Friday, June 10, 2011

Aurora cops seminar highlights values and techniques of news writing and broadcasting

BALER, Aurora, June 11, 2011-To uphold true broadcast and journalistic values, Aurora provincial director, Police Senior Supt. Ervin “Jojo” B. Gumban led a two day enhancement training on news writing and broadcasting for the 35 Philippine National Police (PNP) newly designated as police information officers here at Camp Captain Victor Ravina, Brgy. Sabang last June 9 to 10, 2011.

Cops participants highlighted the need of upholding the high values of journalism, especially within the new security environment in which there is a clear danger of losing the truth and credibility when faced with violence and hostile ground realities.

The views were put across during the workshop organized by SPO2 Desiderio “Ding” M. Noora, Aurora over-all PNP spokesman in collaboration with the different point of views of the police, saying that the true journalistic values had been compromised a bit since each media outlet constantly tries to outshine others in the race of broadcasting breaking news; however, the police agreed that in the face of tremendous challenges face by the media, there are still journalists out there who do not compromise on facts and truths and those are the real unsung heroes and flag-bearers of the profession.

The participants said that determining the national interest was too important business to be left with the security institutions to protect the welfare of the people in the province.

They said that the parliament, civil society and the media must get together to evolve a consensus over what constitutes national interest. Cops participants also highlighted the dilemma of how some stakeholders, through their vested interests, tried to influence media through money and advertisement revenues.

Noora believes that the freedom of speech and freedom to write is a responsibility. Without responsibility and accountability, freedom and independence could become harmful. 

“There are numerous factors out there which hamper the pursuit of truth and threaten the journalists’ integrity,” Noora said, explaining that the Aurora cops realized to establish police spokesman to give the truest information to the people without fear.

Noora said that the seminar is intended for the creation of Aurora PNP press corps, the creation of radio program on DZJO FM which is run by the catholic and the establishment of “Pulis Silangan” a police news letter to be circulated in the entire province next month.

He furthered that the seminar will also serve as the central source of information release by the police; assist the media in covering routine news stories; prepare and distribute news releases; arrange for, and assist at, news/press conference; coordinate the release of information that concerns confidential police operations and/or investigation; provide information openly and honestly to contribute confidence, trust and respect in the police force among others.

“I think this is the first province which has been organized here in central Luzon to disseminate information to the public from the police force,” Noora ended. (Jason de Asis)

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Trillanes calls for in-depth study on the ambitious K+12 of DepEd

SENATE OFFICE, Manila, June 10, 2011-Senator Antonio “Sonny” F. Trillanes IV bats for the investigation about the ambitious Enhanced Kindergarten to Grade 12 (K+12) program of the Department of Education (DepEd) which seeks to expand basic education to 13 years from the current 10 years, describing the DepEd program intend to implement next school year as a big, costly and potentially disastrous experiment that would only worsen the existing problems confronting the education sector in the lack of teachers and classrooms in the country.

Trillanes said that the DepEd revealed that severe shortage estimated to around 103,000 elementary and high school teachers plus 27,000 Kindergarten teachers and an equally severe shortage of classrooms estimated at around 90,000.

“Why are our education officials proposing to adopt a system which will obviously result to an aggravation of the already severe shortage in teaching personnel and classrooms?,” he asked, pointing out that most public schools in the National Capital Region (NCR) have 76 to 79 students, a far cry from the ideal ratio of 45 students per classroom.

“The national average class size in Philippine secondary schools is 56 students per classroom and can be considered overcrowded when compared to Malaysia’s 34, South Korea’s 35.1 and Thailand’s 41.5,” Trillanes furthered, citing that the case of Batasan National High School, which has three shifts of classes daily and where some students go to school as early as 5:30 in the morning and will go home as late as 7:20 in the evening.

He asked that if we implement DepEd’s K + 12 system, are we going to add a fourth shift and require our students to wake up earlier, say at 3:00 a.m. or maybe go home at midnight? Are we going to pack our students even more tightly with 150 students per class?

“The program would entail additional costs not only to the government but most especially to the parents. Parents who are barely able to make both ends meet. The same parents who must now bear the burden of the rising cost not only of education but of almost everything else from food to utilities and from gasoline to LPG,” Trillanes said.

