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Chapter 2
REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE AND STUDIES
This Chapter presents some foreign and local
literatures and studies which the researchers deem relevant
with the present study. Such literatures and studies cited
paved the way in determining the extent of how far
researchers have gone through along the area under
investigation.
Related Literature
Foreign Literature
Waste Management
According to Schidmit (2012) in his book entitled
Zero Waste Management cited that the present rubbish
includes synthetic materials that keep piling up unlike
natural ones that degrade and eventually return to earth.
Thus, disposal becomes a problem. Aside from this, garbage
is also a health hazard- being a melting pot of all sorts
of disease. As todays throwaway society consumes more and
more products, we also generate more and more waste. Much
of this waste gets burned in incinerators or buried in
landfills, causing a series of environmental problems
including water pollution and loss of open space,
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According to Duran (2012) in his book entitled Waste
Management Disposal cited that waste is a visible face of
inefficiency in terms of material utilization. Waste
handling is a major concern, especially since improper
waste treatment causes increased environmental
deterioration. The last few decades have seen the emergence
of new measures to handle waste effectively, but most of
them are not flawless. Zero waste, an innovation of the
1990s in waste handling, emphasizes planning for the
elimination of waste rather than managing waste.
According to Allen (2012), the Zero Waste
International Alliance, means that zero waste is the
designing and managing products and processes to reduce the
volume and toxicity of waste and materials, conserve and
recover all resources, and not burn or bury them. The
simple technology and methods required to achieve Zero
Waste exist in every community around the world.
Zero Waste Management Group (2012), Environmental
sustainability and waste management are the most important
issues of our time. An important step towards achieving
environmental sustainability and responsible waste
management involves reducing our impact on the environment.
It is through the successful implementation of our waste
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management and diversion programs that we commit ourselves
to continually satisfy our client's needs. The main
principals that are employed by Zero Waste Management Group
involve resource preservation and waste reduction. These
are the core fundamental components of the 'Zero Waste
Philosophy'. This is done by means of recycling all
potential waste and reusing those materials in different
ways, creating a circular system of use and re-use.
Implementing this philosophy, bring solutions to all
segments of society. This is demonstrated by our commitment
to work with and provide efficient solutions to
individuals, groups and municipalities.
According to Serbanto (2012) in his book entitled
Waste Management Disposal said that Zero Waste is a
critical stepping-stone to other necessary steps in the
efforts to protect health, improve equity and reach
sustainability. Zero Waste can be linked to sustainable
agriculture, architecture, energy, industrial, economic and
community development. Every single person in the world
makes waste and as such is part of a non-sustainable
society. However, with good political leadership, everyone
could be engaged in the necessary shift towards a
sustainable society. Good political leadership in this
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matter involves treating citizens as key allies to protect
human health and the environment and in making the
transition to a sustainable future. Governments need to
govern rather than attempt to manage this change to
sustainable resource conservation practices. This includes
a significant investment in public outreach and education
so that citizens can help communities make the most
informed choices.
According to Dantes (2013) cited that the dumping and
burning of garbage generated in cities, towns and villages
in wetlands and water bodies, have resulted in serious air,
soil and water pollution. Zero Waste Management is a new
system of managing solid waste, which strives for maximum
waste recovery through recycling and reuse, aiming at
zero waste to be disposed onto dump yards and landfills.
All over the world, Zero Waste Management has been accepted
(and is being practiced) as the best solution to the
problem of waste, for the following reasons. Waste is
segregated and resources are recovered through composting
of organic waste and recycling of inorganic waste. Compost
generated through Zero Waste Management is used to promote
organic farming, bringing down the use of chemicals in
agriculture. Zero Waste Management helps reduce the rate of
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virgin raw material extraction and resource depletion. Zero
Waste Management minimizes waste disposal at dumpsites and
reduces pollution of air, ground water and soil that result
from dumping.
In the book of Calonzo (2014) entitled Eco Waste
Management cited that waste disposal directly contributes
to climate change with the discharge of GHGs such as
methane from dumps and landfills and carbon dioxide and
nitrous oxide from incinerators. Waste disposal also
indirectly drives climate change by depriving the economy
of reused, recycled and composted materials. By adopting
Zero Waste, we cut greenhouse gas emissions from waste
disposal sites as well as from the energy-intensive
extraction, processing and transportation of virgin
materials to replace the buried or burned discards, Manny
Calonzo, Co-Coordinator of the Global Alliance for
Incinerator Alternatives (GAIA), another member of the Eco
Waste Coalition.
In the book of Obrero (2015) entitled Waste
Management cited that waste management that aims to reduce
total amount of waste to zero by redesigning resource-use
systems. Rather than maintaining a linear waste system
you throw something away, it ends up in a landfill zero
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waste initiatives work toward extending current practices
of recycling and reuse into a circular waste system. This
strategy maximizes recycling, minimizes waste, reduces
consumption and ensures that products are made to be
reused, repaired or recycled back into nature or the
marketplace.
