CLARK FREEPORT— A Pampanga-based architect will begin his work in Aurora province this month as part of Senator Edgardo Angara’s efforts to promote environment-friendly projects in the Central Luzon province.
Angara tapped the expertise of Architect Adriano “Andy” Gulapa, a former Candaba town councilor, in leading green architecture projects in Aurora, including those of the Aurora Pacific Economic Zone and Freeport Authority (APECO) in Casiguran town, which is facing the Pacific Ocean.
Gulapa said that he “supports and welcomes” Angara’s development plans for his home province.
He added that he is a “staunch believer” in harmonizing development with the environment and in the two-term senator’s advocacy to promote green and environment-friendly architecture.
Angara and Gulapa discussed plans to construct an Aurora-Clark Commercial Complex here that will pave the way for the promotion of the province to the rest of Central Luzon.
As home of Asia’s largest 600-year old balete tree in Maria Aurora town, Aurora province will benefit much from green architecture that has been proven to attract tourists. (Joey Pavia)
It's in Christ that we find out who we are and what we are living for. Offering ourselves to God is what we worship about. Let us share our talents and resources to God with all our hearts and souls as one network of the Catholic Media that is pro-life, pro-people, pro-poor, service and community oriented.
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
Lyceum of the East and 48th IB to Hold Joint Strategic Action Plan in Aurora National Greening and Gender and Development (GAD) Program
MARIA AURORA, Aurora,
August 8, 2012-The National Service Training Program (NSTP) of the two (2)
campuses of Lyceum of the East in Aurora and the 48th Infantry
“Guardians” Battalion, Philippine Army based in Brgy. Calabuanan, Baler, Aurora
will hold a workshop on the formulation of the Joint Committee Strategic Action
Plan (JCSAP) for 2012 to 2015 to assess and to educate environmental situation
in the province.
Lyceum of the East-Aurora (LEA) Maria Aurora NSTP President Allan T. Dela Rosa said that the workshop, which is scheduled on August 9 to 10, 2012 in Brgy. Florida, Maria Aurora, “aims to assess the National Greening Program situation in the province in terms of prevailing environmental problems and adequacy of ongoing action in the environment.”
Mr. Cyril Philip A. Angala, NSTP President of Lyceum of the East, Inc. (LE) Baler said that the workshop also intends to identify the vision, values, mission, overall goal, immediate objectives, and key result areas of the program to address the environment in the province.
The duo said that the expected output will be a Joint Committee Strategic Action Plan (JCSAP) that specifies an assessment of the provincial environment situation, a clearly stated vision, mission and values, the overall goal of the plan, the immediate objectives and key result areas.”
Expected to participate in the activity are selected NSTP Officers and members of the Technical Working Group from the college and the 48th Infantry “Guardians” Battalion, Philippine Army from the well-performing and low-performing municipalities and other stakeholders.
2lt
Teresita T Ingente said that the
activity is also in consonance with the AFP’s Internal Peace and Security Plan
“Bayanihan”, the army considers the youth as a vital sector of the society that
needs attention particularly to win their support and to develop their
character.
Meanwhile, the newly launched program of the two (2)
campuses: “Gender and Development” is given impetus for the protection of
humans particularly the youth. At present the school and the army are designing
a program for the said matter.
In recent decades, women's and
girls' education and health levels have improved greatly. But in many parts of
the world, women are still dying in childbirth, or not being born at all, at
alarming rates. Women continue to lack voice and decision-making ability in the
household and in society; and, their economic opportunities remain very
constrained. This inequality is manifestly unfair. It is also bad economics:
under-investing in girls and women puts a brake on poverty reduction and limits
economic and social development.
