Interesting articles updated daily
- ADMIN, CAPTIVATE
- Oct 12, 2021
- 2 views
Objectives in the Right Perspective
By CRB Ricky C. Velasco
2015 National Chairman
As one envisions, analyses, prepares, and ultimately implements an objective, the only one thing that he should be mindful of is how good the objective will be for its target beneficiary. In all of the stages that he undertakes, variables must be recognized and that these will have a direct effect whether the objective will make sense at all.
Adaptation and flexibility play key important roles into realizing the program’s objective/s. As it is admirable to maintain ideals, one must also recognize actual and existing factors—realistically speaking.
So, as we have been gearing and professing so much principles and setting of directions, our advocacy of finally putting into play what the law has in-stored for our practice, for our profession to be recognized as the sole implementing personification of the real estate service practice can and will only make good reason if it would be recognized by the implementing government agencies (that is, BIR, Registry of Deeds, LGUs, et. al.)
What is REBAP’s Advocacy in the first place? That is, our licenses’ inclusion in the set of the requirements before the implementing government agencies may start to process any kind of transfer of property ownership. Accountability will be at hand and that is the ultimate objective of the RESA Law, ensuring the security of the public by way of a professional service. You wouldn’t want to be represented by a non-lawyer when you place a plead in court, right? Neither of purchasing a medicine without the physician’s prescription, right? Nor even of having a building permit without the architect’s and engineer’s signatures in it, right? REBAP’s Advocacy analogy is that somehow plain and clean in perspective—effective and sensible.
This objective encompasses not only REBAP members but the entire licensed real estate service practitioners in general. Fulfilling this objective entails like riding the bicycle—look afar, not on the wheels and by constantly stepping on the pedal will maintain balance, thereby moving forward.