We’re slowly dying

Our water utility in home town has been poisoning us with arsenic. The Commission on Audit (COA) has already flagged this in 2020 and 2021 but the local water district has failed to fulfill its duty as a regulator. I again wrote LWUA to demand why our water district has not addressed so many issues, the biggest of all is the high arsenic content.

I suddenly got tired. I am too angry and it left me tired. I’m just too spent.

There are so many problems weighing me down.

God, help me.

Thank God for cats.

Dear daughters, this is mommy, still grace under pressure. I try to be the best I can be despite the mounting problems on my shoulders because I want to show you that it can be done. That you always have to maintain dignity at all times because at your lowest point, that is the only thing that will be left with you. Love, mommy.

So it goes on and on…

It aired. The excerpts of the meeting aired and of course it only showed a few points that I had raised. At least we showed the people that fighting for what is right is something that we all have to do and not just stay angry on social media. Nothing will happen if we just let social media take precedence over real action.

I’m not done yet. I’m still at the beginning.

Oh, but I’m so tired and stressed. I feel like I’m in this alone. They’re just all noise. No one from the home owners association or concerned groups bothered to show up during the meeting with the water company.

I’m in this roller coaster ride of emotions and tiredness. Good thing I’ll be abroad for 9 days to take a sort of break from all these local issues. Even for a while.

I just read an essay on NYT that got me thinking a lot. It made me read the readers’ comments to see if they agree or not and they didn’t disappoint. But I’m too sleepy and tired to elaborate on it. Will just put down my thoughts later.


Fixing broken things

I’m on a mission to fix broken things, saving things worth saving.

Like for example my printer. It was working the entire year after I bought it in December 2020 and the black cartridge became shot because of the printing job I did last Friday. 72 pages of complaint/petition. I went to Greenhills this afternoon to have it fixed and et voila! It was clogged with cars. Like inflation didn’t climb to its highest level in 14 years and people are still shopping like there’s no tomorrow.

People on a shopping galore. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

Greenhills gives me the chills. I’m always reminded of my #$%$#%^&*(* ex because we were often there to have his laptop or mini-PC fixed. Or to buy his Gundams. Or to meet for the weekend so he can drop off his laundry at my apartment—never I get invited over that condo we leased together. Probably the slut was already sleeping over there. Then I remember the time I went to Greenhills to order the girls’ new PCs and I was supposed to go to his condo to bring him some stuff and I was thinking of spending the night there. Then he got unreasonably angry because I was going there when he clearly said he won’t be there because he was supposedly meeting somebody in Megamall or something.

That was…that tore me apart.

So Greenhills is still a sore point with me, two years after.

I’m still fixing myself, getting back my self-esteem and confidence. Trying to forgive myself for letting myself be used in so many ways. Trying to forgive myself for ignoring red flags that this person is horrible.

No person has broken me more than him. Not even the girls’ dad.

I don’t want to encounter J ever again. Ever.

Part of fixing myself is trying to get back in shape. I got stalled during my holiday because I got sick. Then I lazy because…I was I was dealing with a storm and a roller coaster of emotions.

Because I was off from my workouts for a week, I got bloated again. Now I wonder if I could still fit in my dresses that I was thinking of wearing for the cocktails event in Singapore that our company is sponsoring.

Which reminds me that I should look at new clothes to bring to Singapore when I go to Makati on Tuesday for a meeting.

Still on the topic of fixing, I am fixing our lives (after the hiccup with J) by building our future, which includes my new tiny house. While I was in Greenhills, I saw the new area where the furniture and home decor stalls relocated. I checked out some lighting fixtures and…

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! Photo by CallMeCreation.com

For some reason I want to hang this in my bathroom. The store owner said this was really meant for a bedroom but people had been telling her they were going to install it in their bathrooms, too. She just couldn’t get why. I don’t understand it either but it looks just right for a ridiculously decked out bathroom.

And the funny thing here is my bathroom is just condo-sized.

There is more space beyond that annoying post and beam that we could not move. My contractor said he will just disguise the post by making concrete shelves. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

To make this more over-the-top, the bathroom door is hardwood–the former bedroom door.

Then I saw this, which was prettier and cheaper than the ones from Ikea.

I’d like this to hang over the dining table. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

I just need to send these photos over to my contractor. I think he will have a heart attack when he sees the chandelier. HAHAHAHAHAHA!

And finally, I am trying to fix the broken water system of my hometown.

We arrived at the office of the water utility before 10 am. I didn’t tell the people here that I was bringing along the local broadcast network with me to document the entire thing as a payback for snubbing their invitation to guest on their show because they wanted answers why we are so fucked up.

I also didn’t tell the company that I was bringing the GM of the water district—the government-owned company that was part of the JV and part regulator (yeah, the set-up is messy and I will try to get to the bottom of this).

Only when we were seated did I tell them that the crew I had with me were part of the local broadcasting station.

