LEYTE Rep. Ferdinand Martin G. Romualdez meets with officials of the Commission on Higher Education (CHED), Department of Education (DepEd), Department of Health (DOH) and Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) at Price Mansion in Tacloban City on Monday to discuss immediate interventions following the shooting at San Jose National High School. Joined by Tingog Party-list Reps. Jude A. Acidre and Andrew Julian K. Romualdez, Romualdez proposed establishing a regional rapid-response network of volunteer psychologists, psychiatrists, guidance counselors, social workers and other mental health professionals who can be immediately deployed to assist schools and communities affected by violence and other traumatic incidents. (Photo courtesy of the District Office of Leyte Rep. Ferdinand Martin G. Romualdez)
A REGIONAL rapid-response network of mental health and child protection professionals may soon be organized in the wake of the San Jose National High School shooting in Tacloban City, as part of a broader effort to help schools respond faster to violence, trauma and students in distress.
“Tatlo ang ating agarang direksyon. Una, bubuo tayo ng regional network ng mga volunteer psychologists, psychiatrists, guidance counselors, social workers at iba pang professionals na maaaring agad ma-deploy kapag may ganitong insidente,” Leyte Rep. Ferdinand Martin G. Romualdez said in after his meeting with officials from the Commission on Higher and Technical Education (CHED), Department of Education (DepEd), Department of Health (DOH) and Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) at Price Mansion in Tacloban City Monday.
Romualdez said the network would be supported by preventive education and stronger coordination among government agencies, schools and local communities.
“Pangalawa, magsasagawa tayo ng regular na seminars para sa mga estudyante, magulang at guro tungkol sa mental wellness, child protection at violence prevention. Pangatlo, palalakasin natin ang koordinasyon ng lahat ng ahensya upang mas mabilis ang pagtugon kapag may mga batang nangangailangan ng tulong,” he added.
The move came after a shooting at San Jose National High School in Tacloban City that killed three students and injured at least 20 others, prompting national concern over school safety, bullying, children’s access to violent online content and the availability of psychosocial support for affected students and teachers.
“Una sa lahat, nakikiramay tayo sa mga pamilya ng mga biktima ng nangyari sa San Jose National High School. Bilang mga magulang at bilang isang bansa, nasaktan tayong lahat,” Romualdez stressed.
The Leyte House leader said government response should go beyond sympathy because the tragedy exposed the need for immediate action and long-term prevention.
“Pero naniniwala ako na hindi sapat ang makiramay lang. May pananagutan tayong kumilos,” he said.
Romualdez called a meeting with the offcials to discuss both assistance for those affected and measures to prevent similar incidents.
“Kaya ipinatawag natin ang CHED, DepEd, DOH at DSWD upang pag-usapan kung ano ang maaari nating gawin—hindi lang para tumulong sa mga naapektuhan ngayon, kundi para maiwasan na maulit ang ganitong trahedya,” he explained.
He rejected suggestions that Congress should leave the matter entirely to executive agencies, saying lawmakers have a role in bringing institutions together and addressing gaps in law, budget and implementation.
“Hindi ito usapin ng pakikialam. Ang tungkulin ng Kongreso ay hindi lamang gumawa ng batas,” Romualdez pointed out.
“Responsibilidad din naming pagsama-samahin ang iba’t ibang sektor at tiyaking may sapat na suporta ang mga programa ng pamahalaan. Kapag may kakulangan sa batas o pondo, trabaho naming ayusin iyon,” he added.
Romualdez cautioned against reducing the incident to a single cause while investigators continue their work, noting that school violence may involve several overlapping factors.
“Hindi natin dapat pangunahan ang imbestigasyon. Maraming posibleng salik ang ganitong mga pangyayari—mental health, family environment, bullying, social media, access to counseling, at iba pa,” he said.
He said the goal is to strengthen the entire child protection and school safety system rather than address only one issue after each tragedy.
“Kaya ang gusto nating tugunan ay ang buong ecosystem ng child protection at school safety, hindi lamang isang aspeto,” Romualdez emphasized.
He said possible legislative responses include expanding school mental health programs, hiring more guidance counselors and social workers, strengthening GMRC and reviewing safeguards for minors’ use of social media.
“Kasama rito ang pagpapalawak ng school mental health programs, pagdaragdag ng guidance counselors at social workers sa mga paaralan, pagpapalakas ng GMRC, at pag-aaral ng mga hakbang upang mas maging ligtas ang paggamit ng social media ng mga menor de edad,” Romualdez said.
“Gusto nating maging mas handa ang ating mga paaralan sa pagprotekta sa ating mga kabataan,” he added.
Romualdez said the safety of children should be treated as a shared national duty, not the responsibility of one agency alone.
“Ang kaligtasan ng ating mga anak ay hindi responsibilidad ng isang ahensya lamang. Responsibilidad ito ng buong pamahalaan, ng mga paaralan, ng mga magulang, ng komunidad, at ng bawat Pilipino,” he said.
Romualdez said the country should not wait for another tragedy before fixing gaps in school safety, mental health support and child protection.
“Ang trahedyang ito ay dapat maging paalala na hindi tayo maaaring maghintay ng susunod na insidente bago kumilos. Kung sama-sama tayong kikilos ngayon, mas marami tayong batang mapoprotektahan bukas,” Romualdez said.
