CALAPAN CITY, Oriental Mindoro – A non-government organization headed by former Department of the Interior and Local Government Secretary Mel Senen Sarmiento lauded the local government of Puerto Galera, this province, for their unique pro-environment approach in restoring and protecting its bay and coastal resources.
Sarmiento specifically cited Puerto Galera’s Waste Water Management Program (WWMP) that greatly helped in improving the water quality in San Isidro and Sabang Bay.
WWMP is a comprehensive and science-based solution featuring sewage collection and treatment systems, particularly in Barangay Sabang and Barangay San Isidro, to protect coastal waters and marine ecosystems.
In a social media post thru his group called Galing Lider Forum, Sarmiento recalled how Puerto Galerans expressed deep concern about the heavy pollution in the town’s coastal areas and diving destinations which are within the Verde Island Passage, a significant marine corridor located between Batangas and Mindoro.
Sarmiento learned that before the implementation of the program, untreated waste water from establishments and households flowed directly into the bay, pushing fecal coliform levels to dangerous levels and threatening marine life, public health, and the tourism industry that sustained the local economy.
He highlighted Vice Mayor Rocky D. Ilagan’s own brand of local leadership that turned an environmental crisis into a model for sustainable coastal management.
In 2018, then Mayor Ilagan requested Gov. Alfonso V. Umali Jr. for financial assistance for the construction of a waste treatment plant facility in Barangay Isidro, where the popular White Beach could be found.
Citing the people’s inherent right to clean and safe environment, particularly conservation and preservation through proper waste water management, Umali endorsed it to the Department of Public Works and Highways for processing, design, and construction while funds were sourced from Tourism Infrastructure and Enterprise Zone Authority (TIEZA) and the Department of Tourism.
The local government unit passed an ordinance requiring all residential and commercial buildings to connect their sewers to the existing sewerage system leading to the sewerage treatment plant.
The ordinance said that with the growth of residential and tourist establishments, there was a need to safeguard the well-being of Puerto Galera especially its waterfronts, coastlines, beaches, and bodies of water against the liquid and fluid effluents and discharges.
Galing Lider Forum is the advocacy platform of Sarmiento, chairperson of Galing Pook Foundation, a non-government entity dedicated to building bridges among communities and advancing practical, action-oriented solutions to the country’s pressing challenges.