Of waste segregation, commissions and corruption

WASTE segregation could not work or is not working in many municipalities because the mayors are making money from the hauling fees of garbage trucks and the commissions from the tipping fees that are paid by the operators of the dumpsites where the garbage are dumped.

Before discussing further however, I would like to insert my argument that all towns and cities should be classified as municipalities, no matter what their charters say.

To add to that, I would say that there is no shame for a city to be referred to as a municipality, in much the same way that there is no shame in referring to city halls as municipios. It is just a matter of terminology really, but if terminologies are really that important, then those mayors should know the difference between solid wastes and recyclables, and also between dumpsites and landfills.

Not that I pay too much attention to semantics, but for all intents and purposes, waste segregation is really the process that leads to waste recycling. In other words, segregation should really be the means to an end.

Perhaps that would be easy to understand, and if that is so, it should also be easy to understand that most solid wastes would not become garbage if only segregation is done as a means to recycling, the latter being the desired ultimate result. Again more semantics, because technically speaking, all recyclables are not garbage.

The best way to explain that is to say that all recyclables have value but most garbage have no value.

In theory, if only most solid wastes could be segregated, more recyclables could be extracted and in doing so, lesser waste materials would be dumped into the dumpsites.

In reality however, nothing else should be left after proper segregation, except hazardous materials perhaps. Also as it is supposed to be, dumpsites are supposed to be illegal, and only proper landfills are legal.

What is the use of passing laws if these could not be implemented?

I heard some skeptics saying that our laws are just as good as decorations, and we might as well frame those laws and put them up our walls.

Some would even say that our laws are just suggestions, and therefore nobody should take these seriously.

Worst of all, some are even saying that we pass these laws so that we would know which could be broken.

I must admit that I disagree with all these negative perceptions, because up to now, I am still hoping that somehow, we could still muster the strength to implement our laws, starting with our environmental laws, and by that, I mean the political will to do so.

In reality, landfills would not even be needed if only our barangays would build MRFs as they are supposed to do.

In theory, most of the solid wastes coming out of our commercial and residential locations could be segregated so that the recyclables could be recovered, and that is why they are called MRFs.

If only segregation is done properly, only the hazardous wastes would need to be hauled out using garbage trucks.

That seems to be the perfect picture as far as I could imagine it, but there is something wrong with that picture, because if lesser trucks would go to the landfills, the lesser money it would be for these supposedly corrupted mayors.

Speaking of environmental laws, allow me to draw your attention to the fact that the closure of Boracay should not have happened in 2018 if only the laws pertaining to the installation of Sewerage Treatment Plants (STPs) were implemented.

While we may all be alarmed by what happened there, let us not be surprised to know that apparently, many resorts and hotels all over the country also do not have STPs, and now we know what that does to our oceans.

I hate to spark a finger pointing exercise amidst this issue, but shouldn’t resorts and hotels also be sued for their failure to install their STPs?

If that is so, shouldn’t the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) be the one sued for not implementing the STP laws in Boracay in the past?

The worst thing that could come out is for the DENR and the Department of Interior and Local Government to sue each other for their own respective failures./PN

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