Thursday, August 23, 2018
Makati barangays now with free wifi
Makati City recently launched its free wifi service for residents in a number of barangays.
The city government announced the availability of the free wifi on thier official Facebook page.
“Nagsisimula nang i-implement ang libreng Wi-Fi services sa iba’t-ibang barangay dito sa Makati.
Ma-e-enjoy niyo na ang libre at mabilis na internet services para sa pag-aaral ng mga estudyante o kaya’y pag-mo-monitor ng mga balita at updates dito sa My Makati,” it said on the My Makati Facebook page.
The post was accompanied by status messages of netizens who were able to use the free wifi.
A Makati city netizen experienced the said free wifi service with an outstanding speed of 175 mbps.
However, based on the post of the said netizen, right now you can only enjoy the free wifi for a maximum of 30 minutes upon connection.
This project aims to help Makati students on their school works to ensure that anywhere in the city they can do their research and projects.
The free wifi service is expected to be rolled out in more places in Makati over the next few months so that more citizens may enjoy the free internet service. (Michael Lim)
Source: Metro News Central. Photo credit: yugatech.com
Wednesday, August 22, 2018
Remote Cebu island barangay shines with solar power
Before their boat could even dock on the shores of Barangay Hilotongan, Bantayan Island, already — students and teachers in pink, green, red and white uniforms were clapping and cheering for the team from Vivant Foundation, Inc. (VFI), a non-profit organization led by Executive Director Shem Garcia.
The new power system would allow the school to finally utilize two computer central processing units, 46 monitors in the High School computer laboratory and six Grade School computers.
It also ensured that the air-conditioning unit, electric fans, classroom
lights and perimeter lights would work to create a conducive and safe
learning environment for the teachers and students.
Standing with his fellow students was Edmar Orpeza, 15, who said that he
felt special that people from the city made the effort to understand
the needs of the island where he lives.
“Classes will continue even when it is raining and cloudy because we can just turn on the lights,” said Orpeza, a Grade 9 student who dreams of becoming a mechanical engineer.
His older siblings, who are in Grades 10 and 11, want to be a nurse and a teacher, respectively.
Established in 1935, the school has 734 students from Kindergarten to Grade 12.
Garcia said HIS was chosen as pilot beneficiary for VFI’s Project Liadlaw or the Off-Grid Solar Electrification Project because it has the biggest student population among un-energized islet schools in Cebu province.
Garcia said the four-year-old foundation aimed to find ways to help the community.
“When we went around the Philippines, we learned that education is the most important concern of many communities. The best way to help people is to uplift themselves so we extend our help starting off with Hilotongan,” he said.
The solar power system includes inverters and batteries that ensure that lighting and appliances continue to function even when there’s cloud cover and that perimeter lights remain on at night.
The foundation also upgraded the school’s electrical wiring system and donated LED lights and electric fans for the 20 classrooms.
Hilotongan
Reaching the island-village of Hilotongan is a tiring journey that runs for six long hours from Cebu City when the weather is sunny.
The trip could take longer during rainy and windy days.
The journey begins with a three to four-hour drive from Cebu City to Hagnaya in San Remigio town, located 110 kilometers north of the city center.
From Hagnaya, another 1.5-hour boat ride will take travelers to the port of Santa Fe town in Bantayan Island.
A 30-minute land trip from Santa Fe leads to the Bantayan municipal wharf where pump boats take passengers to Hilotongan Island for another ride that runs for 45 minutes to an hour.
The boat fare is P20 for adults and P10 for children.
Barangay Councilor Martinita Paclibar said the island is about seven to eight hectares with a population of 3,000 to 4,000 individuals. There are 1,200 registered voters in the island-barangay.
James Lauron, a Grade 10 English teacher, told Cebu Daily News that the school also faces the problem of classroom shortage which has led him to hold classes on the school stage.