The Gender and Development (GAD)
approach is a way of determining how best to structure development projects and
programs based on analysis of gender relationships. It was developed in the
1980s as an alternative to the Women
in Development (WID) approach
that was in common use until then. (Jason de
Asis)
Tubig to Bigas: From Jalaur to Pinas PNoy to witness signing of P8.9-B deal with Korea in support of PHL’s rice self-sufficiency target
MANILA, August 8, 2012-The country is another notch closer toward its rice self-sufficiency target by 2013 with the signing of an P8.9-billion loan agreement with the Republic of Korea to fund an agriculture infrastructure which is seen to improve the country’s agricultural productivity, said Senator Franklin M. Drilon.
President Benigno S. Aquino III is expected to witness today (August 9) the signing of a memorandum of understanding between the Philippines and the South Korea which provides for P8.95-billion official development assistance (ODA) to the country to construct the Jalaur River Multi-Purpose Project-Stage II (JRMP) in the Province of Iloilo, said Drilon, who was instrumental in the realization of JRMP.
The signing will be held at the Malacanang Palace with Finance Secretary Cesar V. Purisima and Export-Import Bank of Korea Executive director San-Wan Byun who will lead the signing.
The project which costs P11.2 billion – P2.2 billion is Philippine’s counterpart fund – will be the first large-scale reservoir dam outside of Luzon and will provide uninterrupted irrigation water supply to 32,000 hectares of farm land and benefit more than 783,000 farmers, explained Drilon.
JRMP II is envisioned to augment agricultural production, stimulate agri-industrial activities, spur the local economy and the eco-tourism industry, increase employment opportunities and contribute to the development of the Province of Iloilo and the Western Visayas, in general.
The project dubbed as “Tubig to Bigas: From Jalaur to Pinas” clearly speaks of what Iloilo can contribute to the country in becoming the source of strength of Philippines in terms of agricultural productivity, added Drilon.
“This project will be Iloilo’s contribution to the vision of President Aquino to equip the country with food security soon. Once completed, this project will make Western Visayas the rice granary of the Philippines once again,” said Drilon.
This will increase the irrigated lands in the region by around 10 percent and the annual regional rice production by around five percent. It will likewise expand the production areas of sugarcane and other crops, noted Drilon.
As a multi-purpose project, it will provide benefits such as flood mitigation and control, and the promotion of eco-tourism in selected reservoir areas.
On top of these, the project will also generate approximately 17,000 local jobs equivalent to P1.3 billion in basic wages per year.
Drilon recalled that implementation of the Jalaur River Multi-Purpose Project was mandated under Republic Act No. 2651 enacted by Congress in 1960. Phase one of the project, which consisted of rehabilitating the irrigation systems with an area of 22,340 hectares, was completed in 1983. But Phase 2 of the project was never implemented since 1988 due to lack of funds and the apparent indifference on the part of the national government.
PRO3 CONTINUES TO CONDUCT SEARCH AND RESCUE OPERATIONS IN FLOOD AFFECTED BRGYS
CAMP OLIVAS, City of San Fernando, Pampanga- Personnel from Police Regional Office 3 headed by its Regional Director, PCSUPT EDGARDO T LADAO conducted search and rescue operations along flood-stricken municipalities of Pampanga and municipalities of Bataan due to incessant monsoon rains.
Rescue and retrieval operations started as floodwaters began to rise-up raging from waist deep to 10 feet high particularly in low lying municipalities of Bataan, Bulacan and Pampanga.
Amid the strong water current, PNP Search and Rescue personnel equipped with rubber boats were able to rescue a total of 104,138 families stranded from their inundated homes and transferred to the 157 evacuation centers within the region. Residents staying from their rooftops who recently refused to leave their personal belongings due to fear of burglars were persuaded to evacuate to a safer place.
PRO3 personnel are still deployed regionwide to conduct SAR operations to different provinces affected by the typhoons.
As of this date, 10 persons were reportedly killed, 2 were injured and 4 are still missing.
PCSUPT LADAO also directed the SAR Team to conduct search and rescue operations for stranded families particularly on still-inaccessible areas. He also sent additional PNP personnel to thwart criminal elements especially looters and profiteers who may take advantage of the situation.
