Urban Asset Reform

Urban asset reform deals with the provision of security of land tenure to the poor and vulnerable including informal settler families in urban areas. These interventions include presidential proclamations of sites for socialized housing, onsite development and services, and resettlement, among others. Presidential proclamations identify and proclaim idle government lands as socialized housing sites for disposition to qualified beneficiaries. Since 2001, the government, through the Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Council (HUDCC), has issued 113 proclamations covering 27,000 hectares, providing security of tenure to about 280,000 informal settler families.

In resettlement, the overriding policy is to improve the quality of life of informal settlers while ensuring maximum retention and minimum dislocation. The national government has implemented a number of resettlement programs, namely the North and South Rail Project, the North Luzon Expressway-C5-South Luzon Expressway, and the relocation of typhoon-related victims. As of November 2010, the government has relocated almost 88,000 families, or 93 percent of total families living along the rail rights-of-way in North Luzon and South Luzon (which are danger zones), paving the way for development of new transport systems and to provide safer and better homes.