“The solar panel technology that the foundation provided meant a conducive learning environment for the students and comfortable teaching spaces for us, teachers,” said the 26-year-old Lauron who originally hails from Liloan town, mainland Cebu.
He noted that a school should be a place where children can dream to succeed and become somebody in society to be able to provide for their family and improve their living conditions.
Project Liadlaw
Vivant Foundation is the corporate social responsibility arm of Vivant Corporation, a publicly-listed energy corporation operating in the Philippines with its headquarters in Cebu.
The foundation’s Project Liadlaw was named after Visayan mythology’s god of the sun.
With help from the Department of Education (DepEd) and the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA), the project also integrated solar power into the Electrical Installation and Maintenance (EIM) technical-vocational curriculum of the Bantayan Senior High School (BSHS).
BSHS is now the first senior high school in the country to offer EIM-Solar.
“The maintenance of the HIS solar PV system will be part of the on-the-job training of BSHS EIM students, preparing them for a growing sector in the country’s energy market,” Garcia said.
To enable the teachers to effectively teach solar power installation and maintenance to their students, Vivant organized a TESDA-certified training for EIM instructors of BSHS and Mandaue City Comprehensive National High School which also received tech-voc teaching equipment and tools from the foundation.
Sustainability
With the solar technology providing 50kWp to HIS, the school has more than enough supply of electricity for their future load. The school’s present load is about 11.25kW.
Meantime, the foundation will work with the school and the community on how residents could utilize the excess power.
VFI has put in around P4.3 million for the HIS solar power system, P1 million for the EIM-Solar tech-voc equipment at BSHS, and another P200,000 for the teachers’ training.
“The foundation is geared towards supporting STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) programs because we are lagging behind in this area. We felt that this is an area that we can work on,” said Garcia.
Garcia added that the project was in response to an appeal from DepEd for power companies to provide electricity to off-grid schools in the country.
Salustiano Jimenez, assistant regional director of DepEd Central Visayas, called on the students to take care of the gift that they received from VFI.
“Do not throw stones on the solar panels. Treat it very well because you are very blessed to be given this gift,” Jimenez said. (Cris Evert Lato-Ruffolo)
Source: Cebu Daily News.
“Classes will continue even when it is raining and cloudy because we can just turn on the lights,” said Orpeza, a Grade 9 student who dreams of becoming a mechanical engineer.
His older siblings, who are in Grades 10 and 11, want to be a nurse and a teacher, respectively.
Established in 1935, the school has 734 students from Kindergarten to Grade 12.
Garcia said HIS was chosen as pilot beneficiary for VFI’s Project Liadlaw or the Off-Grid Solar Electrification Project because it has the biggest student population among un-energized islet schools in Cebu province.
Garcia said the four-year-old foundation aimed to find ways to help the community.
“When we went around the Philippines, we learned that education is the most important concern of many communities. The best way to help people is to uplift themselves so we extend our help starting off with Hilotongan,” he said.
The solar power system includes inverters and batteries that ensure that lighting and appliances continue to function even when there’s cloud cover and that perimeter lights remain on at night.
The foundation also upgraded the school’s electrical wiring system and donated LED lights and electric fans for the 20 classrooms.
Hilotongan
Reaching the island-village of Hilotongan is a tiring journey that runs for six long hours from Cebu City when the weather is sunny.
The trip could take longer during rainy and windy days.
The journey begins with a three to four-hour drive from Cebu City to Hagnaya in San Remigio town, located 110 kilometers north of the city center.
From Hagnaya, another 1.5-hour boat ride will take travelers to the port of Santa Fe town in Bantayan Island.
A 30-minute land trip from Santa Fe leads to the Bantayan municipal wharf where pump boats take passengers to Hilotongan Island for another ride that runs for 45 minutes to an hour.
The boat fare is P20 for adults and P10 for children.
Barangay Councilor Martinita Paclibar said the island is about seven to eight hectares with a population of 3,000 to 4,000 individuals. There are 1,200 registered voters in the island-barangay.
