| 
                 
                  
                DILG-8 
                Regional Dir. Pedro A. Noval Jr. (in red) and Mayor Reynato 
                Latorre (in yellow) lead the groundbreaking of the water project 
                for Villareal, Samar. At the foreground is Engr. Ofelia Pido of 
                DILG.  | 
              
            
            
           
          
          25M peso project to 
          finally bring potable water to Villareal, Samar
          By MYLES JOSEPH E. COLASITO
          August 17, 2012
          TACLOBAN CITY  –  
          Residents of the town of Villareal, Samar may have forgotten that tap 
          water once flowed into their homes. After all, it has been decades 
          since residents enjoyed water from their faucets instead of needing to 
          be fetched in pails and other plastic containers from deep wells.
          However, all these could 
          change in a few months as the municipality last August 15, 2012 broke 
          ground for a 25-Million peso water project that stands to benefit 
          about 14,000 people or 60% of its population. The project is a soft 
          loan from the Municipal Development Fund Office (MDFO) under the 
          Department of Finance (DOF) and the Department of the Interior and 
          Local Government (DILG).
          DILG-8 Regional Director 
          Pedro A. Noval Jr., the guest of honor, lauded municipal officials led 
          by Mayor Reynato R. Latorre for persistently pursuing the project 
          after years of exploring alternatives for a viable water source. “This 
          project will be one of your legacies to the generations to come. With 
          a dependable supply of safe drinking water, there will be less 
          water-borne diseases and you will have more time spent for other 
          aspects of life instead of needing to fetch water from communal 
          faucets,” said Dir. Noval.
          On the other hand, Mayor 
          Latorre revealed that the municipality shall form a cooperative to run 
          the facility. He expressed confidence there would be no more repeat of 
          previous incidents of kaingin (slash and burn farming) that decreased 
          the flow at the water source (Milagrosa Falls in Brgy. San Andres), as 
          well as of pipes being vandalized for irrigation purposes, which led 
          to the decay of the town’s original water system.
          In his speech, Mayor Latorre 
          narrated how the town was finally able to secure an extension of the 
          loan offering. The municipality’s Memorandum of Agreement with DOF was 
          about to lapse when he approached MDFO on June 28, 2012. The DOF 
          official agreed, on the condition that the town complies with the 
          DILG’s Full Disclosure Policy and the standards of the Seal of Good 
          Housekeeping, consistent with this administration’s campaign to 
          institutionalize transparency and accountability. Fortunately, the LGU 
          was able to show such certification from the DILG-8 Regional Office, 
          and so his request was granted.
          The LGU has commissioned 
          Houston Construction for the project, which includes upgrading of the 
          existing water intake box at the site, installation of a water 
          treatment facility, construction of a ground reservoir, and laying 
          down of transmission and distribution pipes.
          The project is to be 
          completed by February 2013. Fourteen (14) barangays will be set up 
          with Level 3 (household level) water systems, with Level 2 (communal 
          faucets) also being installed in five (5) of these barangays to 
          accommodate those without water connections.
          Six barangays in the town 
          proper are covered by this water project. These are: Central, Mercado, 
          Miramar, Soledad, Tayud and Villarosa. Residents in eight (8) rural 
          barangays will also be able to avail of the new water system: 
          Cambaguio, Canmucat, Mahayag, Pacoyoy, Pangpang, San Andres, San Roque 
          and Ulayan.
          The interest rate under the 
          Millennium Development Goal (MDG) Fund has been reduced to 6% from the 
          original 8% to enable easier payback. Nationwide, about 600 LGUs are 
          classified as “waterless”, or those where most of its population do 
          not have a reliable supply of safe drinking water. To help address 
          this problem, DILG provides advocacy and technical assistance in 
          document preparation and fund sourcing through the MDG Fund and Sagana 
          at Ligtas na Tubig sa Lahat (SALINTUBIG) programs.