“Under the present basic education system, the  K+12 program would only result to more dropouts, noting that for every 100 students who enter Grade 1, only 43 manage to finish high school and only 14 graduate from college,” Trillanes revealed.

Trillanes said that the dropout rate would further increase if the government extended the 10-year basic education by two more years, where he debunked DepEd’s claim that the program would improve the quality of basic education and address youth unemployment.

Former Education Deputy Minister Abraham Felipe and Dr. Carolina Porio recent study showed that there is no correlation between the number of years of basic education and the overall quality of education.

Trillanes mentioned the case of students from Singapore who performed best in the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) from among 50 countries which have the same length of high school cycle as the Philippines, saying that the countries that have longer high school cycles such as South Africa, Chile, Palestine, Morocco and Saudi Arabia belong to the group that have low-performing high school students.

Trillanes asked that if thousands upon thousands of college degree holders now cannot find employment, what makes the DepEd believe that they can solve our unemployment problem by producing ‘employable’ high school graduates?

“Parents have sacrificed much so that their children would finish even high school only, why there is a need for the additional two years for the elementary and for the secondary where in fact there is no clear manifestation that the country will benefit from the proposed educational program,” the young senator said. (Jason de Asis)

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Legarda bats to investigate the massive fishkill in Taal Lake

SENATE OFFICE, Manila, June 9, 2011-Senator Loren Legarda has filed Senate Resolution 498 directing the Senate Committees on Agriculture and Food, Environment and Natural Resources, and Climate Change for the immediate investigation of the recent massive fishkill in Taal Lake.

Since May 26, there were over 700 metric tons of milkfish and tilapia, worth approximately Php57.226-million that died in the different fish cages which surrounded in Taal Lake.

Legarda revealed that with the massive fish kill, consumers and fishermen are affected. The fishkill reportedly affected as much as 27% of the fish supply of Metro Manila and will certainly affect majority of the fisherfolks from the lakeside communities of Taal who depend primarily on fishing as the source of their livelihood.

The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) and the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) reported that the fishkill was caused by an overturn wherein moderate to heavy rains made the surface water of Taal Lake cold and dense which in turn forced the deep hot bottom water containing pollutants to rise, heating the fish cages thereby depriving the fish of dissolved oxygen.

BFAR revealed that the recent fishkill in the Kakiputan Channel in the towns of Bolinao and Anda in Pangasinan were also caused by these changes in temperature.

Legarda said that the sudden drop in temperature and the heavy rains which led to the overturned may have been caused by the extreme shift of weather brought about by climate change, adding that there have been reports to BFAR that the run-off from the Baleter River leading to Taal Lake was discolored and contained animal waste.

Legarda said that there is a need to determine the various and interrelated causes of this disastrous fishkill in the place to protect our ecosystem, the livelihood of the communities surrounding these bodies of water, as well as the consumers who may be affected by the same; thus, she filed resolution directing the committees to conduct an immediate investigation in aid of legislation on the cause of the massive fishkill in Taal Lake.

Prior to this, BFAR already warned that improper aquaculture practices such as intensive feeding, overcrowding of fish cages and overstocking of tilapia fry, as well as the presence of unconsumed fish feeds, urine, domestic, industrial and agricultural wastes in the lake may have contributed to its high levels of hydrogen sulphide and ammonia way back 2008, the decomposition of which consumes oxygen. (Jason de Asis)

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

2011 Miss Philippines Earth could be Aurora governor

Ms. Athena Mae Imperial, Miss Earth Philippines 2011.

CASIGURAN, Aurora, June 8, 2011-Governor Bellaflor Angara-Castillo lauded Miss Philippines Earth 2011 Athena Imperial who won the prestigious title during the two-hour pageant at the Puerto Princesa City Coliseum, Sunday.

“From Miss Philippines-Earth to Aurora Governor Imperial,” Angara-Castillo said, expressing that    she was impressed with Imperial’s gift of gab and of being smart.

Imperial, who hails from this town, was feted by Angara-Castillo who led a small group of Aurorans in cheering for their bet, who also placed as a semifinalist     during the 2009 Mutya ng Pilipinas pageant held in Baler. She is a Communication Research graduate of the University of the Philippines.

Angara-Castillo said that Imperial has the gut and feels that the hometown heroine will make a good politician someday, and even follow her footsteps.

