LETTERS
FROM THE AGNO
March
Fianza
In the Philippines, government agencies hire
security guards who double as frontline clerks who frisk, ask questions and try
to solve problems of clients. In some cases, the frontliner “clerk” in blue
uniform acts like he is the “know it all” manager who can save the day for the
client.
Later when the
customer is able to talk to the real person in charge, he finds out that his
time and effort was just wasted by that guy in blue. In other cases, frontline
workers mix-up the issue presented to them and that becomes additional problems
to a client.
The other frontliner
sits at the first table of an office and serves as the clerk who receives and
records all incoming communication letters, memos and delivered documents from
other offices, and piles the same in a corner of the desk. The 8am to 5pm
employee will not care about the importance and urgency of the communication
letters and documents he receives and so he just piles them one on top of
another paper that came in first.
The desk clerk then
carries the heap of documents from his table and places them on the table of
the boss who ran out of papers to sign or things to do. And so, as it has been
said in the Good Book, “the first shall be last, the last shall be first.”
Those who came early to have their papers processed will have to go home late
because the front desk guy does not know how to make himself an effective
public servant.
It is not easy to be
regional executive director of the most important line government agency in the
country because you will always be on the RED. There are nitty-gritty unwritten
requirements that have to be looked into. In the Cordillera, the new RED of the
DENR should consider reshuffling his staff.
With “OIC Gov. Roger
Sinot of the Autonomous Republic of Asin,” I visited DENR OIC RED Paquito
Moreno to follow up some papers last week. RED “Kits” was his usual friendly
and good-humored self. In a very light and informal atmosphere, we talked a
little about the vacancies and new positions in the DENR bureaucracy that would
soon be in place once the budget for the government items are finalized and
released.
But for the moment,
there will be no movements, no re-appointments and new appointments, meaning
every DENR guy will still hold on to his post until further instructions. As
for job applications, RED Kits said, in the meantime he discourages such
because the application papers might just gather dust in his office considering
that the fund notices for the items are not yet ready.
I was not sure if the
OIC RED was serious when he asked me if I was interested in a position in the
DENR. But of course the only answer I can tell him in jest was that I could
have wanted to apply for the position of RED – if he was not appointed to the
position vacated by RED Clarence Baguilat.
During that short
exchange, I wanted to tell him a bit of unsolicited advice that I forgot to do.
I wanted to tell him to put a staff in his office who should be able to feel
and connect with the needs of the agency’s clients. It is not a matter of
complying with a job description and finishing an 8am to 5am work, rather it is
a matter of satisfying people who need the services of the DENR.
The RED’s office needs
a government worker who knows how to interact intelligently with different
kinds of people and who is familiar with the Cordilleran who possesses a
distinct character depending on what province he comes from.
In other government
agency offices, the presence of the “cordon sanitaire” that screens people is
obvious. They ask questions from a client and try to interpret it; even try to
provide an answer and a solution, especially when the concerned official is not
around. But what happens is that the main issue gets garbled as it passes from
mouth to mouth, thus the official gets the wrong message. In cases like these,
the incompetent office staff can make or unmake a RED.
Incidentally, in one
blind item that came out in a local weekly about the continuous use by a DENR
official of a government vehicle when he has already “retired,” RED Moreno was
quick to clarify that RED Baguilat, if he was the person being alluded to, has
not been fully retired and separated from office as he was given special
assignments in the interest of public service. RED Baguilat has not even
received his retirement money. I suspect an insider in the department has an
axe to grind against whoever the blind item was alluding to.
********
How come everytime the
city sends its frontliners to hold public meetings in its bid to bring its
waste to its neighboring communities, they convince the people by telling them
that the municipality and host-community will benefit financially and there
will be employment for the jobless.
When it comes to
proper waste disposal, employment and money should not be the priorities to be
peddled. In past public consultations I have seen, especially on basura
concerns, the proponents avoid talking about health and sanitation and the
effects the project brings to the community because questions from the public
that are often left unanswered will surely flood the meetings.
In one consultation in
Yagyagan, Tadiangan, Tuba where an ESL project was proposed, an elderly citizen
gave the observation that most statements made about the proposed basuraproject
were all good, clean, healthy and would have very minimal negative effects to
the community. If so, then why not put the basura in the middle of
Burnham Park and why then does the city have to deposit its basura in a
neighbouring town?
********
The NCIP field offices are the frontliners in the mandate to correct the
injustices inflicted on IPs as far back as can be remembered. But when a few
personnel do things contrary to what should be done, the injustice is not cured
but instead, repeated. I was told that some field offices have contradicting
interpretations on the terms ancestral “land” and “domain,” and for other
reasons. Because of all these, a moratorium was issued by the NCIP that further
delayed the processing of applications.
Ancestral land
applicants who have waited for the longest time for the approval of their
claims are dying one after the other. Why should they suffer more for problems
unresolved by frontline offices? If the moratorium stays for a long time, a
greater number of IPs would unreasonably be experiencing agony for the mistakes
committed by a few office personnel. In the meantime, fearless squatters in
droves enter the idle and open ancestral lands of the meek Ibaloy. – ozram.666@yahoo.com
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