James Lauron, a Grade 10 English teacher, told Cebu Daily News that the school also faces the problem of classroom shortage which has led him to hold classes on the school stage.
“The solar panel technology that the foundation provided meant a conducive learning environment for the students and comfortable teaching spaces for us, teachers,” said the 26-year-old Lauron who originally hails from Liloan town, mainland Cebu.
He noted that a school should be a place where children can dream to succeed and become somebody in society to be able to provide for their family and improve their living conditions.
Project Liadlaw
Vivant Foundation is the corporate social responsibility arm of Vivant Corporation, a publicly-listed energy corporation operating in the Philippines with its headquarters in Cebu.
The foundation’s Project Liadlaw was named after Visayan mythology’s god of the sun.
With help from the Department of Education (DepEd) and the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA), the project also integrated solar power into the Electrical Installation and Maintenance (EIM) technical-vocational curriculum of the Bantayan Senior High School (BSHS).
BSHS is now the first senior high school in the country to offer EIM-Solar.
“The maintenance of the HIS solar PV system will be part of the on-the-job training of BSHS EIM students, preparing them for a growing sector in the country’s energy market,” Garcia said.
To enable the teachers to effectively teach solar power installation and maintenance to their students, Vivant organized a TESDA-certified training for EIM instructors of BSHS and Mandaue City Comprehensive National High School which also received tech-voc teaching equipment and tools from the foundation.
Sustainability
With the solar technology providing 50kWp to HIS, the school has more than enough supply of electricity for their future load. The school’s present load is about 11.25kW.
Meantime, the foundation will work with the school and the community on how residents could utilize the excess power.
VFI has put in around P4.3 million for the HIS solar power system, P1 million for the EIM-Solar tech-voc equipment at BSHS, and another P200,000 for the teachers’ training.
“The foundation is geared towards supporting STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) programs because we are lagging behind in this area. We felt that this is an area that we can work on,” said Garcia.
Garcia added that the project was in response to an appeal from DepEd for power companies to provide electricity to off-grid schools in the country.
Salustiano Jimenez, assistant regional director of DepEd Central Visayas, called on the students to take care of the gift that they received from VFI.
“Do not throw stones on the solar panels. Treat it very well because you are very blessed to be given this gift,” Jimenez said. (Cris Evert Lato-Ruffolo)
Source: Cebu Daily News.
Thursday, August 16, 2018
ARRM building progressive communities
With efforts of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) to build empowered communities, about a million individuals from 553 barangays received various projects through the region’s flagship program dubbed ARMM’s Health, Education, Livelihood, Peace and Governance, and Synergy (ARMM-HELPS).
Since the program’s implementation in 2014, the regional government has earmarked P6.2 billion for high-impact projects. ARMM Governor Mujiv Hataman reiterated that the regional government continues to make greater progress in improving the quality of the peoples’ lives, improve their living environment, and create more development opportunities in beneficiary communities.
Official data from ARMM-HELPS showed a total of 1,062 of 1,713 infrastructure projects targeted for construction were completed, 374 of 563 cooperatives were served, and 257 of 530 barangay halls were built. “Projects for 2018 are on-going and we hope to implement all of these before the transition to the new Bangsamoro entity,” Anwar Upahm, ARMM-HELPS program manager said.
ARMM-HELPS is a convergence initiative of the regional government and is regarded as the centerpiece of the Hataman administration. It was established to achieve a more coordinated and focused intervention at the barangay level and eventually to create maximum impact of services delivered to the community.
Projects include provision of essential medicines, setting up of birthing facilities, construction of barangay health stations and water and sanitation projects, construction of community learning centers, support to standard madrasah development program, and delivery of basic livelihood and enterprising projects, among others.
Gov. Hataman said he is confident that before the new Bangsamoro political entity comes in, the ARMM government has already helped improve the lives of at least a million Bangsamoro people and has strengthened local governance in the region.
