as Pineda, indeed meriting
her the endearing Nanay to her people.
Her efforts at providing her
constituents universal care – in the true meaning of the word – with her
engagements with PhilHealth and the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office have earned
accolades from the national government. Her organization and deployment of health
workers and her eponymous Nanay volunteers at the barangay level have been hailed
as “best practices” for emulation, moreso, for replication in other local
government units.
The improvement of the
province’s 11 district hospitals and the provincial Diosdado Macapagal Memorial
Hospital in facilities, equipment, staff and services has likewise been hailed
a template for other LGUs.
Still, Pineda herself
would be the last to call her health program a “success.”
“All our efforts seem to
be always falling short, notwithstanding the amount of resources, both manpower
and material, we infused in all these health initiatives and interventions,”
she said, her mind not far from the long lines to the medical assistance office
at the ground of the Capitol and to that to her office on the second floor.
Pineda said it was high
time that the “curative phase” of health programs be “strongly complemented by
the preventive aspect.”
“The quality of the air we
breathe, the water we drink, the food we eat, among others, need be of the
safest standards,” she said. “We all know how disease-causing germs thrive in a
dirty environment.”
In a short talk with Punto!
at her office on Monday, Pineda adumbrated a series of legislative measures
she said shall be enacted to ascertain the health security of the Capampangan constituency
this 2020.
Potable water
Local water districts
(LWDs) and their joint venture partners shall be made to account of their
strict adherence to, “not simple compliance with,” the set standard parameters
for drinking water quality.
“Hindi puede yung malinaw
naman, kaya puede nang inumin. Dapat, talagang puro sa kalinisan,” she said.
Reports of periodic safety
water standard tests conducted by the LWDs shall be asked to be provided to the
local government units, “not only for their information but moreso for their
immediate action in cases of problems.”
Food security
It is not enough that there
is enough food supply, it is imperative that the food is safe, especially with
the penchant of the Capampangan to make even the blandest of dishes “not only edible
but even delectable.”
“Safety starts where the
food is grown,” Pineda said. “Our experiences with the H5N6 avian influenza in
2017 and the African swine flu last year are lessons here.”
Poultry and piggery farms,
as well as abattoirs, need to be subjected to stringent health and environmental
standards to “guarantee food safety.”
“The cleanliness of these
food farms will also greatly minimize, if not totally eradicate, air pollution,”
Pineda added.
Waste management
While Pineda took
exception to the validity of the reasons of Environment Undersecretary for
Solid Waste Management and LGU Concerns Benny Antiporda in closing four “open dumpsites”
in the province last year, she has nonetheless advanced “more stringent”
measures to the local implementation of the garbage law.
“There have been a lot of
concern over the disposal of hospital wastes, which is really called for owing
to their impact to the health of the people. As much concern though should be
given to funeral parlor wastes,” she said.
Close monitoring by
concerned departments of LGUs on both provincial and municipal/city levels of
the disposal of hospital and funeral wastes will be mandated through local
legislation to assure they undergo proper procedures and prevent their posing
danger to the people’s health.
Road safety
“I mourn the loss of
lives, especially the young and promising ones, in that New Year road tragedy,”
lamented Pineda of the mishap in her native Lubao that claimed seven lives.
While conceding that transport
regulations are primarily “within the ambit of national agencies” like the Land
Transportation Office and the Land Transportation and Franchise Regulatory
Board, the LGUs “will be shirking their responsibility to ensure the safety of
their constituencies if we just these accept accidents as inevitable.”
“We can – through resolutions,
for one – ask the LTFRB to strictly implement the banning of dangerously
dilapidated public transports, the LTO for the revival of the drug-test and its
strict implementation as requirement for the issuance of driver’s license,” she
said. “Also, the deputization of local traffic enforcers and their deployment
in major routes.”
In cases of indigents
being fatalities in road accidents, Pineda said she would be calling a meeting
with funeral parlor proprietors to “strongly request an automatic 15 to 20
percent off the cost of their services.”
“We in the LGUs have
already institutionalized funeral assistance to indigents, it is not too much
to ask of similar assistance from funeral parlors in terms of discounts,”
Pineda said. “If only for humanitarian considerations.”
3rd District board
member Atty. Ananias Canlas, Jr. said he would be putting into resolutions “Nanay’s
expressed agenda.”
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