Widow gets P8T, but stays at creek
SHE received P8,000 in aid for the shanty she lost in a demolition at the Mahiga Creek in sitio San Isidro, barangay Mabolo, three weeks ago.
For 68-year-old widow Ma. Lily del Rosario, the amount she received from Reps. Tomas Osmeña and Rachel del Mar of Cebu City’s south and north districts left her thankful for small blessings.
“This is a big help, but it’s not enough to replace my home,” a teary-eyed Del Rosario told Cebu Daily News.
She now lives under “trapal”” or canvas tarpaulins with her daughter and grandchild , a few steps from their original shanty by the creek.
Here she will stay, she said, until she finds a new home.
Del Rosario said she also lost her store to the city’s demolition team. She had to sell G.I. sheets from her demolished shanty to a junk shop for P100 so they could buy food.
Article continues after this advertisementCebu City officials led by Osmeña and Del Mar visited sitio San Isidro yesterday morning to distribute Land Bank checks and dry goods to 32 families displaced by the demolition.
Article continues after this advertisementDel Rosario was one of the receipients.
Osmeña gave out checks worth P5,000 while Rep. Del Mar distributed checks of P3,000 from their pork barrels.
Mabolo barangay captain Rey Ompoc said the barangay released P1,000 financial aid to the affected families after they declared sitio San Isidro a calamity area.
Del Rosario said they were offered by the Department for the Welfare of the Urban Poor (DWUP) relocation to the St. Michael’s Village in San Jose Talamban before the May 2 demolition.
“But I don’t have money. We have to pay to enter the village,” she said.
Del Rosario said the P8, 000 financial aid would be enough to pay for a downpayment for a lot in St. Michael’s Village.
The problem is, she won’t have enough money for construction materials to build a house.Chief of Reporters Doris C. Bongcac