The Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) commits to
sustain its partnership with local government units and citizens in helping
ensure that their basic needs will be met through the continuation of
implementation of the Kapit-Bisig Laban sa Kahirapan-Comprehensive and
Integrated Delivery of Social Services (Kalahi-CIDSS) even amidst the
elections.
Kalahi-CIDSS is implemented by the residents of the covered municipalities
of the program, following its community-driven development (CDD) strategy.
Through CDD, the program seeks to empower citizens by training
them so they can develop, implement, and maintain projects that would address
their most pressing needs.
The program will not halt its operations given the agreements
between DSWD, the World Bank, and the Asian Development Bank, as a large
percentage of Kalahi-CIDSS’ funding comes from the two latter institutions.
Kalahi-CIDSS seeks to cover 19,283 barangays in 825 municipalities
across the country in 2016. As of February 2016, it was able to reach 18,049
barangays in 766 municipalities, training 504,272 citizens as its community
volunteers. The program also funded the implementation of 14,393 community projects,
most of which come in the form of small-scale infrastructures.
According to DSWD Secretary Corazon Juliano-Soliman, the program’s
community volunteers serve as the reason for continuing implementation of
Kalahi-CIDSS despite the elections, as their potential for change cannot be
paused given their needs.
Sec. Soliman referred to her personal experiences as a community
organizer, saying that sustainable change happens only when the projects and
programs brought to them are responsive to the needs of the people and take
their own needs into account.
She emphasized that citizens have the right, responsibility, and
the capacity to instigate the changes in their lives. She added that the
government’s role is to provide mechanisms and an enabling environment that
would allow people to pursue their development, which would in turn change the
country.
“Ang susi ng pagbabago diyan ang mga mamamayan, ang mga mamayan na
nakikiugnay sa atin. Ang mga mamamayan ang susi ng kanilang pagbabago (The
citizens are the key to change, the citizens who link with us in the
government. The citizens are the key to their own development),” she said.
Kalahi-CIDSS aims not only to capacitate these people so they will
have ownership of their projects, but also so they can explore additional
opportunities even beyond the program. It also links to their citizens to their
local government units (LGUs) so they can make their elected officials more
responsive to their needs. The program also seeks to make LGUs sustain the environment
of participation, transparency and accountability to and for their
constituents.
Sec. Soliman added, “Ang pinakamahalaga ay ang malaking paniniwala
ng mga mamamayan na kanila ito, dahil sila ay nanindigan (What is important is
that the citizens believe that this is theirs, that they were the ones who held
strong).” (DSWD)
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