The opposite of gerrymandering
>> Wednesday, November 18, 2015
BANTAY GOBYERNO
Ike Señeres
Believe it or not,
there is no antonym for gerrymandering in the dictionary. Perhaps that’s simply
because it does not ever happen. When political boundaries are gerrymandered to
create new sets of positions for political reasons, the reverse never ever happens.
Having said that
twice, I will still say that something else happens, and it seems that it is
only happening in the Philippines. For now, I will only cite two examples, but
I am almost sure that there are other examples that may have already happened
in the past, or may possibly happen in the future.
My first example is
the case of the former Davao Province. It started as one province many years
ago until it was gerrymandered to become Compostela Valley, Davao del Norte,
Davao del Sur, Davao Oriental and Davao Occidental. As it is now, what used to
be one province that was governed by one Governor and one Provincial Board has
now become five provinces that are governed by five governors and five
Provincial Boards.
Perhaps not by
coincidence, what used to be one province has now become one region, with the
same name as it used to have as a province. My second example is the former
Cotabato Province that has since been gerrymandered to become North Cotabato,
South Cotabato, Maguindanao and Sultan Kudarat. Just the same, what used to be
one province that was governed by one Governor has now become four provinces
that are governed by four Governor and four Provincial Boards.
As it is now, it has
become one region with the same name as it used to have as a province. Adding
to the confusion, the name of North Cotabato was reverted back to the old name
of simply Cotabato.
Needless to say, each
of the gerrymandered provinces would have at least one Congressman, depending
on the size of their voting populations. One thing is clear however, the Davao
Region and the Cotabato Region are now supposed to have their own Regional
Development Councils (RDCs).
That is the upside,
because the development agendas of the provinces within these regions could now
be coordinated within their own RDCs. The downside however, that would sound
more like sour grapes, is that the development agendas of these provinces could
have just been simply coordinated as one province as they originally were, sans
the gerrymandering. Setting aside the sour grapes, their development agendas
could still be coordinated within the RDCs, if only they would faithfully
institutionalize their RDCs as they are supposed to.
By its very nature,
all gerrymandering actions are politically motivated and there is not much that
we could do about that, because these actions are backed by acts of Congress.
Notwithstanding the political boundaries that were defined by Congress however,
the fact remains that these regions still actually belong to the same natural ecosystems
that have been there long before Congress was created, and there is nothing
that the Congress could do about that.
Even if the political
boundaries have been changed by Congress, the geography within and around these
regions are still the same, and they are still affected by the same weather
patterns collectively or separately, as the case may be. That being the case,
the RDCs of these regions have to logical choice but to plan and manage their
common ecosystems as if they are one jurisdiction, for example in the case of
Climate Change Adaptation (CCA) and Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR).
Based on the laws of
economics, the bigger a project is, the better its economies of scale would be.
Although I am an advocate of subsidiarity, I would still say that there are
many infrastructure projects that would be more efficiently planned and
implemented regionally, again because of the economies of scale.
Examples of these
would be renewable energy generation projects. This reasoning would also apply
to water generation and filtration projects, particularly when several
provinces are actually sharing the same water sources such as watersheds, lakes
and rivers. Pollution control is also one possible area of cooperation, because
it could actually happen that the solid wastes or the polluted air of one
province would also spill over and affect their neighboring provinces.
Although “One Town One
Product” (OTOP) would actually sound like a good idea at the outset, this
approach would usually not be practical in terms of achieving the best
economies of scale. Considering that achieving good economies of scale is
actually a numbers game, it might be better to have one principal product per
region, in order to add up the numbers. Please note that the operative word here
is “principal” because it goes without saying that each region should have a
mix of many products, with a principal product leading it. One practical
application of the economies of scale is to have post harvest facilities that
would service entire regions and not just one or more separate municipalities.
Going beyond the
political jurisdictions of provinces and the combined development planning of
the RDCs, the regions should actually go beyond what meets the eye where they
are, because there are many opportunities in emerging growth corridors that
would encompass at least two regions.
For instance, the
reach of the highways from the Davao Region to the Caraga Region could actually
become the Eastern Mindanao Growth (EMG) Corridor, perhaps sooner or later. If
only these regions could start thinking out of the box, this EMG Corridor could
actually be interconnected with a bullet train that would only stop in major
cities from end to end. To make this doable, the national government could
spend for the bullet trains, while the provinces could spend for the train
stations. Not having old trains is actually an opportunity to go directly to
bullet trains, as many countries have already done. Email bantaygobyerno-subscribe@yahoogroups.com or text
+639369198429
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