Monday, March 26, 2007

We can make the difference

After having scrimped and saved and then spent our life savings for a house in BF Homes Parañaque Subdivision in order to enjoy a well deserved peace and quiet away from the madding crowd, so to speak, we find that we are to suffer the sad fate of having the same madding crowd practically in our front yards, complete with cars and vans to boot.

Our politicians have shove aside our families’ welfare in the interest of commerce, opening our main gates to a huge influx of outsider traffic that includes squatters, commuters, short-cutting motorists, and even prowlers, thieves, rapists, and all sort of criminals.

Criminals are now roaming free in and out of BF Homes to commit murder, armed robbery, “akyat-bahay,” carjacking, carnapping and snatching. Even our PCJ church parishioners within the confine of the church premises were not spared by the brutality of crime.

We have to queue up to get in and out of the subdivision. BF Homes is now the main artery for traffic to and from Cavite/Las Piñas and Parañaque, Pasay, Makati and points north. Foot traffic has drastically increased and we no longer know the background and number of strangers roaming our neighborhoods.

In a word, we have the distinction of having been chosen by the mayor of Parañaque to be fed to his constituents!

The commercialization cannot, by any stretch of imagination, be described as promotive of the health, safety, peace and order, education, morals, comfort and convenience, or protection of property – in short, the wellbeing and general welfare – of the greater number of residence of BF Homes. For the serenity, peace and quiet have been replaced by the chaos, turmoil and frenzy of commerce. Where there was no crowding, congestion, and air and noise pollution, these banes of the so-called “progress” now pervade and suffocate the environment. To characterize the re-zoning as an exercise of police power would be retrogressive.

To paraphrase a justice of the appellate court, part of the allure of subdivision living is the comparative privacy and exclusivity which the residents enjoy. Otherwise, we might as well have lived along the main road and spared ourselves the expense of paying a premium for our abodes. Perhaps Mayor Jun Bernabe and his obedient cohorts would not would not think too highly of their idea of general access through subdivision roads if it were they whose relaxation would be disturbed by the constant honking of horns and the screeching of tires, or if they had to live in constant fear of a wayward car plowing through their front doors, decimating the entire household, maids, children and all.

We are saddled with officials who cannot seem to grasp even the basic fundamentals of urban planning, who lack the creativity to increase the city’s coffers except by increasing real estate taxes and who exhibit a total disregard for a healthy environment.

We made the difference in the 2004 election with a voter’s turnout of 60% instead of the usual 10%. Let’s all go out in the upcoming May election to express our indignation by voting them out of office.