In
line with the full speed implementation of the Community Development in
Conflict-affected Areas in Mindanao (CD-CAAM) extension phase, a
barangay-wide orientation was recently conducted on August 5, 2015 at
Barangay Balut, Sultan Mastura, Maguindanao facilitated by Bangsamoro
Development Agency-Central Mindanao (BDA-CeMin) Region. The barangay-wide orientation aimed to guide the community
stakeholders of the barangay particularly the beneficiaries of this
project, on the implementation of fish pond project in their community. The participants of this activity were composed of representatives
from local government units (LGU) of Sultan Mastura and Brgy. Balut;
Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) organized groups such as the
Political Committee (PolCom) for Maguindanao Province, Social Welfare
Committee, and Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces (BIAF), and Municipal
Catalyst of BDA-CenMin in this town. During the orientation, the project staff emphasized, “this
barangay-wide orientation also includes selection of thirty (30) direct
beneficiaries of the project but it does not mean that those who will
not be selected is restricted to avail, particularly, of the knowledge
on managing this project (Tilapia culture) because they can also join
the class along with the duration of the training”. As an important counter part of the community, representatives from
different sectors expressed their commitment of support for the
implementation of the project. A representative from the Barangay LGU said, “we will do all we can
in order to support the project so it will be successfully implemented”. BDA CenMin Regional Manager (RM) Hashim B. Manticayan in response to
the commitment of support expressed by different sectors also expressed
commitment of supports, “we in the BDA are also committed to implement
the project in the best possible form”.
“Likewise, we are expressing our thanks and gratitude to the
representatives from different sectors for their commitment of support”,
RM Manticayan added. He further said: “BDA is a show window of the MILF governance and the
success of this project with our unified support represent our
readiness and capacity to run the Bangsamoro Government”. CenMin is among the regions of BDA where CD-CAAM Project is being
implemented for its extension phase that kicked off in May this year. The region is also part of the pilot implementation of the project together with Ranaw Region. CD-CAAM is implemented by BDA with support from Japan International
Cooperation Agency (JICA) in partnership with ICNet Limited as service
provider.
Suspected Abu Sayyaf men have beheaded a barangay captain of
Dapitan City whom they abducted along with two personnel of the
Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) three months ago. Brig. Gen. Alan Arrojado, commander of the Joint Task Group
Sulu, said the cadaver could be Rodolfo Buligao, the barangay chairman
of Barangay Aliguay Island in Dapitan City, Zamboanga del Norte. “A
written note was found on top of the cadaver with that name,” said
Arrojado. The body was discovered on a road intersection in Barangay Lunggang in Maimbung town of Sulu at around 10 p.m. on Tuesday night.
“Accordingly, the beheading was executed by the captors of
the victim when the negotiator did not meet the amount of ransom
demanded by the captors,” said Arrojado. Buligao and the two Coast Guard personnel, identified as Rod
Allain Pagaling and Gringo Villaruz were seized while they were
monitoring the arrival of vessels off Dapitan City on May 4. In June, a video showing the three pleading for help had
gone viral in social media, with the masked gunmen threatening to behead
them. Original Post: Abu Sayyaf Men Behead Dapitan City Barangay Chief.Manila Bulletin
Prosecutors from the Office of the Deputy Ombudsman for
Visayas have secured the conviction of Charlene Cabusas, former
treasurer of Barangay Rizal, San Carlos City, Negros Occidental, for 30
counts of malversation through falsification of commercial documents
that resulted in P780,000 in cash shortage. The joint ruling issued by the San Carlos City Regional Trial Court
(RTC), Negros Occidental Branch 57 sentenced Cabusas to suffer
imprisonment of reclusion perpetua for each of 15 cases. Meanwhile, for 14 other cases, she was sentenced to suffer imprisonment of 13 years, 1 month, and 11 days of reclusion temporal as minimum to 20 years of reclusion temporal as maximum. For one other case, she was sentenced to suffer the indeterminate penalty of 8 years, 8 months, and one day of prision mayor as minimum to 14 years and 8 months of reclusion temporal as maximum. During trial, the Ombudsman prosecutors established that from March
2008 to March 2009, Cabusas falsified 30 checks by altering their
details. The audit investigation conducted by the Commission on Audit (COA)
found the 30 checks issued from the barangay’s Development Bank of the
Philippines (DBP) account were in excess of the stated amounts in their
corresponding disbursement vouchers. The COA determined that of the 30 checks, 16 of these were falsified
with respect to the name of the payee and the amount, while the
remaining 14 checks were falsified as to amount, resulting in a cash
shortage of P780,000.
