Building must continue into next administration

Credit to Author: Tempo Desk| Date: Fri, 25 Oct 2019 16:32:40 +0000

 

EDITORIAL edt

THERE are at least 45 major public works projects underway in the government’s mas­sive infrastructure program and at least 75 percent of them will be completed by the end of President Duterte’s administration in 2022, Secretary Mark Villar of the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) said at a round-table interview at the Manila Bulletin last Tuesday.

Some of the projects aim to decongest the highways of Metro Manila and develop new links to other parts of the country, he said. He cited the Metro Manila Skyway Stage 3, Har­borlink, C-5, Southlink, the NLEX-SLEX Connector, and the Cavite-Laguna Expressway.

The other major projects are in the provinces – railways and expressways and bridges, airports and seaports, dams and irrigation systems all over Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao.

The first batch of projects will be completed by 2021, he said, and a second batch by 2022, when President Duterte bows out of office. With all these projects, he said, “Definitely, we will be looking at a different country from when we came in.” He added: “Whatever suf­fering we have now, it’s for a good purpose…. Medyo luluwag na ang traffic by next year.”

Secretary Villar had the ongoing problem of traffic when he spoke on the ongoing con­struction projects in many parts of Metro Manila. But while some of the big projects are indeed in the capital area, the department is looking at the entire country and its needs, he said. Aside from the 45 big projects, he added, there are also thousands of other smaller ones being studied and implemented.

The big projects may not all be completed by 2022, but Secretary Villar expressed confi­dence that the next administration will carry on the ambitious master plan of “Build, Build, Build.”

We truly hope that this will be so – that the next administration will continue the build­ing program of the Duterte administration. Previous administrations have had their own special concerns – uniting
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