“Every time I heard her speak, I tell myself that one day she will become governor of Aurora,” Angara-Castillo said of Imperial where she immediately offered Imperial a job in the provincial Capitol, adding that someday, the latter will make good as a political leader.

“Imperial’s victory is another feather in the cap of the province as this will also promote tourism and environmental awareness as Miss Earth winners are considered ambassadors of nature,” the lady governor said.

Imperial, who works as researcher for GMA News TV, bested nine other finalists in the pageant for the right to represent the country in the Miss Earth pageant set this November in Thailand. The pageant promotes environmental protection.

The crowds were impressed when she rejected the use of nuclear energy for the country. She said there are other more viable sources of energy such as hydroelectric, solar and wind which are safer than nuclear.

Meanwhile, a dance party is being planned in this town to celebrate Imperial’s victory in its town fiesta on June 12 and 13 says Angara-Castillo. (Jason de Asis) 

Monday, June 6, 2011

Legarda bats for national census of indigenous ethnic origin groups

SENATE OFFICE, Manila, June 7, 2011-To better address the needs of indigenous peoples (IP) groups, Senator Loren Legarda, Chair of the Senate Committee on Cultural Communities has proposed the inclusion of information on ethnic origin in the conduct of national census under Senate Bill 2858 that would allow the inclusion of ethnic origin in the national survey conducted by the National Statistics Office (NSO).

Legarda believed that this measure would be useful in determining the specific concerns of IPs in various areas and finding suitable solutions to address the exact data on them, explaining that the successful implementation of laws will be meaningful if it is anchored on the possession of relevant and accurate data which is the basis of sound policies that in turn are translated into effective and targeted action.

“Until now the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) relies on estimates based on outdated figures and more than a decade has passed since the recognition of the rights of IPs through the passage of the landmark legislation Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Act of 1997 (IPRA), but there is still a dearth of information and disaggregated data on the exact population of our indigenous brothers and sisters,” Legarda said.

The NSO shall include ethnic origin in its national survey and national census starting the year 2011 under the proposed measure. To serve as guides of NSO enumerators are NCIP employees, who must be knowledgeable of the different ethno-linguistic groups of the Philippines, and must know the dialect and appropriate manner of talking/asking culturally-sensitive questions to members of indigenous cultural communities (ICCs).

Legarda said that the proposed bill seeks to remedy the absence of information on members of IP groups by formally including the ethnicity and ethno-linguistic variable in the country’s national census in order to make effective policies that will promote and address them. (Jason de Asis)

Sunday, June 5, 2011

2011 Miss Earth Philippines from Casiguran Aurora deserves as queen

BALER, Aurora, June 6, 2011-Once again Aurorans proved in the province history that eventhough Aurora is one of the smallest provinces in the country the brain and beauty still prevailed no matter what and deserved to be the queen.

It’s really wonderful to see that our provincemate Athena Mae Imperial who hails from Casiguran town won in the recent coronation of 2011 Miss Earth Philippines which was held in Puerto Princesa, Palawan yesterday night.

Among the 48 candidates, Imperial was proclaimed as big winner although she was the shortest among the top 10 finalists, adding that she did not get any special awards even the minor ones. She was also not so tall in the contest but still proved that there’s a chance to be a beauty queen.

Imperial became a semi-finalist in the Mutya ng Pilipinas 2009 and kept going in joining the pageant. Now, it’s her victory. She is not tall enough for international competition    but she really is the Goddess of the Earth and deserves to be Miss Philippines Earth 2011.

As an Auroran, we congratulate Imperial for winning in the contest the title Miss Earth and must be proud of her now that she is representing the country in the coming Miss Earth 2011 beauty pageant in Pattaya, Thailand.

Imperial’s accomplishment will surely win the country’s television networks and other big companies which have seen her potentials to be their partner in the industry. It’s amazing and I mean it! (Jason de Asis)



Ms. Athena Mae Imperial crowned as Miss Earth Philippines 2011. Another pride of Aurorans. (Jason de Asis)

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Phl to host GOPAC 2013 conference against corruption

SENATE OFFICE, Manila, June 5, 2011-After the Senate steering committee hearing, Senator Edgardo J. Angara said that the country will be hosting the 2013 Global Organization of Parliamentarians Against Corruption (GOPAC) conference here in Manila  where Malacañang manifests full support with the same mission  on strong anti-corruption policy.

