City assisted mortgage program
>> Sunday, October 21, 2018
BANTAY GOBYERNO
Ike Señeres
I consider the late Dr.
Jose Conrado Benitez (Jolly or JCB as we used to call him) as my mentor in
public housing in particular and human settlements in general. I was still very
young when my fate brought me to the University of Life (UL) where I was
appointed as a Fellow, among a few as I could recall. Since very few could
understand what a Fellow was at that time, I presented myself as a Marketing
Consultant, which more or less suited my job at the Public Affairs Office
(PAO).
In reality
however, I was actually seconded to the UL from the Bliss Marketing Corporation
(BLISSMARK) where I was an Assistant Vice President and Group Product Manager.
Prior to that, I was also seconded to the National Livelihood Program
Secretariat (NLPS), for the purpose of organizing what eventually became the Kilusang
Kabuhayan at Kaunlaran (KKK).
Just to put
this conversation in the right perspective, the Philippines at that time was
under a parliamentary form of government; hence we had a Ministry of Human
Settlements (MHS). Early on however, Dr. Benitez apparently realized the
limitations of a bureaucratic agency doing fast paced development work, and
that is perhaps the reason why he created the Human Settlements Development
Corporation (HSDC) as the corporate arm of the MHS.
Up to now, I
really believe that that is a very practical approach, to create a corporate
arm under a bureaucratic agency. That was really a brilliant move on the part
of Jolly, if I may say so myself. Down the line, that was also the reason why
BLISSMARK was created as a subsidiary of HSDC, as I understand it. Although
BLISSMARK was positioned to be a marketing and trading company, its primary
mission was to help the public housing program by buying and selling the
products coming from the livelihood projects of the MHS.
As it always
happened, Jolly was always in the mood to lecture about the complete human
settlements program, and it so happened that I was always available to listen
to his lectures. Of course, it could be said that it was actually my job to
listen to his lectures, but the fact is, I actually enjoyed listening to him,
and I really learned so much from him, absorbing his bits of wisdom like a
sponge, so to speak.
Up to this
day, I could claim that I am actually one of the very few “disciples” of Jolly
who has practically absorbed most of what he said at that time, including the
secondary mortgage program that was his pet project, a project that has
seemingly disappeared from the public housing ecosystem. Very early on, I
already learned from Jolly that housing is not a technology problem because in
reality, housing is a financing problem. In other words, there are many ways to
build an affordable house, but there should be at least one way to make public
housing affordable to very low income families.
I do not know
whether Jolly already had an idea about his life expectancy, but he invited me
for dinner one night, just the two of us, and during that time, I had the
strange feeling that he was already passing on to me a lot of his ideas, mostly
about public housing and public transportation. Perhaps he remembered that I
was one of his ardent “students” so to speak. I was so flattered when he told
me that he wanted to talk to me because he wants to implement the ideas I have
been writing about in my newspaper columns.
Little did I
know that he read my columns regularly, but he confirmed that himself. Stunned
by and honored by what he said, I told him that practically half of what I have
been writing about came from him, which was not too far from the truth. To cut
a long story short, I was welcomed by his senior staff during his wake, and
they told me that Jolly had actually instructed them before he died, for me to
do what he had told me to do.
As of now,
there is already a Community Mortgage Program (CMP) under the Social Housing
Finance Corporation (SHFC). It has already built a lot of affordable public
housing, but sad to say, the housing backlog is still counted by the millions.
The national government is trying to finance the CMP as much as it could, but
the money needed is just too much.
It is for
that reason that I am advocating the creation of a City Assisted Mortgage
Program (CAMP) that would already be under the auspices of the Local Government
Units (LGUs). Hopefully, some LGUs will be able to finance CAMP from their surplus
funds or loan windows, providing as well the vacant lots that they have
foreclosed or repossessed. These housing units could be owned and operated by
local cooperatives, an approach that has already worked in many places.
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