KIKO: GOVERNMENT AGENCIES MUST OFFER PUBLIC FREE SHORT COURSES ON SAFETY TRAINING
MANILA, August 8, 2012-Senator Francis "Kiko" Pangilinan urges government agencies such as the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA), the Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG), the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), and the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) to offer the public basic safety training courses for free.
Pangilinan adds that doing so will not only equip citizens with skills needed in cases of emergency but will also beef up the government's volunteer reserves.
"We have seen that with the recent flooding that hit Metro Manila, we are severely lacking in manpower that could help in rescue operations. Even if our countrymen heed the call to volunteer during rescue operations, they are ill-equipped to deal with emergency situations. It would be very much like deploying troops to a gun battle without the necessary firearms."
Pangilinan earlier called for a nationwide rehabilitation of the country's sewerage and drainage systems.
"Alam na nga natin na bawat taon ay tinatamaan tayo ng napakaraming bagyo, ganito pa rin ang nangyayari taun-taon—at palala pa nang palala ang sitwasyon. We should invest a significant amount of resources on beefing up our infrastructure and equipping our people with life-saving skills so that more lives will be saved when disasters and emergencies strike.”
“Hindi natin puwedeng sabihin na ‘ganyan na talaga’ dahil hindi tama na taun-taon na lang ay nalalagay sa panganib ang mga tao dahil lang sa pag-ulan na ni hindi pa nga ‘supertyphoon.’ For drastic change to happen, then we must also do drastic actions and do things differently. In this case, doing things differently can be literally a matter of life and death,” the senator points out.
Legarda: Build Back Better, Resilient Communities as Country Experiences ‘New Norm’ in Weather
MANILA, August 8, 2012-As post-disaster efforts are underway for communities affected by the southwest monsoon that brought incessant rains and flooded many areas in Metro Manila and Luzon, Senator Loren Legarda today reiterated her call to build better communities that would be resilient to natural hazards.
“The kind of weather we have experienced in the past days and weeks is part of the ‘new norm.’ This is climate change. And while we experience weather disturbances that bring stronger winds and heavier rains, we have to strengthen our efforts in preparing our communities. We need to recover and rebuild our lives with this in mind. We need to build back better, by further reducing people’s vulnerability, by further building our resilience to floods,” the Senator stressed.
Legarda, Chair of the Senate Committee on Climate Change, explained that everyone should be involved in the effort to make the whole nation prepared against natural hazards.
The Senator explained that being prepared means undertaking activities that would prevent disasters. It includes, among others, the cleanup of drainage, waterways and riverbanks, segregating garbage, updating dam protocols, growing trees on vacant lots and roadsides, relocating urban settlers living in vulnerable areas, and setting up rainwater catchment basins so water is stored during rains and used during dry season.
“All sectors must work together. The government must seriously look into improving the flood prevention and mitigation measures in the National Capital Region. The private sector, on the other hand, must strengthen their business continuity plans, especially for hospitals and other lifelines, which are vital for post-disaster activities,” she said.
Legarda also said that the public must be more aware of the disaster risks in their midst and do something to protect lives and property way ahead of any typhoon and other natural hazards.
“Our people should heed disaster warnings and cooperate with the government when they are asked to evacuate their homes for their own safety. Meanwhile, media can help build resilience through awareness raising and public education,” she pointed out.
“While we rebuild the lives of our people in disaster-stricken areas of Metro Manila and Luzon, it may be good to reflect that a similar disaster is likely waiting to happen in hundreds of other places in our country, maybe known already to us. The best choice we have is to make our nation disaster-resilient to free us, once and for all, from the exhausting and costly cycle of rebuilding our communities every single time nature unleashes its wrath,” Legarda concluded.
ABS CBN Star Diether Ocampo reached out to the less-privileged children in Abra
DOLORES,
Abra - The people of Brgy. Cardona, Dolores were so happy and grateful to meet
ABS CBN Star Diether Ocampo, who recently reached their place despite being
isolated by typhoon Gener on August 1, 2012.