Knowledge on Waste Management
Ivan (2012) in his book Zero Waste cited that zero
waste management groups will initiate programs that will
raise awareness of recycling and environmental issues that
families can implement together. One such method will be
the distributions recycling guides with tips on recycling
and composting to households, schools and business in local
communities. These easy-to-guides will increase awareness
about the importance of being environmentally friendly
highlight the importance of reducing, reusing, and
recycling the resources without compromising daily routine.
Smith (2012) in his book Environmental Management
cited that Environmental education is an essential tool for
achieving effective resource management and sustainable
development. Environmental education in its broadcast sense
encompasses awareness raising, acquiring new perspectives,
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values, knowledge and skills and both the formal and
informal process that lead to changed behavior in support
of sustainable environment.
James (2013) cited that environmental information has
been described as central to the issues of solid waste
management and disposal. This study investigated the
availability and accessibility of environmental information
to the solid waste policy formulators and implementors with
regard to the media/channels used for disseminating
environmental information to the public. A descriptive
survey design was adopted for the study. A purposive
sampling technique was used to select the sample and the
method produced 205 respondents that consisted of 185
Policy Implementors and 20 Policy Formulators. A total of
147 cases were finally analyzed, which included 16 Policy
Formulators (80% of total sample) and 131 Policy
Implementors (71% of total sample). Data collected were
analyzed using descriptive statistics such as percentages
and frequency counts. Findings show that the Policy
Implementors preferred the use of personal contact as the
channel for disseminating environmental information,
whereas the Policy Formulators relied on the use of
posters, radio/TV talks, and professional meetings. Some
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barriers to disseminating information to the public
included: lack of access to information sources, lack of
standards for acquisition of information, and lack of funds
to publish information materials.
Conor (2013) cited that the individual achievement
would remain individual had it not been shared with the
community. As soon as the use of fire was shared, the scope
for its future use and development was widened. Throughout
time, other members of the community would discover or come
up with new practical application for it, like cooking and
production of tools and items. These associate innovations
reinforced the initial idea, contributed to its use and
were at least as significant as the primary innovation. But
the question remaining is what could have prompted all
other communities to adopt the use of fire too? One can
only speculate, but it may be that fire with all its
derivative uses gave communities that used it a competitive
advantage. Better fed, better equipped, as these
communities prospered over time and migrated they simply
either spread the knowledge of fire to others or triggered
their extinction. Perhaps some neighboring villages even
stole fire, in an attempt to even the odds.
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Kate (2012) argued that information collection and
storage involve the day-to-day processes of gathering and
storing data from organizational programs, partners, and
stakeholders. More sensitive information being managed is
usually personal information subject to the various state
and international privacy laws or information that is
proprietary to a corporation or other organization. The
various state and international privacy laws Information
provisional impact levels are documented in the Personal
Identity and Authentication information type. Such
information will often be assigned a moderate
confidentiality impact level. Where any of the information
to be managed can be expected to have a high
confidentiality, impact level, then the information
management information must be assigned a high
confidentiality impact level. When the data being managed
belongs to one of the information types described in this
guideline, the confidentiality impact assigned to the
system is that of the highest impact information type
processed by the system. Depending on the organization and
the mission being supported, the sensitivity of the
information can range from none (public information) to
high.
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Solid Waste Management
The advent of Republic Act 9003 (2000, various local
governments have adopted and integrated the law into local
laws and ordinances. RA 9003 provided the framework as to
the Solid Waste Management Plans in various LGUs in the
country. In line with the implementation of the RA 9003,
various researches and reports are published regarding the
assessment of the implementation of the Republic Act in the
local governments. These studies range from the assessment
of the local governments in their implementation of the RA
9003, to the challenges and mechanisms of solid waste
management in the Philippines.
Richie Grace Lago (2012) of Liceo de Cagayan
University studied on the Solid Waste Management system in
Bayabas, Cagayan de Oro City. Her study entitled Solid
Waste Management Needs of a Suburban Community
studied the terms of handling, storage, collection,
transfer and transport, processing and disposal of solid
waste in the said community. In the abstract of her
study, she indicated baranggay officials, barangay
workers and baranggay residents as the respondents of the
study. She measured on the respondents awareness of the
Republic Act 9003 or the Ecological Solid Waste Management
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Act of 2000 and the initiation of the LGU in the
implementation of the said Republic Act. The researcher
concluded that the respondents have moderate awareness of
the RA 9003 and that this level of awareness led to the low
cooperation in the LGUs in terms of the implementation of
the Republic Act. She also concluded that this moderate
level of awareness discloses a community interest in
adopting the introduced solid waste management system.
