Now, how was I supposed to do that? A Task Force was formed with the help of the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), the Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG), and the Department of Education (DepEd) after which I wove my way to the Presidential Management Staff (PMS) and the Army Engineering Brigade. The undersecretaries of these departments, in turn, assigned people with specific duties to work with me.
At the DILG, we collected documents that its field offices from all over the country mailed to Manila as did PMS Engr. Andy Pelayo and his boss Mayet Tamundong. We sorted out deeds of donations of 500 to 1,000 sq.m. We were originally hoping to acquire 5,000 sq.m. of donated lots with dreams of expansion through the years. The unavailability of locations put an end to that. Photographs of these plots of land and maps of their locations were given out to agencies who would inspect the sites. If they meet the criteria set by DepEd, construction could commence. Eventually, Mildred Sayman and Bebot Nacario assigned to Director Lita Abcede from the DILG and DepEds Aida Bautista, Sally Santiago and Gracelyn Crisostomo have been traveling companions inspecting these sites with the approval of the DepEd Undersecretary Ramon Bacani.
From DepEd came the list of barangays all over the Philippines where school buildings were badly needed to accommodate children living in unserved clusters of barangays. The ever growing student population will continue to increase for as long as children are born at the rate of 2.33 percent in the Philippines. This brings us to another issue: the population boom as we try to catch up with every mode of education in the poorest barangays.
And here I must mention Department of Budget and Management Secretary Emy Boncodin who scraped the barrel to forward the budget needed to the PMS for the DPWH and Army Engineering Brigade to construct the school buildings. The President wanted to save the government some money by allotting only P200,000 per school building. After reasoning out with her, she agreed to P250,000 with each classroom measuring 7 x 8 sq.m. She also had to initially contribute from her social fund to get this program started.
We met leaders governors, congressmen, mayors and barangay captains who contributed for teachers salaries. Great! Because on the part of the DepEd, they could only afford 519 teacher items for 2002. But this is where the local government and the parents Filipino spirit shone. They understood that the government could neither do the work alone nor all the time. In fact, it needs you too. The "tatays" made additional desks and chairs out of floating lumbers.
We built 563 school buildings in 2002 and 317 for Batch 2 will be finished by August; 283 will be completed by the end of August. Five hundred and fifty-four more schools to go for 2004 depending on the availability of the sites. Cheers for those small group of determined folks who have met GMAs challenge. They have become true friends in the process and wouldnt balk at performing such a big task.