BROKEN ROADS, BROKEN SYSTEMS AND BROKEN CHILDREN
BROKEN ROADS, BROKEN SYSTEMS AND BROKEN CHILDREN
We often grumble about our roads and bridges—those pothole-riddled
highways and rusting steel spans that were probably last inspected when Marcos
Sr. was still in Malacañang. In some places, it takes five decades
before anyone even thinks of maintenance.
Now, if that’s how we care for concrete and asphalt, what more for our orphanages
and childcare facilities, where what’s at stake isn’t infrastructure—but
the emotional, mental, and spiritual well-being of real, vulnerable Filipino
children?
At least with highways, we know whom to blame—the Department of
Public Works and Highways (DPWH). But with orphanages, who’s accountable? Is
it the DSWD? Or does the blame go even higher?
We have had a long line of Secretaries—some technocrats, some reformers,
many well-meaning—but how is it that basic maintenance, supervision, and care
still fall through the cracks? Maybe, just maybe, it’s not about individual
incompetence but a flaw in our national culture: we simply don’t value maintenance—of
roads, of buildings, of systems… or of lives.
Let’s get one thing straight: I’m not just talking about leaky roofs or
cracked walls in these orphanages. I’m talking about neglected souls,
children left to languish in bureaucratic silence because no one ever bothered
to check on how they were really doing.
Let me share what I’ve learned:
A Catholic volunteer working with disadvantaged children told me
that the Bureau of Standards (BOS)—the unit within DSWD that’s supposed
to monitor these homes—doesn’t do unannounced spot visits. They often
don’t even talk to the children. Instead, they go through checklists, inspect
walls and floors, then leave. They might as well be assessing a warehouse.
Worse, most of these homes are unaccredited, and guess what? The
unaccredited ones barely get inspected at all.
In some visits, officials told staff to build a “lockdown” room to
isolate emotionally disturbed children—yes, like a punishment cell. What year
is it again?
These inspections, when they happen, are obsessed with paperwork and
plumbing, but blind to the pain in a child’s eyes. No conversations,
no trauma programs, no emotional healing. Just ticks on a clipboard and a
silent child staring through a barred window.
This is not just a failure of bureaucracy—it’s a failure of basic
humanity.
Now ask yourself: Why are we so outraged when we see cracks in a bridge,
but not when we hear about cracks in the soul of a child who’s been
tossed from one failed system to another? Why are our leaders silent when
there’s damage done not to concrete, but to character?
I ask: Where is the command responsibility? Shouldn’t someone at the
DSWD answer for this? If the President is truly on a mission to “recalibrate”
his Cabinet for efficiency and public service, then this is the perfect
time to look under the floorboards of our child welfare system.
Here’s what I propose:
First, form an independent monitoring team made up of child welfare
professionals—not paper-pushers—who can make unannounced visits, talk
directly to the children, and file honest, uncensored reports.
Second, revise the accreditation process. Don’t let any child live in a
home that hasn’t passed a thorough assessment—not just on safety and legality
but on emotional and psychological care.
Third, use international best practices. Tools like the Child Status Index
(CSI) and the Orphanage Information Management System (OIMS) are
available globally. Why are we reinventing the wheel—or worse, ignoring it?
Lastly, empower the Bureau of Standards. Give them the authority, the tools,
and the independence to do their job without interference. If they’re not up to
the task, then shake them up and bring in people who care.
Mr. President, this is your moment. If you’re serious about quality
public service, then make child welfare a cornerstone of your governance. These
children are not just statistics. They are future Filipino adults, and the
state has a sacred duty to protect them.
We can’t wait another 50 years before someone checks in on these kids. By
then, it’ll be too late.
And if no one else will say this loudly, I
will: we must act now or be complicit in silence.
Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres
iseneres@yahoo.com,
09088877282, senseneres.blogspot.com
08-02-2025
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