PLANS are underway to improve into a decent subdivision the depressed community in Valenzuela City where a fire broke out last week, Mayor Rex Gatchalian reveals.
In a meeting with the homeless families, the mayor says the city government will renovate the 3.3 hectare crowded community along Lingahan St., Bgy. Malanday to become a well laid-out subdivision.
The subdivision will have a six-meter wide setback from the main road and inner roads three to four meters wide each. The plan to widen the roads had been particularly prompted by the difficulty the firefighters met in making their way through the community during the fire that began at 11:30 p.m., December 10 and was put out at 5:30 a.m., December 11.
A total of 491 families took shelter at the Malanday Covered Court, Malanday 3S Center building and the A. Deato Elementary School, reports from the City Social Welfare and Development Office show. A 24-year old man with disabilities, who fell into a creek, died in the blaze as residents fled for the evacuation camps.
“Admit it or not, we were just lucky yesterday. Last night could have been worse. When I entered the community, I saw that only one fire truck made it through, the other bigger trucks had to stay in the main road. There was but one alley for the firefighters to pass through. Imagine what could have happened if it were a bigger fire. Far more people could have died,” according to Mayor Gatchalian.
The local chief executive also says the city government will provide cash to the displaced members of the Tahanang Walang Tuntungan ng Malanday, Inc., the local homeowner’s association. Renters or those who rented instead of owned houses before the fire will likewise be assisted by the city government find new places and be given cash equivalent to three months of rent.
Since 1991, the 512-member homeowners’ association has been paying for the land under the Socialized Housing Finance Corporation’s Community Mortgage Program. Many homeowners have been free to build extensions of their houses even beyond their designated lots, encroaching into the roads, it was learned. Years of unchecked house construction and burgeoning population have made the community into a crowded section, the city government says.
The mayor says that the renovation would not only allow unhampered movement of people during disasters but cultivate a sense of dignity among the residents. “We have now an opportunity to correct mistakes.
We have now an opportunity to restore that dignified way of living. Before, whenever you asked pedicab or tricycle drivers to take you to Lingahan, they would refuse. Now, when you tell people you are from Lingahan, you should do it with heads held high,” he says. GOOD RIDDANCE/ARLIE CALALO