Moreover, the assessment of the respondents on the Republic
Act 9003 depended on their level of awareness of the
Republic Act and the perceived importance of the
Materials Recovery Facility. Lastly, the
researcher concluded that the baranggay should take the
lead on the implementation and support of the Republic
Act 9003, which will in return affect the
receptiveness of the respondents to the said Act.
Francis Paulo M. Quinas (2011) study on Wasting
Away: The challenges of solid waste management in the
Philippines, a study posted on the UP Forum, tackled on
the situation of solid waste management in the country. The
researcher presented the current deplorable state of the
Philippines in terms of waste, especially on landfills and
dumpsites. The researcher talked on the current law
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managing the solid waste management in the country and the
urban planning and renewal. The study imparts on the poor
urban planning that led to the current solid waste
management problem, especially in Manila. The study
stated, to begin with, poor urban planning and its
inadequate implementation in Metro Manila have contributed
significantly to the solid waste problem. It also
presented the current situation of the LGUs which
acknowledges the sector of tourism, thus reducing the
impacts of the community on the environment, mainly caused
by the wastes generated in the households and industries.
The study assessed on the role of the Filipino individuals
to the segregation of waste, saying that most Filipino
households dont even bother to segregate their solid
waste. Because of this, there is a pressing need for
Material Recovery Facilities (MRFs) in communities across
the country. These facilities process solid waste to
recover recyclable and reusable materials, not only greatly
reducing the volume of solid waste, but also generating
revenue for the LGUs.
William H. O. Streegan (2013) assessed on the
compliance of Bacolod City to the RA 9003. The researcher
presented facts on the current situation of Bacolod City,
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including the fact that waste management problems as a
major pillar in the flooding of Bacolod City. The
researcher also presented the current situation of
Baranggay Felisa as the citys illegal open dump, where a
sanitary landfill is proposed to be situated. The
researcher assessed Bacolod City into five conclusions.
First, the Bacolod City Government did not comply
with the guidelines and deadlines of RA 9003 and
therefore the National Solid Waste Management
Commission. Second, the City Government failed to address
the DENRs request to establish a sanitary landfill. Third,
the City Government did not heed the call to close illegal
open dumpsite in Baranggay Felisa. Fourth, that the City
Government could be subjected to criminal sanctions as a
result of non-compliance to RA 9003. Lastly, the City
Government continued to operate the illegal dumpsite in
Brgy. Felisa. As a whole, the researcher stated that it is
imperative that the City should be more serious about the
implementation of RA 9003 and should fast track its
information drive on this law so that the citizenry could
become more aware of its provisions. It is equally
imperative that the citizenry, either in their homes or in
their workplaces should implement proper waste segregation,
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so that the City could comply with its agreement with the
DENR.
Another related study is Jessie Todocs Decentralized
Solid Waste Management In The Philippines, which sought to
analyze the framework of Solid Waste Management in the
Philippines. The study also aimed to formulate strategies
for its replication in the country and among local
government members of the Kitakyushu Initiative Network.
The study tackled on four baranggays and villages in
the country, which assessed the compliance of Local
Government Units to the Republic Act 9003. It further
scrutinized on the budget allotment, disposal facilities,
and sanitary landfills of the LGUs.
The book entitled The Garbage Book: Opportunities for
Change assessed the implementation of the RA 9003 at the
baranggay level. It states that, while the extent of
formal recycling through local government initiatives has
been limited, informal and private sector recycling is
extensive, at all points from waste generation through to
final disposal. Scavenging forms a significant element of
this activity. It is found out that an insignificant
amount of 10% of waste is only recycled. More so, it
assessed that community-based initiatives involve waste
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segregation at source, recycling, and composting. Programs
have been attempted in many barangays throughout Metro
Manilasome have succeeded, others have failed for one
reason or another. Leadership is the key factor in
successful programs. In most cases, the initiative is led
by the Barangay Captain or nongovernment organization
aligned with the zero waste movement.
With the signing of RA 9003 into law, a challenge is
posed for the local governments to implement the provisions
of the republic act into local laws and ordinances. Various
local governments have adopted and have implemented the RA
9003 into local ordinances, but the challenge comes with
putting right sanctions to the violators of the
law. The assessment provided for by the different
researchers suggests that despite the presence of local
ordinances, there is still much to be done.
Synthesis
The related literature and studies, foreign and local
herein discussed are both related in a way that it deals on
solid waste management.
The above-cited foreign literatures were cited because
of its bearing to the present study because of its
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similarities and dissimilarities. Lago (2012) of Liceo de
Cagayan University studied on the Solid Waste Management
system in Bayabas, Cagayan de Oro City. Her study
entitled Solid Waste Management Needs of a Suburban
Community studied the terms of handling, storage of
waste materials. Though the present study also aims to
assess the waste management however, it varied on the
setting and locale of the study.