Aboard
a rubber boat, Ocampo and his team who are part of the KIDS Foundation, Inc. dared
the heavy rains and raging Malanas river in order to reach the people of Brgy.
Cardona where he promised to donate school building and distributed school
bags, school supplies and slippers.
Ocampo’s
visit to Brgy. Cardona was intended to have a look into the actual condition of
the locality in order to be able to make the appropriate program and proposal
for a multi-level school building as requested by the people through Mayor
Robert Victor G. Seares, Jr. of Dolores, Abra.
A
two-story school building is going to be donated by the KIDS Foundation, Inc.
intended for the school children at the same time to serve as evacuation center
during calamities, because said barangay is always flooded during the rainy
season as it is lying low-level and surrounded by three rivers and creeks that
cause their isolation even during ordinary typhoon and monsoon rains.
The
KIDS (Kabataang Inyong Dapat Suportahan)
Foundation, Inc., founded by Ocampo in 2006 with three other co-founders, has
for its mission to address and respond to the needs of less-privileged
children. In a brief discussion
regarding the programs and projects of the Foundation, with Teejay Deovilla, Programs
Coordinator of KIDS Foundation, Inc., he said that, Ocampo was inspired to put
up this foundation for children because Ocampo himself is an orphan. His father died when he was only 8 years old,
that he wants to share his blessings to the children.
Ocampo
and his team were supposed to go to Brgy. Cardona on July 31, 2012 upon their
arrival in Abra, but they could not cross the Malanas River in Poblacion,
Dolores because the flood swelled so high and the current was so strong that
the ordinary bamboo rafts could not cross.
Instead,
Ocampo spent the day with the people of Dolores and had his birthday party
celebration with the children at the Dolores Town Plaza which Mayor Seares
sponsored as a way of thanksgiving for his outreach project in Dolores because
for the first time in Abra, a showbiz personality had come to the province not
to earn a talent fee for his appearance, but rather to serve and respond to the
community needs especially in the most depressed barangays.
The
occasion therefore served as an opportunity for Ocampo to consult with the
pupils and teachers on what support they need. The pupils requested for a
computer unit for their use in school, while Ms. Judith Milagros Zapata, the
teacher-adviser of the Drum and Lyre Corps of Dolores Central School requested
for a bass drum and trio drums to include sports equipment. Ocampo gave them
his outright approval and promised them to deliver the said items during his
next trip to Dolores.
The
team expressed grateful appreciation to the officers and men of the 503rd
Infantry Brigade of the Philippine Army, under Col Eliseo C Posadas, the
Brigade Commander, by providing security and escort to the team and helped the
LGU staff in transporting the school supplies to barangay Cardona, despite the
rains and risks in crossing the Malanas River.
The
LGU likewise thanked Ms. Michelle Seares-Umali for without her, the ABS-CBN TV
Program “Ako ang Simula” which works
in close coordination with the KIDS Foundation as sponsor of the projects being
brought to Dolores would not have been realized.
Ocampo
is expected to be coming to Dolores more often as he said, he had committed to
come for the groundbreaking of the school building project, and also wants to
see for himself the construction of the project until its inauguration and
turnover to the Department of Education and LGU of Dolores, Abra.
KIKO CALLS FOR 'PRICE HIKE HOLIDAY' AMID MASSIVE FLOODING AND DAMAGE
MANILA, August 8, 2012-As Metro Manila and parts of Luzon struggle to get back on their feet after the massive flooding brought about by days of continuous rain, Senator Francis "Kiko" Pangilinan calls on oil companies and dealers of food, vegetables, and basic commodities to "go easy" on price hikes.
Pangilinan made this statement days after some oil companies announced a price hike amid the continuous onslaught of rains and flooding.