“Ito naman talaga ang goal natin na maramdaman ng mga kababayan natin na may gobyernong handang tumulong sa kanila,” Gov. Hataman added. The projects that have not been completed since 2014, will be finished within this year, said Upahm of ARMM-HELPS.
(Source: Bureau of Public Information-ARMM website)
Wednesday, August 15, 2018
321 Bohol barangays declared drug-cleared
Three hundred twenty one barangays in Bohol were recently declared drug-cleared by the Philippine Drugs Enforcement Agency (PDEA), Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) and other members of the Regional Oversight Committee (ROC).
Dangerous Drugs Board (DDB) chairman Catalino Cuy and Bohol Governor Edgar Chatto led the awarding of certificates to the chairmen of the drug-cleared communities yesterday at the Bohol Cultural Center.
Chatto told the Manila Bulletin that the province originally recommended 556 barangays as drug-cleared, but only 321 as of press time were approved since the other barangays lacked the required documentation for final endorsement.
“We will pursue and do some follow-up on the remaining 200 plus barangays for the next batch of declaration of drug-cleared barangays,” Chatto said.
Thorough monitoring
Chatto thanked the PDEA, DILG and ROC for painstakingly engaging and monitoring the barangays down to the ‘purok’ level.
The ROC is made up of the Central Visayas heads of the PDEA, DILG, Philippine National Police (PNP) and Department of Health (DOH).
Chatto added that the challenge now is for the other barangays to be cleared as well, while those already cleared have to maintain their status.
DILG-Central Visayas OIC-Regional Director Loisella Lucino said that Bohol’s monitoring is done down to the ‘purok’ level.
She said the reporting includes all ‘puroks’ to identify and report drug users, even if the subject only used drug once.
“Our number of cleared barangays showed how serious we are in our anti-drug programs involving our puroks and even at the households,” Lucino said.
Multi-sectoral support
“Bohol is now the best-performing province in terms of barangay drug clearing and, by percentage, has now the least drug affectation,” Chatto declared.
Chatto cited the multi sector involvement in the province’s anti-drug program.
He lauded the Center for Drug Education and Counselling program headed by Dr. Cesar Lopez and the Community-Based Drug Rehabilitation Program-Without Walls (CBRP-WoW) that involves the church/religious sector.
Galing Pook Award candidate
In a related development, the national Galing Pook Award evaluators over the weekend assessed Bohol’s “Kontra Druga Para sa Pamilya” program through the Countryside oDevelopment Program – Purok Power Movement (CDP-PPM).
“ The Galling Pook Award has recognized our noteworthy accomplishment, that’s why they came over to inspect and validate our CDP-PPM, the CEDEC and the CBRP-WoW, said CEDEC head Dr. Cesar Lopez. (Minerva BC Newman)
(Source: Manila Bulletin). Photo credit loboc river bohol: www.panglao-bohol.com
Monday, August 13, 2018
Iloilo City newly-elected barangay execs train on governance
Newly elected barangay officials in this city have started their training/orientation on governance under the Department of the Interior and Local Government.
The close to 2,000 trainees include Sangguniang Kabataan chairpersons from 180 barangays.
They will be trained by batch. In a three-day training/orientation, they will be taught on the following, among others:
* barangay legislation
* functions of the Peace and Order Council and the Anti-Drug Abuse Council
* procurement
* Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for Public Officials and Employees
* planning
* budgeting
The first batch including 140 trainees were trained from Wednesday to Friday last week, according to DILG-Iloilo City director Ferdinand Panes.
Panes said they hope to cover all 15 batches of trainees by October.
“We could not just give them advice piecemeal,” the DILG official said of the importance of the training.
The DILG-Iloilo City coordinated with the Liga ng mga Barangay and the Iloilo City government in coming up with the training design based on a module from the DILG regional office.
Meanwhile Panes warned barangay officials about unauthorized organizations offering trainings on legislation.