Long story short—they don’t have any disaster SOPs in place, to capex plans, no systems in place. NOTHING. No record of improvements on infra, NOTHING. Except for this newly constructed office, which I learned was built at the height of the pandemic. Sneakily.

New office of the water utility. Photo by CallMeeCreation.com

I could no longer recount what I said and what others had said because it triggers me so much. My sister, who is a climate change disaster mitigation and adoption expert, asked questions that they could not answer—very important points that every utility and local governments must address.

The GM and the community relations manager (the husband and wife tandem) couldn’t say anything. They knew they were fucked. And it’s all being recorded.

It will be aired tomorrow. Then I will share the broadcast to anyone who would care.

They didn’t know what hit them.

I’ve been in this business for long time and I wouldn’t survive it if I haven’t learned how to be crafty, sharp, and always on my toes. Journalism is a mind game. My guide has been the 48 Laws of Power, which has taught me how to handle people and how to approach people who are higher in stature than me. I have to be two steps ahead of my interviewee and of the principal characters in the stories I am pursuing.

This is why I like strategy games.

In the meantime, I need to rid myself of bad jujus because some heavy work load is ahead of me this week. I’m scheduled to present to the commercial team on Thursday, showdown with a conglomerate (that is part of the water JV of my hometown) on Wednesday, and meeting on Tuesday.

Sigh. *pat on my back*

Everything will be all right. I’m doing good. —> I need to assure myself or else I will crumble with stress.

Blocking

Have you ever had a day that is emotionally draining that you just can’t discuss it or even think about what transpired?

Today is that day. Maybe I’ll talk about it tomorrow. But not tonight. 🫠I felt like I had been to war.

It was nice that my cats were waiting for me when I got home. ❤️

Waiting for me by the window. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

I dropped off my rangehood at the construction site and…wohooo! My room now has a door!

I yet have to choose the varnish. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

The fittings aren’t cheap. I’m tired of things breaking down so I’m spending more than I should for things like doors, levers/knobs, and cabinetry.

Oh hello tiny kitchen. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

I also checked the water reservoirs for installation because I don’t want to lose water when disaster strikes. I need two tanks (one is buffer tank and another is the gravity reservoir) and then pressure pump and pressure tank. Then we have to fabricate a tower to elevate one tank along the roof line. 🥴

Salesperson for reference. This costs 22k. I need two. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

Sigh. More and more expenses.

But at least my tiny house makes me happy.

The battle has begun

Mud coming out of the tap in one of the barangays in my hometown.

Filed my formal complaint (together with the testimonies of customers) to Laguna Water District and Local Water Utilities Administration last night. The LWD general manager responded immediately and assured me that this will be tackled by the LWD Board on Monday.

I also talked to the Institutional Development Services (IDS) of LWUA this morning about my complaint and I was assured that this will be acted upon by the agency and will also be endorsed to the National Water Resources Board, which has adjudication powers, if this is not settled by the LWD Board.

I had a fruitful discussion with the IDS and learned that LWUA only has power over the water district and has little say in the joint venture with the private sector itself. The water district board has the power to rescind concession agreements it signed with the private sector depending on HOW THE CONCESSION AGREEMENTS WERE CRAFTED.

Now the problem is, we the customers do not have access to the concession agreements that LWD or other water districts have entered into. Unlike under MWSS, there is transparency since they have made public the revised concession agreements with the private sector https://mwss.gov.ph/…/MWCI-THE-REVISED-CONCESSION…

How do we keep scorecards? What are the obligations that the concessionaires must fulfill so we can keep tabs? How many emergency water interruptions are allowable within a certain period? What are the SOPs that concessionaires must execute when there are mishaps like that i.e. water rations within xxx number of hours of water interruption? How much is the penalty for this and this and that? WE DON’T KNOW!

Another thing that I learned from IDS is that water district JVs with the private sector use NEDA Guidelines, which state that LWUA is only an observer and has no voting right in the Joint Venture Selection Committee. In the draft revised guidelines, LWUA again is still an observer. I do not know the rationale for such like will LWUA participation slow down the process? Do they think that the local water district is capable of assessing the capacity of a new entrant in water utilities space like Equi-Parco? We don’t know! Something to ask Sec. Balisacan.

In cases where a municipality does not have an existing water district like Ormoc, it is the LGU that does the JV, therefore, it is no longer under the jurisdiction of LWUA. Again, who will regulate and have adjudication powers over such transactions? NRWB only? The participation of PPP Center is elective (as I understood it as I cover infrastructure in Southeast Asia); the LGU may choose to tap it if it feels it needs the expertise of the agency. What if Mayor Lucy Torres decides that, nahhh, we can do this JV selection on our own. Pa’no na?

There are over 20 agencies that govern water resources, I kid you not. What are the enabling laws that cover water resources? There are so many and nakakahilo. Which agency should ensure that the JV selection is just and fair when the supposed regulator, the water district, is also a participant in the JV? Parang regulator-revenue generator role na naman yan like Pagcor, and Philippines Ports Authority na conflicting ang roles.

So many questions. So many things that have to be raised on a national level.