“GOPAC is an international network where its mission is perfectly fit with the Aquino administration’s anti-corruption policy. The global community also recognizes us that we are serious about stamping out corruption,” Angara said, adding that there are more than 900 parliamentarians from over 90 different countries dedicated to good governance and combating corruption under GOPAC.

Angara reported that about 300 to 500 international parliamentarians are expected to attend. About a quarter of the participants will be from the Philippines but the bulk of the guests will fly in from abroad where the three-day conference has been scheduled tentatively for January 31 to February 1 and 2 to include workshops, forums and plenary meetings.

GOPAC's Philippine Steering Committee involves stakeholders from government agencies, private sector, nongovernmental organizations and academe where the participants are Aurora Rep. Juan Edgardo “Sonny” Angara; Sen. Franklin M. Drilon, chairman of the Senate Committee on Finance; former Chief Justice Artemio V. Panganiban; Bagong Henerasyon Rep. Bernadette Herrera-Dy, also the SEAPAC secretary; Tourism Assistant Secretary Domingo Ramon Enerio; and Atty. Tess Herbosa, chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Other members of the steering committee are Dean Marivic Leonen, UP College of Law; Dean Cesar L. Villanueva, Ateneo Law School; Dean Antonio A. Agustin, MLQU College of Law; Dean Amado D. Valdez, University of the East College of Law and president of the Philippine Association of Law Schools; Atty. Avelino V. Cruz, founding partner of ACCRA Law; Atty. Raoul R. Angangco, senior parter at CVC Law; Atty. Roan Libarios, president-elect of the Integrated Bar of the Philippines; and Dr. Georgina R. Encanto, president of Transparency International-Philippines.

Aside from SEAPAC, GOPAC's other active regional chapters are in Latin America (LAPAC), Arab Region (ARPAC) and Africa (APNAC), and they are all expected to join the Manila conference in 2013. 

Angara is the Asian representative in the GOPAC executive board as well as the founding president of the Southeast Asian Parliamentarians Against Corruption (SEAPAC), one of the active regional chapters and was elected as GOPAC's vice-chairman during the conference held in Mexico City Last March 11 to 13. (Jason de Asis)

Senate approved bill for state workers retirement benefits immediate release

SENATE OFFICE, Manila, June 4, 2011-Senator Antonio “Sonny” F. Trillanes senate bill 2748 that seeks the expeditious and timely release of benefits, pension and gratuities of government workers retiring from the service has unanimously approved on third and final reading here in the Senate by the 18 senators who voted for its approval.

No one cast a negative vote on the proposed measure which was principally authored by Senator Antonio “Sonny” F. Trillanes IV wherein the bill calls for the release of retirement benefits within a 30-day period, except for benefits from the Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) that would be released on the last working day of the retiring government employee.

“As of second quarter of 2010, our Government is still the largest employer nationwide with some 1,312,508 employees. Sadly, it is sometimes referred to as the employer of last resort due to uncompetitive pay schedule and minimal promotion opportunities compared to the private sector,” Trillanes lamented, saying that our colleagues in the government service soldier on, toiling and laboring with salaries and benefits barely enough to meet their personal and family needs.  

“This is unacceptable, they spend the best and most productive years of their lives serving the public and the country despite the Spartan pay and measly benefits they receive, often foregoing more lucrative opportunities in the private sector,” Trillanes said, citing the case of public school teachers, who are underpaid and overworked.

“They are the molder of our youth whose hands lay the future of the country, we rely on them serving elections often with great risks to their lives and well-being and yet, we pay them a salary barely enough to meet the basic needs of their families,” he added, saying that often times, when these public servants retire, they are made to wait for unreasonable periods, sometimes years, before they are paid their modest retirement pay, pensions, gratuities and other benefits which are really offensive.
 
“In recognition of their many years, if not decades of faithful, loyal and dedicated service to the government, we have to ensure retiring government employees to receive their retirement pay, pensions, gratuities and other retirement benefits immediately or at least within a fixed and reasonable time after their retirement, adding that they should not be made to wait, much less grovel and beg, for what is actually due them under the law,” Trillanes said.