Cabusas admitted the cash shortage to the COA auditors. A demand to produce the fund shortage was unheeded.
The San Carlos City RTC ruled that Cabusas was the payee, endorser, and recipient of the cash proceeds of all the 30 checks.
It said "the glaring discrepancy in the amount authorized vis-à-vis
the amount reflected on the checks as encashed, coupled by the frequency
by which the subject checks were drawn, readily reveal a deceitful hand
at work. No other inference can be made except that the felonious acts
of the accused were carefully calculated to illegally amass hundreds of
thousands of pesos to the detriment of Barangay Rizal." Aside from imprisonment, the RTC also ordered Cabusas to pay a fine
of P780,000 equivalent to the amount malversed and another P780,000 for
civil liability to Barangay Rizal with the accessory penalty of
perpetual special disqualification for public office. Original Post: Woman barangay treasurer gets life imprisonment for P780,000 check fraud. InterAksyion.
Bayawan Mayor Ismael Martinez and recipients of solar home system units. Photo Credits: Roy Bustillo
The Department of Energy (DOE), in cooperation with the Bayawan City
government and Silliman University, distributed solar home system (SHS) units
in the city during the ceremonial switch-on on Wednesday (August 5).
Bayawan Mayor Ismael Martinez thanked the DOE for choosing his city as a
site for its House Electrification Program (HEP), which would greatly help 17
barangays that don't have power.
Martinez said children in these barangays could now study better and people
would become more productive. Electric lighting, he added, could also help
deter crimes.
According to DOE-Visayas Director Antonio Labios, this is the second time
the DOE had this project in the Visayas, with this one having the largest
number of beneficiaries of HEP at 2,989.
Labios said that most of the sitios are only accessible by foot or by
habal-habal when the weather permits. The areas are also 5 kilometers away from
the last pole of the local electric cooperative.
A lawmaker has filed a bill creating the Office of Barangay Legal
Officer to help resolve the legal issues in the barangay level.
Rep. Evelio R. Leonardia
Rep. Evelio R. Leonardia (Lone District, Bacolod City) said problems
confronting the local government units most especially the Punong Barangays are intermingled with legal issues.
“The complication and intricacies of legal issues that Punong Barangays have to address necessitate the presence of a legal mind,” Leonardia said.
House Bill 5917 seeks to amend Section 396 of Republic Act 7160,
otherwise known as The Local Government Code of 1991, by adding a
subsection, a provision creating an Office of the Barangay Legal
Officer. Under the bill, no person shall be appointed barangay legal officer
unless he is a citizen of the Philippines and a resident of the local
government concerned, with good moral character and a member of the
Philippine Bar. Likewise, the applicant must have practiced his profession for at
least one year to qualify for the position of barangay legal officer. The measure further provides that the term of the barangay legal
officer shall be coterminous with that of his appointing authority. The barangay legal officer is also mandated under the bill to take
charge of the office of legal services and do the function of the legal
officer. The bill mandates a barangay legal officer to formulate measures for
the consideration of the Sanggunian and provide legal assistance and
support to the governor or mayor. Likewise, a legal officer shall develop plans and strategies
particularly those, which have to do with programs and projects related
to legal services upon the approval of the governor or mayor. The measure states that the appointment of legal officer shall be optional to the barangay. Original Post: Bill to Create the Office of the Barangay Legal Officer.
A man sits on a leatherback sea turtle tied to a bamboo pole in Barangay Marabut in Samar in an undated photo, one of several that elicited outrage among
netizens. The turtle has been released back to the sea.
TACLOBAN CITY, Philippines – Photos of a still unidentified man
sitting on a leatherback sea turtle, locally known as pawikan, recently
went viral on social media.
The pawikan, which measures six feet long and three feet wide, was
tied to a bamboo post and has since been released back to the sea – but
not without first inciting outrage from netizens. Six photos were uploaded by Jose Lastimado on his Facebook account
last Aug. 6 at past 9 a.m. Lastimado was reportedly the former village
chief of Pinamitinan and Association of Barangay Councils (ABC)
president of Marabut town in Samar. The photos were captioned “Big catch pawikan in Brgy Sta Rita Marabut Samar (sic).” In his spot report, lawyer Danilo Suarez of the Department of
Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) community environment and
natural resources office in Samar said the pawikan was caught in the
fish net of a certain Jessy Amora, about one kilometer away from the
shoreline of the village, on Aug. 5 around 1:30 a.m. Corazon Horca Makabenta, officer-in-charge of the DENR’s conservation
and development division here, said the pawikan was released “after the
DENR took photodocs and measurements at 11 a.m. in the morning that
same day.”