There was one that coordinated with the DILG central office but did not wait for the guidelines before conducting the training, Panes said without naming the organization.
Panes warned about faulty information that may be discussed during such trainings. “Only accredited institutions are allowed to conduct trainings,” he stressed. (With PNA)
Source: Panay News. Photo credit: DILG-Iloilo City
Friday, August 10, 2018
SK anti-drug advocacy program pushed by PDEA
As part of the continuing campaign aimed at reducing demand for illegal drugs, the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) is pushing for the creation of a uniform anti-drug advocacy program for Sangguniang Kabataan (SK) nationwide.
According to PDEA Director General Aaron N. Aquino, the uniformed anti-drug advocacy programs for SK will be implemented in coordination with the Dangerous Drugs Board (DDB) and Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG).
During the SK Summit in Bren Guiao Convention Center in San Fernando, Pampanga last Aug. 2, Aquino urged the 8,000 SK officials who attended the event to organize less basketball tournaments and beauty pageants and focus more on organizing anti-drug advocacy programs.
“SKs has a 5 percent annual budget from the barangay funds that can be used for the implementation of anti-drug advocacy programs in their community,” Aquino said.
Aquino also cited the capability of the youth in utilizing technology as a way to effectively disseminate information against the drug menace.
“SK officials can use the different social media platforms in disseminating correct information to the youth. They can discourage young people from using illegal drugs and educate them on the harmful impact of this industry to an individual and to the society as a whole,” he said, adding that youth leaders are also role models in their respective barangays, municipalities and cities.
“We dream to have a country that is free of drug menace. We want to put an end to the killings and the criminality brought about by the illegal drug industry. We dream of a nation with proud and rich culture untainted by anomalies, corruption, greed and crime. We encourage you to share this dream and start putting it into reality,” Aquino said.
“The youth is the voice of this nation. So, we appeal to them to maximize such power and help the government change the future of this country. They have the capacity to communicate among their peers, reach out to them and understand them in many ways we cannot as adults, as parents,” the PDEA chief added. (CD)
Source: PTV News. Photo credit: PDEA
Wednesday, August 8, 2018
Bacolod City youth leaders orient on new SK Law
Newly-elected barangay youth leaders in this city gathered during the 1st Bacolod City Youth Leaders Convention on Sunday for an orientation on the Sangguniang Kabataan (SK) Reform Act or Republic Act 10742.
SK Federation Bacolod president Ayesha Joy Villaflor said the convention aims to provide knowledge and understanding among the new youth leaders about the law.
“Since this is a new law, it is hard for us since we cannot fully understand what it is all about,” she said.
Fifty-six out of the 61 SK chairpersons attended.
Villaflor said the SK leaders also learned how to draft resolutions.
She added that since the barangay youth sector has been granted fiscal economy under the SK Reform Act, they are waiting for the guidelines from the Commission on Audit on how they could utilize the SK budget.
The SK fund has been separated from that of the Barangay Council and they are now free to use and appropriate their funds allied with youth advocacy, Villaflor said.
The SK Reform Act mandates both the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) and the National Youth Commission (NYC) to jointly design and implement the mandatory and continuing training programs for SK officials.
These include capability building on leadership, program and project development and sustainability, financial management, and accountability and transparency.
Assistant Secretary Jonathan Malaya had earlier said the DILG had developed modules for the new set of SK officials aimed at equipping the youth leaders with the necessary skills to perform their functions well.
Malaya also said that during their incumbency, SK officials must attend the continuing training programs to be undertaken by the NYC in coordination with the DILG.
The DILG official pointed out that another innovation of the SK Reform Act is that SK officials will have a chance in truly participating in local governance with the creation of a Local Youth Development Council composed of representatives of youth and youth-serving organizations at the provincial, city, and municipal levels. (Nanette Guadalquiver)
Source: Philippine News Agency. Photo Credit: Bacolod City PIO)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)






