SM, donors turn over housing village to Yolanda survivors

FOR 64-year-old pedicab driver Rogelio Palma Consalida, Nov. 8, 2013 was the date he will never forget for the rest of his life.

It was the day when super typhoon Yolanda made land-fall in Tacloban City, his hometown. In just an hour he lost all his possessions, which had taken him several decades to build.

“Nawala sa amin ang lahat (We lost everything),” said Rogelio.

For over two years, he and his wife, Lolita, also 64, had to live in a cramped government housing site.

But, life seems to smile on this couple once more as they are among the 400 family-beneficiaries of SM Supermalls’ biggest SM Cares Village for Yolanda survivors.

SM and its donors awarded 400 new houses in Tacloban City, Leyte to families who were hardest hit by the typhoon in 2013.

The village is called “Pope Francis-CFC ANCOP Canada Community–SM Cares Village.”

It is the biggest of all the four SM Cares housing projects, as the other villages only have 200 houses each.

The first village in Bogo, Cebu has been turned over to beneficiaries in November 2014, while the second village in Iloilo City was inaugurated in October 2015. The fourth and last village in Ormoc City is undergoing construction and will be turned over in July this year.

The SM Cares Village in New Kawayan, Tacloban is the third batch in the 1,000-house SM Cares Village housing project, which was launched in the aftermath of Yolanda in 2013.

SM Prime officials headed by its president, Hans T. Sy, led the turnover ceremony accompanied by Tacloban City officials led by Mayor Alfred Romualdez.

Guests who attended the event included Leyte Archbishop John Du, Canadian Ambassador to the Philippines Neil Reeder, Yedda Romualdez (representing Leyte’s first district Rep. Martin Romualdez), Ricky Cuenca and Jimmy Ilagan of the Couples For Christ-ANCOP, Mikee Romero of Global Port and Julian Payne of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce.

The 400 houses were awarded to the chosen beneficiaries for free. Aside from the houses, the SM Cares Village also has amenities, such a basketball court, street lamps, sewage treatment plant, materials recovery facility, rain-catchment system and provisions for water and electricity.

SM Cares, a division of SM Foundation and the corporate social responsibility arm of SM Prime Holdings Inc., launched the housing project shortly after the onslaught of typhoon Yolanda in November 2013 to provide permanent and disaster-resilient houses to survivors of the typhoon in the Visayas region.

Through its tenants, business partners, service providers, employees and local communities, SM was able to raise the money needed to build the 1,000 houses, a moving proof of the people’s accord in times of emergency.

Some of the donors for SM Cares Village in Tacloban include Zonta Club, Duty Free Philippines, Forever 21, ANCOP, New Golden City Builders & Development, and Philippine Daily Inquirer. Global Port and Sultan 900 donated the basketball court.

All the houses in the SM Cares Housing Village are disaster-resilient and have roofs made of concrete slab. Vetiver grass, with leaves that can be used for handicrafts, were used in the village to control soil erosion and for better slope protection. Its roots reach up to three meters long.

To ensure sustainability of the project, community development programs have been put in place to make the change work for all beneficiaries.

For the Tacloban housing project, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Palo and Couples For Christ-ANCOP were the  partners in charge of selecting the beneficiaries, training, livelihood and values formation to enable the new residents start a new life in their community.

SM said that the SM Cares Housing Village is a testament to the solidarity that Filipinos and people all over the world have shown to help the survivors of Yolanda. It is also personifies SM’s commitment to nation-building.

To know more about SM Cares and its advocacies, visit www.smcares.com.ph or www.facebook.com/OfficialSMCares.

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