Makabenta, through her Facebook account, also thanked the public for their “expression of concern and support.” She said the person who “maltreated” the pawikan would be charged
with violation of Republic Act 9147, or the Wildlife Resources
Conservation and Protection Act. Some reports said the man atop the pawikan was Lastimado although this information has yet to be verified. As of press time, Lastimado has deactivated his Facebook account. The leatherback sea turtle (Dermocheleys coriacea) is considered an endangered species here and elsewhere in the world. The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) describes it as the “largest of all
living sea turtles and the fourth largest modern reptile behind three
crocodilians.” Adult leatherback sea turtles can reportedly grow to as long as nine feet and weigh an average of 300 to 500 kilos. Data show that the largest leatherback sea turtle ever recorded had a length of about 10 feet and weighed 916 kilos. Original Post: Sea Turtle Caught in SamarPhilstar Headline Aug. 10, 2015.
PANGLAO,
BOHOL, Philippines — The barangay chairman of Tangnan in this town
alleged that he found some names of already dead persons in the
manifesto of protest against the planned construction of a sea port at
sitio Tabuan in the village.
Photo of a typical jetty port. Credits: Wikipedia
Punong Barangay Cirilo Gatase told The Freeman that the manifesto,
signed by hundreds of barangay residents, was published in the local
weekly papers recently allegedly perpetrated by critics and political
enemies of Panglao Mayor Leonila Montero and Vice Mayor Pedro Fuertes. Gatase however said he was unsure of how many “dead persons” signed
the protest papers, and he had tasked his secretary to determine this
further. Contrary to the published manifesto, Gatase said the Barangay Council
was not totally against the construction of the port, but only wanted
to have the project go through the process, like a barangay assembly or
public hearing first to make his constituents understand it more. A public hearing was earlier conducted though, in the presence of the
mayor and the vice mayor, but Gatase would like to do it again for the
sake of transparency and wider consultation. Another public hearing was slated at the Barangay Hall, he added. Earlier, barangay residents protested against the planned jetty,
citing environmental degradation, perceived rise of criminality and
preservation of patrimony.
Gatase confirmed that the Barangay Council on June 9 last year
approved Resolution No. 12-14, “authorizing the C. Harrison Power
Enterprises and Construction Services to construct a jetty port and
operate the same for the purpose of delivering construction materials
needed for the New Bohol Airport.” The resolution also authorized Gatase himself to enter into a memorandum of agreement for the construction of the jetty port. The MOA further provided that the planned port will be constructed by
Ormoc City-based C. Harrison Power Enterprises and Construction
Services, the contractor, having a “width of 50 meters, length of not
less than 300 meters, and a depth of not less than 15 meters at the
expense of the contractor.” The port was intended for the “unloading and delivering construction
materials needed by the contractor for the new Bohol Airport.” It will
be for the exclusive use of the contractor for a period of 10 years, the
MOA said. The barangay will get P1,100 as docking fee from the contractor for
every barge at the port. The latter shall also pay local taxes for port
operations, while providing spaces for docking fishing boats and
developing a barangay road to and from the port and the highway. (Source:
Whichever way I look at it, this kind of project is good for the barangay. Fortunate is a barangay such as Brgy. Tangnan because whether it likes it or not, it is in the path of progress and development. It is up to its leaders and residents whether to take advantage of this positive development or not. Add to this, the system that was adopted to bring this project to reality is timely and aligned to the so-called Public-Private Partnership where projects that can't be funded by a government unit are financed instead by the private sector.
This in my view, is an innovative model to speed-up the development of a town, province or even a barangay. When a barangay is in the path of progress, just like the used-to-be "backward" barangay where I was born and grew up but now hosts over 5,000 business establishments, it's about time for barangay leaders to change their mindset when it comes to developing their respective barangays.
Their focus should not only be on how they'll make ends meet with their IRAs or Internal Revenue Allotments. A barangay chairman is just like a CEO or Chief
Executive of a company and the barangay that he leads, just like a corporation.
Like in a corporation, the priority of a barangay chairman of today should be a sustained effort in generating revenues for the barangay under its jurisdiction so it will have the budget to sustain all the needed services for its constituents. (JIM)