The Senator added that there is a need to penalize officials who would cause undue delay on the release of these benefits, saying that these erring officials after hearings and due proceedings shall be subjected to administrative disciplinary action and to be penalized with suspension from service without pay from six months to one year at the discretion of the disciplining authority, except in cases of force majeure and other insuperable cases.

“Some agencies violated the law due to lack of penal provision punishing the agency for its non-compliance that’s why we should put teeth into our existing law for better enforcement of its provisions,” Trillanes ended. (Jason de Asis)

Friday, June 3, 2011

Angara bats for the creation of elite enforcers to protect Phl aquatic territory

SENATE OFFICE, Manila, June 3, 2011-In the recent hearing of the Senate Committee on Environment and Natural Resources, Senator Edgardo J. Angara, who is a former Secretary of Agriculture  urged the government for the creation of elite enforcers who will be tasked to protect the country’s aquatic territory. 

Angara explained that the country’s archipelago is one of the richest, most bio-diverse and extensive coastal areas in the world but we don’t possess enough resources to protect it where poaching exotic corals and wildlife has become a very lucrative business around the world, saying that the destruction of rare flora and fauna has already caused un-repairable damage to the country’s marine ecosystems.

He said that the country has very good laws against poaching and other destructive activities but insufficient in manpower and technical resources to police our huge territory, adding that the national coast guard cannot provide all the manpower needed; thus, Angara suggested that there is a need to tap the local government units or LGUs to train their own bantay-dagat teams to serve as the guardians of the sea.

“They already established bantay-dagat and maybe we can establish an elite force among these ranks who will be dedicated in enforcing our marine laws,” Angara said.

“I urged the government to act fast and be more proactive on this matter, adding that the destruction of our country’s rich natural heritage is a race against time, which we may have already lost,” he said, calling on concerned government agencies to work together to solve and to mitigate a national problem.

Angara said that to channel their efforts into action-oriented plans and measures, there is a need for a comprehensive framework to unite all government agencies with jurisdiction over the country’s marine and aquatic resources. (Jason de Asis)

Monday, May 30, 2011

Senators repeal two articles of labor code under Senate bill 2701

SENATE OFFICE, Manila, May 31, 2011-To provide equal employment opportunities for men and women in night work, the Senate yesterday has approved on Third and Final Reading Senate Bill 2701 repealing Articles 130 and 131 of the Labor Code of the Philippines which was sponsored by Senate President Pro Tempore Jinggoy Ejercito Estrada, Chairman of the Senate Committee on Labor, Employment and Human Resources Development.

Estrada said that his committee has decided to repeal the two articles which limit the job spectrum for female workers where they initially wanted to expand the exceptions prescribed by the Labor Code on women worker on night work since it aims to level the employment field for men and women while maintaining protection for women workers; but after hearing the invaluable inputs of Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago, they decided to go all out in dismantling the discriminatory provisions in the Labor Code against  women workers.

Under Article 130, it prohibits nighttime work (generally between 12:00 midnight and 6:00 AM) for women in industrial, commercial and non-industrial undertakings (other than agricultural) while in Article 131 provides exceptions on cases of emergencies, urgent work on machineries, managerial posts, cases permitted by the Secretary of the Department of Labor and Employment, among others.

Estrada said that these stipulations prove oppressive when we look at the boom of call center industry which operates on a 24-hour system, adding that before women workers can actually work, they have to suffer a burdensome process of securing paper work and permits.

“It introduced a new chapter in the Labor Code on the employment of night workers and provided measures on health assessment, installation of mandatory facilities for workplaces, compensation and benefits for night workers under the Senate Bill 2701,” Estrada said, noting that the provisions include those which provide that workers shall have the right to undergo a health assessment without charge and to receive advice on how to reduce or avoid health problems associated with their work and one that requires the employers to provide first-aid facilities, sleeping and resting quarters and means of transportation (subject to exceptions and guidelines by the DOLE).

“The measure is in compliance with our obligation to the CEDAW or the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women and consistent with the objectives of Republic Act 9710 or the Magna Carta for Women,” Estrada ended. (Jason de Asis)

Senate passed bill that will enhance early education on children below 6 years old

SENATE OFFICE, Manila, May 30, 2011-Senator Edgardo J. Angara said that it is expected to benefit 17 million Filipino children after the senate passed today on Third and Final Reading the Senate bill 2802 otherwise known as early years act that would enhance early education among children below six years old.
  
