By Aileen P. Refuerzo
BAGUIO CITY – For city hall
employee Michael Lopez, honesty is a way of life.
Close to
two years after returning the cash-laden wallet of a Lingayen town official
which he found under a client’s chair in his office at the city environment and
parks management department, Lopez found and returned another wallet he found
lying along Bonifacio Road last April 26.
It was a
Saturday and Lopez, 37, was driving a taxi cab at around 2 p.m. as his second
job to augment his meager income as a job order employee of the Roadside
Inspection Testing and Monitoring Team of the Water/Waste Water and Ambient Air
Management Division of the CEPMO, when he spotted an old wallet in the middle
of the road.
“Passersby
were ignoring the wallet as it looked old and worn out maybe thinking it was
purposely discarded by the owner or thrown away by a pickpocket but my first
thought was it may have been dropped by its motorcycle-riding owner and may
still contain something important to the owner like the driver’s license which
is hard to obtain nowadays so listening to my instinct, I stopped and picked it
up,” Lopez related.
“When
traffic stopped at the rotunda of Bonifacio St., I checked the wallet and saw
it contained cash amounting to P17,300 so I immediately searched for some
identification cards and proceeded to the ABS-CBN Baguio station to turn it
over and to have it announced,” he added.
The ABS-CBN
Baguio management announced Lopez’ find via its FM radio program MOR and at
4:30 pm, he received a call from the owner Bryner Conchao, a plumber and
maintenance employee of the Saint Louis University (SLU).
Conchao
told Lopez the money was for the salary of his co-workers. He was aboard
their service vehicle on the way to SLU Laboratory Elementary School and did
not notice it when the wallet fell off his pocket.
Apart from
driving a cab after office hours and during weekends, Lopez also does all-around
on-call jobs as a mechanic, cook and others to augment his income and provide
for his wife Yvonne and their five children whose ages range from 2 months to
14 years.
He
expressed hopes of landing a permanent job at the city government where he has
served as job order employee for close to five years now.
Edith
Hallare, former Lingayen vice mayor who owned the first wallet Lopez returned
and who now considers Lopez a member of her family and “a friend for life”
called Lopez after watching the ABS-CBN feature done by newshen Ada Sibayan on
the incident and hailed him anew for his honest deed.
“You did
it again. It’s really in your nature,” Lopez quoted Hallare as telling
him.
An
overjoyed Hallare joined the flag-raising ceremonies at City Hall in June two years
ago to pay tribute to Lopez for his act of honesty.
“Now I
know why people come to Baguio not only because of the good climate and the
good views but also because of the good character of its people who like
Michael are honest accommodating and hospitable,” Hallare told city officials
and employees then.
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