There are floods we expect – monsoons, typhoons, rivers that swell with rain. And then there are floods we never see coming – those that rise from within, from the cracks in our institutions, from the silence of complicity, from the betrayal of public trust.
The recent exposé on the flood control scandal has left the nation stunned. Senator Panfilo Lacson’s speech, Flooded Gates of Corruption, didn’t just drop a bombshell – it opened a dam.
He revealed how billions in public funds were siphoned off through ghost projects, coded kickbacks, and political insertions. From 2011 to 2023, P1.9 trillion was poured into flood control. And yet, only 40% was left for the project, the rest of the bulk vanished – not into the river, but into pockets.
The names may yet be hidden, but the pattern is clear. Projects with identical costs. Reseta fees imposed by engineers. Parking fees paid to lawmakers. Funders demanding 25% of the budget.
Senator Panfilo Lacson stunned the nation with his "Floodgates of Corruption" speech
DPWH – The Solution Starter
And at the center of the storm? The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) – the very department tasked with protecting us from floods.
Let’s not mince words. If we’re looking for the solution starter to the scandalous complex problem, we must first crack open the Pandora’s Box at the DPWH.
It is the institutional crux, the root of the rot. Secretary Bonoan himself admitted that central audits are sporadic, often reliant on field reports and photos that may be falsified.
The concrete has cracked. The foundations are hollow.
So, what do we do?
We start where the cracks run deepest. We open the box – not to unleash chaos, but to confront it. We expose the mechanisms, reform the culture, and rebuild the trust.
DPWH Secretary Manuel Bonoan
Easily said than done? Maybe. Here’s where the story takes a turn – not toward despair, but toward hope.
Let’s say you work for a big government institution. Bit by bit, you advance in your career. You carry a comfortable salary, build a retirement nest egg, and settle into the rhythm of public service. Then one day, you stumbled upon something terribly wrong – an abuse of power, a misuse of funds, a betrayal of the very mission you serve.
Do you make a big stink and endanger your job? Or do you look the other way, knowing full well that the organization will resist change, and that speaking out might leave you flattened – road-kill on the highway of institutional self-preservation?
Bunny’s Story – A Template of Courage and Hope
This was the direful situation confronting Bunnatine “Bunny” Greenhouse in her story featured in the book “Your America: Democracy’s Local Heroes.” She helped bring accountability and transparency to a giant government agency, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. As a top civilian inside the agency, she became a whistleblower and waged a personal battle, refusing to back down or quit.
It was in the 90s when Bunny became the top civilian procurement officer at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers – the first woman and the first African American to do so. In her time at the agency, she would oversee over $23 billion worth of contracts, approving and signing all procurements and contracts, each one valued at over $10 million.
Grew up in a poor family, she wasn’t a rebel. She was a steward. A career public servant who simply didn’t buy deceit. Thinking of that, I know it would scare you out of your wits to imagine following in Bunny’s footsteps.
But, that’s precisely why Bunny’s story matters. Because she did what most of us fear to do today. She stood up. She spoke out. And she didn’t flinch.
Bunnatine "Bunny" Greenhouse
Twin Personal "Bodyguards"
You may wonder: Did she have a backer? Yes - two.
First, her family. The discipline she learned at home left a lasting imprint.
“My mother always said lying is in the intention, not the content,” Bunny recalled. In her household, silence in the face of untruth was never acceptable. Truth wasn’t just taught – it was expected.
Second, her faith. Bunny is a deeply spiritual woman. She believed that God had a purpose for her life and she embraced it with conviction.
“I was to be a fisher of men,” she said – echoing the moment when Jesus called two fishermen to follow Him. Her courage was not self-made; it was anchored in calling.
So where did Bunny find her support?
Not from institutional shields or legal armor, but from a network of truth-tellers – investigative journalists, members of Congress, and outraged citizens. The whistleblower speaks. The media amplifies. Congress investigates. And together – forming what she called the information triangle - they generate enough moral and political leverage to shake the system.
It's a model that works – when the institutions are willing to listen.
Oops – Our Philippine Slip Is Showing
But here in the Philippines, the cracks run deep.
Congress, the very body meant to investigate, appears entangled in the flood control scandal itself. So where do we turn when the watchdog is part of the mess?
Perhaps to alternative mechanisms, like Senator Tito Sotto’s proposed Independent People’s Commission – a body outside the usual political machinery, designed to probe with impartiality and public trust.
Not to mention that unlike in the U.S., we still lack a comprehensive Whistleblower Protection Act. It’s been filed multiple times in Congress, yet remains unpassed – gathering dust while courage goes unrewarded and unprotected.
Yes, there are fragments: Republic Acts, agency memos, administrative orders. But they offer only partial protection – a patchwork of promise in a landscape that demands bold reforms.
A Few Good Men and Women
As the old saying goes: Sunlight is the best medicine. Bringing truth into the light makes it harder for sleaze to survive.
Yes, Bunny paid the price. But, in doing so, she became a living answer to the question we all ask in moments of moral crisis.
Can it be done? Yes. It can.
And if Bunny could do it inside the 35,000-employee U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, then someone can do it inside DPWH with around 20,000 work force. Surely, there’s a few good men and women in our flood-ridden DPWH bureaucracy who can choose conscience over complicity.
Let Bunny’s story be more than inspiration. Let it be a template for:
Engineers who refuse to falsify reports
Auditors who speak up when numbers don’t add up
Citizens who use platforms like Sumbong sa Pangulo to report anomalies
Lawmakers who choose reform over reward.
Change Begins in Us
Let Bunny's story be a striking answer to every doubting Thomas who asks, “Can it be done?”
Yes, it can. Yes, it must. Yes, it begins with us.
Because behind every ghost project is a real family displaced. Behind every padded budget is a child wading through floodwaters to school. Behind every silence is a soul waiting in justice.
“Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves… defend the rights of the poor and needy.” Proverbs 31:8-9
Let us be the echo that refuses to be drowned. Let us be the whistle in the wind, the voice in the storm, the hand that rebuilds not just dikes – but dignity.
For in the end, the most important public work is not what we construct with concrete and steel, but what we uphold with truth.
To The Few Good Men And Women
This piece is dedicated to every soul who has ever stood alone in the face of wrongdoing – to the quiet whistleblowers, the honest engineers, the truth-telling auditors, to the public servants who still believe that service is sacred.
To those who have nothing to do with deceit, who documented what others erased, who endured demotion, ridicule, and silent treatment – but never surrendered their voice.
To the Bunny among us, and to the ones still waiting for courage to rise.
May this be your reminder that one voice can crack concrete, and one act of integrity can drain the flood.
Let us build again – not just with steel and stone, but with truth, honor, and the kind of hope that refuses to drown.
Your Voice Matters
If this reflection has stirred something in you – a memory, a conviction, a story wanting to be told – share it.
Whether you’ve witnessed integrity in action, stood your ground in quiet resistance, or simply carry a hope for a better nation – your voice matter.
Tell your story. Speak your truth.
We can be the flood that cleanses, the dike that holds firm, and the stream where justice flows.
Keep the conversation alive.
Keep the courage burning.
Content & editing put together in collaboration with Bing Microsoft AI-powered Co-pilot
Head collage photos courtesy of Shutterstock, Inquirer.net, The Market Monitor, Philstar.com, The Manila Times, Getty Images
Still photos courtesy of Inquirer File Photo, Facebook, Macmllan Publication, Kohn & Colapinto LLP, AP News, X, AZ Quotes, Dreamstime.com, Vecteezy, Linkedin, & Ping Lacson file.