Isko Moreno inaugurates modern housing building for city’s informal settlers

Manila Mayor Isko Moreno led the inauguration of the 15-storey Tondominium I, one of the city government’s infrastructure projects.

Manila Mayor Isko Moreno and Vice Mayor Honey Lacuna lead the inauguration of Tondominium I housing project for informal settlers in the city. Contributed photo

MANILA, Philippines — Manila Mayor Isko Moreno Domagoso on Monday led the inauguration of the 15-storey Tondominium I, one of the city government’s infrastructure projects that was promised — and fulfilled — by the 47-year-old local executive to uplift the lives of the people of the city when he campaigned during the mayoralty race in 2019.

“Hopefully, sa maliit nating kaparaanan, naitaas natin ang antas ng pamumuhay nila. na yung natitikman ng mayaman ay pwedeng matikman ng mahirap. Today is the day that the Lord has made that in our own little way, yung equality ay unti-unting nararamdaman ng ating mga kababayan,” Moreno said in an interview after inaugurating the vertical housing project that has its own park, sports facility, livelihood facility and even a swimming pool.

Together with its twin, Tondominium II, the almost P1 billion housing project located in one of the world’s largest slums will be able to accommodate about 336 families in 44-sqm units that will each have two bedrooms, a dining room, a kitchen, a bathroom, and a living room.

Manila Mayor Isko Moreno and other Manila city government officials during the launch of Tondominium I housing project in Manila. Contributed photo

For someone who has been raised in the slums of Tondo and also once dreamed of having a roof over his head that he can call his own, Moreno considered the fulfillment of his promise to provide decent housing to the city’s impoverished residents a historic moment in his life.

“God has so many ways of doing things. Bilang ako, nagkaroon ako ng sariling akin, nagkaroon pa ako ngapagkakataong magbigay ng pagkakataon na magkaroon ng disenteng tirahan, hindi lang disente, komportable at maayos na tirahan. Yung mga kababayan nating squatter, yung mga kababayan nating habang buhay na nangungupahan, ay nagkaroon na ng pagkakataon na magkaroon ng sariling kanila,” said Moreno.

“Salamat sa Diyos. And that is why this is the day that the Lord has made. I am happy for them,” he added.

Life’s experiences also gave him the overriding ambition to give the best for the people while providing them with the minimum basic needs – housing, education, health care and jobs.

“Kaya pagka natutupad ko ang pangarap ko para sa tao, magkaroon ka ng maayos na eskwelahan, magkaroon ka ng maayos na ospital, ngayon magkaroon ka ng maayos na bahay, siyempre it boils down to parang memory lane. Siyempre dati pangarap ko lang ito na makamit, ngayon nakamit ng ibang tao,” he said.

Besides Tondominium 1 and 2, other vertical housing units are in various stages of construction across the city: the P401-million Binondominium; the 20-storey San Lazaro Residences in Sta. Cruz; the 20-storey Pedro Gil Residences in San Andres Bukid; and the 20-storey San Sebastian Residences in Quiapo.

Meanwhile, the Basecommunity is Manila’s in-city horizontal public housing project in Baseco, Port area that was completed in July last year. The property has 229 two-storey, 42 square-meter housing units, and each has two bedrooms, a dining room, a kitchen, a bathroom, and a living room.

New and modern school buildings equipped computers, air conditioning units and elevators are also being built at the Rosauro Almario Elementary School in Tondo; the Dr. Carlos Albert High School in Sampaloc and the Manila Science High School located along Taft Avenue.

The Manila City government also undertook the construction of the 344-bed Manila Covid-19 Field Hospital at the Quirino Grandstand, which was finished in 58 days and started operating last June; the recently inaugurated 10-storey world-class Bagong Ospital ng Maynila; and the President Corazon C. Aquino General Hospital is currently being built within the Basecommunity compound.

Moreno said these modern public facilities were undertaken because he wanted the poor to have the same amenities accorded to the rich, for them not to experience what he had experienced as a poor boy in the slums of Tondo.

“Tignan po ninyo ang mga pasilidad kung paano ibigay yung sobra. Kasi sabi sobra-sobra naman, e sabi ko bakit mahirap ba kailangan kulang? Hindi naman ito kasobrahan, tama lang, at marapat lamang,” he said.

The Aksyon Demokratiko presidential candidate said he wants to replicate all this throughout the country should he be elected president on May 9.

“Kasi ako, nagawa ko na yung mga bagay na nasabi ko na sa ating mga kababayan. And I hope someday, somehow, lumaganap ito saan mang parte nga ating bansa. Yung imposible, akala mo imposible, naging posible,” he said.

Housing, education and health are among the main pillars of Moreno’s 10-point Bilis Kilos Economic Agenda that will be his administration’s guiding principles to accelerate human and economic growth if elected president.

As spelled out under his Bilis Kilos Economic Agenda, he said a Moreno administration will pursue a “Life and Livelihood” economic policy that aims to address poverty, hunger, unemployment, inequality and social injustice through an inclusive and equitable infrastructure development program.

He said the first two years of an Isko Moreno presidency will focus on building facilities that will provide the minimum basic needs of the people – quality housing, education and health – especially in provinces and areas with low human development index (HDI).

To further hasten human and economic growth, Moreno also vowed to strengthen physical, economic and digital linkages among growth centers and the rural economies, by building bridges across major islands of the Philippine archipelago, and build a national fiber optic backbone to boost the country’s communication capability and interconnectivity, among others.

Moreno said such infrastructure investments will create millions of jobs and other livelihood opportunities for our people, and lead to the formation of more micro, small and medium industries (MSMEs), thus further creating more job opportunities.

And if the people have jobs, and have access to affordable housing, quality education and quality health care, he said human and economic growth will follow and social inequity and injustice will be minimized.

“Pagka ang pamilya binibigyan mo ng pagkakataon na magkaroon ng bahay, magkaroon ng trabaho, access to school, access to healthcare, if you invest into this, naturally, mawawala ‘tong ganitong insidente sa lipunan,” said Moreno.

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