Angara, who authored the bill along with Senate President Pro-Tempore Jinggoy Ejercito and Senator Miriam Defensor-Santiago said that the proposed law aims to shift the concept of the day care center from a playroom to a learning center by rationalizing and restructuring the day care into an early childhood education center.

“The bill aims to improve the educational system in the country with the crafting of a formal curriculum for pre-school pupils that will enable them to cope with elementary lessons,” Angara said, saying that forty percent of the children entering Grade I are not ready for school. As such, four out of 10 children drop out of the elementary level and never return to complete their education.

“The National Achievement Test conducted earlier among 1.6 million Grade Six students revealed that a mean percentage score (MPS) of 59.9 percent which means that for every ten items, a Grade Six student can correctly answer five items,” the Senator said.

Angara said that the measure aim to address the lack of facilities and limited teaching staff besetting pre-school education where he estimate that only 46% or about 2.5 million children below six years old are being accommodated by the available 49,000 day care centers nationwide.

“For the implementation of the Act, P500 million per year for the first five years will be appropriated for the National ECCD Program, which will be sourced from PAGCOR,” Angara said, adding that an initial annual appropriation of P1 billion from the GAA shall be provided to the ECCD Council.

Angara explained that they were able to minimize the initial funding requirement because the basic infrastructures for the child development centers are already there. “We will be using the existing daycare centers nationwide and turning them into more education-oriented institutions,” Angara said.

“The bill also seeks for the training of additional childhood development teachers so they could detect and identify gifted and development disorders and disabilities among children below six years old and make the corresponding recommendations where it entails more than just child-minding and childcare to includes the provision of health, nutrition, early education and social development services for the children. (Jason de Asis)

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Air pollution in metro will be resolved thru electric vehicle says Angara

SENATE OFFICE, Manila, May 29, 2011-In the recent study of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) that Metro Manila ranks high among the megacities in Asia with air quality problems,  Senator Edgardo J. Angara, chair of the Congressional Commission on Science and Technology and Engineering (COMSTE) said that 70% of air pollution in Metro Manila areas will be resolved through the use of electric vehicles where he urged the government for the development of a national electric vehicle industry by providing incentives for electric and hybrid car manufacturers and importers as well as adopting an e-vehicle standards.

“The government needs to support the nascent industry which encourages local innovation and promotes eco-friendly transportation where the COMSTE has been working closely with the Electric Vehicle Association of the Philippines (EVAP) to draw up policy framework that will guide the development of the industry,” Angara said, adding that the COMSTE has identified the development of electric vehicles and green transport as one of its priority projects this year.

The EVAP has asked the government to adopt e-vehicles for use in public transport and to create strict industry standards where they completely built unit (hybrid and e-vehicles) and imported parts and components that cannot be manufactured locally should be Duty-Free, Excise and VAT exempt upon importation.

Angara said that these electric vehicles will be powered by electricity generated from biomass as the green transport model where the system has the potential to be one of the most eco-friendly in the world.

He added that thru e-vehicles, it will lessen the pollution and wean the country away from fossil-fuel dependency with this innovative Green transport system like electric tricycles, hybrid jeepneys, buses and electric bicycles.

“We import roughly 96% of our petroleum, the majority of which is consumed by the growing transport sector. The same sector accounts for the biggest share of the energy use, nearly 40%,” Angara said, noting that to become energy independent is one of the goals of the government.

The veteran Senator believed that it can be achieved by promoting innovative projects where it can reduced foreign dependence on fuel and it can create less-polluted and environmentally friendly cities.

ADB study showed that the level of suspended particulate matter (SPM) in Metro Manila is more than double the standard of the World Health Organization where the department of environment and natural resources (DENR) revealed that 70% of air pollution in Metro Manila came from motor vehicles. 

Angara said that the country needed cleaner modes of transport for the welfare of the citizenry. (Jason de Asis)

Friday, May 27, 2011

Villar eyes teachers’ 6-hour workday

SENATE OFFICE, Manila, May 28, 2011-Senator Manny Villar has filed Senate bill No. 2454 to reduce the working hours condition of all public school teachers to a six-hour workday or a total of a 30-hour workweek and exempting them from compliance with 8 hour workday.

