Five days a week, the drive through Barangay San Pedro offers a masterclass in how institutions fail in slow motion. On this stretch of the South National Highway, the “Last Frontier” doesn’t look like a postcard; it looks like a wound.
The pavement is torn open, dust hangs like a permanent shroud, and from the exposed earth rise vertical steel rebars, uncapped, rusting, and jagged.
In a construction manual, they are impalement hazards. In the reality of Puerto Princesa, they are the metallic teeth of a trap set directly across from one of the city’s largest elementary schools.
Infrastructure is sold to us as the visual proof of progress. We are told that road widening is the signal that development has finally arrived in Palawan. But progress stripped of safeguards is not progress; it is the redistribution of risk onto the most vulnerable. Safety standards are not aspirational dreams or bureaucratic suggestions; they are the bare minimum of human decency.
In any regulated world, these steel spikes would be capped with high-visibility covers to prevent a fall from becoming a fatality. But here, the steel remains bare, a silent admission that the cost of a plastic cap is higher than the value of a pedestrian’s life.
This is way past theoretical fear. The asphalt along this corridor is already marked by tragedy; only last year, a motorist died after striking construction materials in this very zone. That death should have been a siren, triggering an immediate audit and visible corrective action.
Instead, the rebars remain. The Department of Public Works and Highways’ Palawan 3rd District Engineering Office manages the technicalities of budgets and contractors, but no amount of administrative complexity nullifies the basic principle that a work zone must not be a corridor of avoidable death.
There is a subtle, simmering violence in how this danger has been normalized. Every weekday, I see parents white-knuckle their children’s hands as trucks and cabs rumble past and dust clouds blur the vision of every driver.
We have been conditioned to adjust our routes and slow our vehicles as if navigating a minefield were a civic duty. It is not. The burden of safety does not belong to the child dodging steel; it belongs to the institutions that authorize, supervise, and certify these projects. When protective measures are omitted, the message is clear: some lives are negotiable.
Palawan’s global identity is built on a narrative of stewardship of the land, the water, and the community. Yet stewardship begins at home. It begins with school zones that aren’t obstacle courses. It begins with the understanding that visible neglect erodes public trust as surely as rust eats through steel.
We have grown accustomed to waiting for roads to be finished, but waiting for safety is a gamble we cannot afford. Every day those rebars remain exposed is a day we bet an ordinary routine against an irreversible loss.
The symbiosis of power and responsibility requires no theater, it requires the physical reality of reinforced steel and the absolute transparency of the ledger.
We often forget that the democratic experiment is conducted on the pavement of our everyday lives. When the architecture of our society becomes a weapon of indifference, the social contract is breached.
We do not merely request a transit route; we demand an end to the lethality of the mundane. We possess an inherent right to survive the journey from point A to point B.