OUT OF
NOWHERE, this tiny third class municipality famously known for the Basi Revolt
during the Spanish era has been making a lot of noise lately.
It first
surprised the province by starting a coffee plantation with an eye on at least
making a dent in the highly profitable coffee market in the country. With a
10-hectare plantation being planned and which would be implemented as
public-private partnership, the Piddig municipal government, through Mayor
Eduardo Guillen, has also entered into a supply agreement with a coffee
corporation or the establishment of a modern coffee plantation and later on a
milling center to supply quality grade coffee to at least 200 supermarkets and
150 hotels and restaurants in the Philippines, Canada and the United States.
Aside from
this, the municipal government, through Mayor Eduardo G. Guillen, is now also
implementing an honest-to-goodness health care system that looks after their
poorest constituents from birth to burial. And according to the mayor, the
health care package is actually available to all Piddig residents as the
municipal government has deposited an amount at Mariano Marcos Memorial
Hospital in Batac for all concerned to be admitted at the hospital without
question.
In a rare
exclusive interview with The Ilocos Times,
Mr. Guillen stressed that the progress of a municipality—or a city, province or
country for that matter—lies on a healthy population; once they are no longer
worried about getting ill, they can then focus on being very productive and
this would drive growth.
The mayor
added that all developed countries had to improve their agriculture first
before they can reach industrialized status. And this is the blueprint he
wishes to implement in his tiny municipality. For this reason, the municipal
government is leaving no stones unturned as they attempt to boost agriculture
productivity in the town by providing all the basic needs for farmers from
water, fertilizer, seeds and the motivation to improve their skills and thus
their productivity.
Piddig may
be just a small municipality, but as their mayor emphasized they dare to dream
big. But not to be seen as trying to overreach, the idea is to dream big so
that even if they unfortunately fail, they would still have achieved a lot.
As in
history, success comes to those who dream—and dare. And as this tiny
municipality led by an inspiring local chief executive moves to grasp their
dream, we can only hope that they achieve all their aims and goals not only for
themselves but also for the whole province to see, hear and understand that all
things—big and small—come from having a vision and the pure motivation to
achieve them.
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