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San
Jose Del Monte City Water District
Public
Service First and Foremost
When
the Sangguniang Bayan passed the resolution approving the
creation of a local water district for the then Municipality
of San Jose Del Monte in 1980, the move was met with apprehension
by skeptics. The demand for safe and potable water was high.
The newly-created water district had no funds, no definite
water sources, not enough manpower with the technical expertise
to deliver safe and potable water through individual connections.
All that the water district had was the commitment of the
existing staff of the Water District (and there were only
five of them), the confidence of the local government that
it will be able to bring water to every home in the municipality,
and the initial 200 service connections that were turned
over by the LGU.
It was a difficult start. Water was turbid during the rainy
season. During summer, water was clear but not potable.
Customers were constantly complaining, even holding street
rallies, against low quality water. Many prospective connectors
preferred their individual "poso" (manual water
pumps) against the water distribution technology of the
Water District which people claimed "was producing
dirty water, anyway. Along with the problem was the lack
of financial resources to fund any improvement project.
The Water District can only implement palliative measures
to avoid a massive uproar from its concessionaires.
During those times when resources of the Water District
could not fully respond to the demand, it implemented Tawid-Uhaw
Projects (TUPs), structures made up of two communal metered
faucets supplying twenty-four hours of potable water to
the beneficiary community. These projects were supported
by funds from local government officials and various civic
organizations in the municipality while the community provided
labor during construction.
The
proverbial light at the end of the tunnel was seen in 1995
when the Water District was able to secure approval for
the implementation of the Comprehensive Water Supply Improvement
Project Phase I which was bilaterally funded by the French
and Philippine Governments. In 1997, a P154 million modern
Water Treatment Plant was completed and inaugurated at Brgy.
Minuyan, Sapang Palay. The plant, now in operation and serving
mostly the Sapang Palay Resettlement Area (SPRA), is processing
20,000 cubic meters of raw water per day from the Angat
River. With the operation of the Plant came people queuing
for water connection.
Ten
years after the completion of Water Treatment Plant 1, SJDMCWD
is now the largest water district in Central and Northern
Luzon and one of the largest in the entire country with
its over 60,000 service connections.
However, the SJDMCWD is quick to admit that it is serving
only 40% of the city's population. "There are still
thousands of San Joseños that need to be served with
safe and potable water," says Engr. Loreto Limcolioc,
SJDMCWD General Manager. "Relocatees from nearby Metro
Manila come here in droves. "
The City of San Jose Del Monte, 40 kilometers north of Manila
and characterized by a topography of rolling hills and plains,
is largely a resettlement area of the government. Month
by month, families from nearby Metro Manila's depressed
areas are transported to settle in low-cost housing subdivisions
of the government. The SPRA alone has 36 barangays, more
than half of the total number of barangays in the city and
accounts for more than half of the 58,000 service connections
of the water district.
Relieved
of its major problem at SPRP from the full operation of
its Water Treatment Plant No. 1, the Water District commenced
the Comprehensive Water Supply System Improvement Project
- Phase II in 2003. The Phase II Project consists of the
construction of an additional water treatment plant, capable
of processing 30,000 cubic meters of raw water per day from
the Angat-Umiray Transbasin Project, and laying of more
than 40 kilometers of water pipeline. Worth P547 Million,
the Phase II Project is funded by the Japan Bank for International
Cooperation (JBIC) through the Local Water Utilities Administration
(LWUA).
The
treatment plant is currently in partial manual operation
as the SJDMCWD awaits the final report by its foreign consultants
on the testing and commissioning stage. It is expected to
be fully operational by the second quarter of 2007 with
the pipelines having been completely laid as early as January,
2006.
Aside from augmenting water supply for the existing service
areas of the SJDMCWD, the new treatment plant, upon full
activation, will expand water service coverage and provide
sufficient drinking water up to the year 2010 to approximately
40,000 additional households, mostly resettled families
from nearby Metro Manila. The tapping of surface water is
also part of the efforts of SDJMCWD to completely veer away
from the extraction of groundwater which is becoming less
dependable because of salt water intrusion, Bulacan being
in the list of water critical areas identified by the Department
of Environment and Natural Resources.
To
realize its vision of making water available to every home
in the city by the year 2020, the Water District is now
eyeing the possibility of another major service improvement
project, the Comprehensive Water Supply System Improvement
Project Phase III. Also in the pipeline is the provision
of an efficient sewerage system for the city in coordination
with the city government.
"We
were created to provide public service, first and foremost",
said GM Limcolioc. "We will leave no stone unturned
to make that service available to all."
March
2007
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