"Maawa naman ho tayo sa taumbayan sa mga panahong ito. Naiintindihan namin na kailangang mabuhay ng mga negosyo, pero sa panahon ng krisis tulad nito, sana ay ipagpaliban muna ng mga kumpanya--lalo na yung may mga 'buffer', ika nga, sa kita nila--ang pagtaas ng presyo. Lubog na nga ang mga tao dahil sa grabeng pagbaha, ilulubog pa ba natin sa pagtaas ng presyo mga bilihin?"
He adds, "Baka po pupuwede tayong magkaroon ng pansamantalang 'price hike holiday' para bigyan ng pagkakataon ang taumbayan na makabangon muna mula sa kalamidad na ito bago magpataw ng panibagong presyo ang mga kumpanya. At sana ay kapag nag-stabilize na uli ang merkado ay maibalik ang presyo sa dati nitong lebel."
"Magtulung-tulong na lang ho tayo sa mga panahong ito," says the lawmaker, who is also the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Agriculture and Food. "Lahat tayo naaapektuhan--mula sa mga magsasaka't manggagawa hanggang sa mga maliliit na negosyante, hanggang sa mga malalaking kumpanya. Pero kung uunahin natin ang bayan at ang mga nasalanta bago ang pagbawi sa kita, lahat tayo siguradong mas mabilis na makakaahon."
Tubig to Bigas: From Jalaur to Pinas PNoy to witness signing of P8.9-B deal with Korea in support of PHL’s rice self-sufficiency target
MANILA, August 8, 2012-The country is another notch closer toward its rice self-sufficiency target by 2013 with the signing of an P8.9-billion loan agreement with the Republic of Korea to fund an agriculture infrastructure which is seen to improve the country’s agricultural productivity, said Senator Franklin M. Drilon.
President Benigno S. Aquino III is expected to witness today (August 9) the signing of a memorandum of understanding between the Philippines and the South Korea which provides for P8.95-billion official development assistance (ODA) to the country to construct the Jalaur River Multi-Purpose Project-Stage II (JRMP) in the Province of Iloilo, said Drilon, who was instrumental in the realization of JRMP.
The signing will be held at the Malacanang Palace with Finance Secretary Cesar V. Purisima and Export-Import Bank of Korea Executive director San-Wan Byun who will lead the signing.
The project which costs P11.2 billion – P2.2 billion is Philippine’s counterpart fund – will be the first large-scale reservoir dam outside of Luzon and will provide uninterrupted irrigation water supply to 32,000 hectares of farm land and benefit more than 783,000 farmers, explained Drilon.
JRMP II is envisioned to augment agricultural production, stimulate agri-industrial activities, spur the local economy and the eco-tourism industry, increase employment opportunities and contribute to the development of the Province of Iloilo and the Western Visayas, in general.
The project dubbed as “Tubig to Bigas: From Jalaur to Pinas” clearly speaks of what Iloilo can contribute to the country in becoming the source of strength of Philippines in terms of agricultural productivity, added Drilon.
“This project will be Iloilo’s contribution to the vision of President Aquino to equip the country with food security soon. Once completed, this project will make Western Visayas the rice granary of the Philippines once again,” said Drilon.
This will increase the irrigated lands in the region by around 10 percent and the annual regional rice production by around five percent. It will likewise expand the production areas of sugarcane and other crops, noted Drilon.
As a multi-purpose project, it will provide benefits such as flood mitigation and control, and the promotion of eco-tourism in selected reservoir areas.
On top of these, the project will also generate approximately 17,000 local jobs equivalent to P1.3 billion in basic wages per year.
Drilon recalled that implementation of the Jalaur River Multi-Purpose Project was mandated under Republic Act No. 2651 enacted by Congress in 1960. Phase one of the project, which consisted of rehabilitating the irrigation systems with an area of 22,340 hectares, was completed in 1983. But Phase 2 of the project was never implemented since 1988 due to lack of funds and the apparent indifference on the part of the national government.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Disclaimer
Disclaimer: The comments uploaded on this blog do not necessarily represent or reflect the views of management and owner of "THE CATHOLIC MEDIA NETWORK NEWS ONLINE".