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Sindangan:
In a silent stride for socio-economic progress
With
the destructive rebel attack on Siocon recently, the province
of Zamboanga del Norte is again lately in the news reminiscent
of the time when the dreaded Abu Sayyaf bandits first gained
national notoriety with their daring, devastating daylight
raid of the town of Ipil in the early 90s.
But
despite the intermittent rebel and bandit pillaging attacks
that drew the strongest condemnation of the Filipino nation
and response from the government and the military, Zamboanga
del Norte remains largely a composite of communities populated
by peace-loving, hardworking people.
Sindangan,
a coastal town of 78,000 residents situated between Ipil
and Dipolog City, is a prime example of its persevering
communities. For years, this town has been silently but
successfully striving for socio-economic stability and progress
such that it is now a candidate for cityhood, potentially
the third city to be declared in the province after Dipolog
and Dapitan City. Significantly, the development of basic
infrastructures and services through the efforts of a series
of provincial and local administrations with the support
of the national government has been instrumental in the
continued transformation of Sindangan from a backwater town
to a potential city.
Take
for instance the efforts at developing the water supply
system of Sindangan which was only begun to be pursued in
earnest in the last decade.
Though
Sindangan is the largest town in the province in terms of
both land area and population, it only had a small water
system inherited from the NAWASA era that provided limited
water service to just part of the poblacion and a nearby
barangay until it finally conked out in the mid 80s. For
decades before the NAWASA and years more after the old system
was abandoned therefore, the residents had to make do with
individual household hand pumps or a few artesian wells
for their water supply needs
Today,
after a development effort started at the start of the 1990s
that culminated with the implementation of a P10 million
water supply improvement project, this town now boasts of
a modern water supply system.
The
Sindangan water system consists of a deep well source with
pumping station capable of producing 348 gallons of water
per minute, a water reservoir, kilometers-long network of
distribution, transmission and service lines that supplies
adequate piped potable water to some 15,000 residents through
more than 1,500 metered service connections scattered in
the poblacion and 14 other barangays of the town.
The
present system was built and completed in December, 1994
through a P12 million loan provided by the Local Water Utilities
Administration (LWUA) to the Sindangan Water District (SWD)
which was created by the local Sangguniang Pambayan pursuant
to the provisions of PD 198, as amended, in 1989 to own,
operate, manage and develop the local water supply system.
The amount actually utilized in the project amounting to
more than P10 million was later on subsidized by an P8.5
million grant provided by then Senator Alberto Romulo in
1996 which was requested by then mayor Cresente Llorente
and later released through the efforts of now Finance Undersecretary
Juanita Amatong, sister-in-law of incumbent many time-Governor
Isagani Amatong and wife of former Congressman Ernesto Amatong.
According
to Raul Escabarte who took over as general manager of SWD
in September 1994 and completed the construction of SWD's
first project later the same year, the water district will
soon undertake the further improvement and expansion of
the Sindangan water system. The LWUA, Escabarte said, has
recently approved the application of SWD for a P12 million
loan for the construction of the next phase of the water
district's improvement program.
Escabarte
said the proposed improvement will involve the construction
of an aeration tower to improve the quality of water supply
being drawn from SWD's current deep well source that has
heavy sulphuric odor. Although the water supply of SWD passes
the standards set under the Philippine Drinking Water Supply
Standards, Escabarte said the presence of odor in the water
supply is a turn-off to many of the water district's potential
concessionaires hence it has to be addressed through application
of proper treatment technology.
Other
components of the project involve the development of an
additional well source complete with pumping station, a
reservoir booster pump and installation of additional transmission
and distribution pipelines and metered service connections.
The project stands to benefit an additional 7,000 residents
through an additional 1,000 new service connections to be
installed in two additional barangays to be covered by the
water districts.
Though
admitting that piped water will soon be available in only
17 of Sindangan's 52 barangays, most of which are anyway
situated in the far-flung, hard- to reach uplands of the
town, Escabarte said the establishment of a modern water
supply system here like the development of other facilities
and amenities like highways and feeder roads, commercial
and fish port, cable TV and radio station and telecommunication
services as telephone, telegraph and cell sites has helped
make Sindangan a better place for both residents and visitors
alike.
Now
classified as a second class municipality, Sindangan is
noted for its main produce such as rice and corn, fish and
other sea harvests, mango, coconut and copra. It provides
road links to several destinations in the two provinces
of Zamboanga: Dipolog City to Zamboanga City and vice versa,
Dipolog City to Ipil and vice versa and Zamboanga City to
Pagadian City via the town of Molave. Its strategic location
and present rate of socio-economic growth aided by the development
of water supply and other basic infrastructures and services
are the key to its ascendance as an upcoming major urban
area in the province and the Western Mindanao region.
Sindangan
indeed exemplifies the determination of the people of Zamboanga
to continue to strive for development notwithstanding the
intermittent distractions of partisan politics and rebel
forays.
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