At A Glance
- Department of Human Settlements and Urban Development (DHSUD) Secretary Jose Ramon Aliling on Thursday, Aug. 28, called on government agencies and private developers to make the housing sector a model of transparency and said even the smallest trace of corruption can undermine national progress.
Department of Human Settlements and Urban Development (DHSUD) Secretary Jose Ramon Aliling (Photo: DHSUD)
Department of Human Settlements and Urban Development (DHSUD) Secretary Jose Ramon Aliling on Thursday, Aug. 28, called on government agencies and private developers to make the housing sector a model of transparency and said even the smallest trace of corruption can undermine national progress.
Aliling made the call during the Housing Summit organized by the Organization of Socialized and Economic Housing Developers of the Philippines (OSHDP).
“Even 1 percent of corruption is unacceptable. Both the private sector and the government should work together to achieve zero corruption in the housing sector," Aliling said.
He urged top officials of OSHDP member-companies to support President Marcos Jr.'s drive against corruption and position the housing industry as a benchmark for integrity.
“Let us show that the housing sector can do this so we can inspire others to follow suit. Let us help President Marcos Jr. fight corruption. He is serious about this. Our country still has hope,” he said, highlighting the sector’s potential to lead broader governance reforms.
In his first 90 days in office, Aliling rolled out reforms under DHSUD’s 8-Point Agenda aligned with the Bagong Pilipinas vision, introducing digitalization, streamlined processes, and zero-tolerance policies for corruption.
He also spearheaded program recalibration and expanded the Pambansang Pabahay para sa Pilipino (4PH) Program, which has gained support from 42 private developers committing over 250,000 housing units under the Expanded 4PH Program.
Urban poor groups and civil society organizations were engaged, reflecting Aliling’s participatory approach to housing reform.
Aliling also cited ongoing probes into alleged massive corruption in government flood control projects, noting that President Marcos personally discovered “ghost” and substandard projects during inspections.