What is CMP and why DHSUD is reviving it in mass housing implementation
At A Glance
- The initial 34 on-site CMP projects will benefit about 5,000 member-beneficiaries.
Photo: DHSUD
The Department of Human Settlements and Urban Development (DHSUD) has revived the Community Mortgage Program (CMP) which was suspended before after the national government focused on in-city, on-site mass housing through condo-type projects.
DHSUD Secretary Jose Ramon Aliling said the revival of the CMP will result in the construction of 5,000 more housing units across the country.
"The initial 34 on-site CMP projects will benefit about 5,000 member-beneficiaries. We need to prioritize high-impact and implementable CMP projects and assist our beneficiaries transform their communities," Aliling said.
The CMP is a people-led housing finance and community development program implemented by the Social Housing Finance Corporation (SHFC) which assists legally organized associations of low-income groups to acquire and develop a tract of land under the concept of community ownership.
The CMP’s primary objective is to assist residents of blighted or depressed areas to own the lots they occupy, or where they choose to relocate to, and eventually create sustainable and resilient communities.
Aliling said the revival of the CMP projects, as proposed by SHFC President Federico Laxa, will further boost the implementation of the government’s housing program.
Earlier, Laxa explained that the priority CMP projects will be readied for the initial awarding of lots and could be subjected for further development in the future.
He said these CMPs have been in the pipeline for years now and that plan could be extended to incremental housing, when member-beneficiaries are able to afford housing improvements with the assistance of the government.
"We will be more transformative with our CMP projects now, with consideration to incorporating development in our sites," Laxa said.
The DHSUD and SHFC are eyeing October to start awarding the sites to the member-beneficiaries.