Villar said that to have more time to innovate and enhance classroom teaching and result to a more productive workforce, reducing their number of working hours and they should be given full attention where the teachers clamor for higher pay but shorter working hours, adding that their work schedule leaves them stressed out and exhausted.

The bill repeals Sections 13 and 14 of Republic Act No. 4670 or the Magna Carta of Public School Teachers where the Department of Education issued Memorandum 291 s. 2008 allowing teachers to allot six hours for actual classroom teaching a day, with the remaining two hours to be spent in teaching-related activities like lesson planning, preparation of teaching aids, checking of papers, recording among others; thus, teachers are required to render a total of eight hours a day.

Villar said that a shorter work day would be a great relief for the teachers where he also proposed that any work performed in excess of six hours a day shall be paid an additional compensation of at least 25 percent of their regular remuneration.

He said that the measure seeks to exempt teachers from the generally established rule on 8-hour workday under the Civil Service Rules. Book V of the Administrative Code of 1987 which stated that officers and employees of all departments and agencies except those covered by special laws shall render not less than eight hours of work a day for five days a week or a total of 40 hours a week, exclusive of time for lunch.

Related school activities which are conducted outside the school shall be paid an additional compensation of at least 25 percent of his/her regular remuneration after the teacher has completed at least six hours of work. (Jason de Asis)

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Umali eyes for 3 more congressional districts in Nueva Ecija, seeks dialogue with solons

CABANATUAN CITY, Nueva Ecija, May 27, 2011-Governor Aurelio Umali expressed desire to have at least three more congressional districts in the province, saying that he is eyeing a dialogue with all the four congressmen to discuss re-districting to pave the way for additional representation in Congress.

“The creation of additional congressional districts is long overdue and there is a need to sit down with the incumbent congressmen on how each existing congressional district will be reconfigured for the envisioned new congressional districts,” Umali said, adding that we have to rationalize redistricting and that’s why we have to sit down with our congressmen to arrive at a consensus.

“We initially discussed it with fourth district Rep. Rodolfo Antonino who said his district alone may be divided into two separate congressional districts,” Umali furthered.

Records showed that Cong. Antonino’s district covers Gapan City and the municipalities of Cabiao, Gen. Tinio, Jaen, Penaranda, San Antonio, San Isidro and San Leonardo.

“Under Antonino’s proposal, Gapan City and the municipalities of Gen. Tinio, Penaranda and San Isidro alone may comprise a district while another district may be carved out from the rest of the towns,” Umali said.

He said that if Cabanatuan City – the province’s trade and educational center – is to become a lone congressional district, the make-up of the entire province will also have to be considered.

Cabanatuan City is lumped together with Palayan City and the municipalities of  Bongabon, Laur, Gabaldon, Gen. Natividad and Sta. Rosa comprising the third congressional district.

The district, which is home to Umali, is the province’s largest congressional district and whose sitting representative is the governor’s wife, Congresswoman Czarina Umali. The governor’s younger brother Emmanuel Antonio is also the incumbent board member in the district after emerging as the top vote-getter in the elections for members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan.

The law stated that a congressional district may be created over an area with a population of 250,000. Nueva Ecija has an estimated population of 1.6 million, making it eligible to have at least two additional congressional districts.

The addition of more congressional districts is considered a boon to the province because each congressman receives P70 million in annual priority development assistance fund otherwise known as pork barrel allocations. 

The other incumbent lawmakers here are Representatives Josie Manuel-Joson and Joseph Gilbert Violago of the first and second districts.  (Jason de Asis)

Umali and Padiernos bat Comelec to delist new Nueva Ecija from list of poll hot spots

CABANATUAN CITY, Nueva Ecija, May 27, 2011-Since Governor Aurelio Umali assumed the governorship in 2007, Umali called on the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) to remove Nueva Ecija from the list of election hot spots in the coming 2013 elections manifesting to the relative peace and order situation now obtaining in the whole province.

“Nueva Ecija now enjoys a stable peace and order climate and Novo Ecijanos can now speak freely and openly irrespective of their party affiliations and loyalty,” Umali said, calling the COMELEC to finally consider removing Nueva Ecija from the list of traditional hot spots to change its image into a progressive and advancing province where the place is categorized as a hot spot where there is intense political rivalry, presence of armed goons and violence. 

Umali recalled that last year, the COMELEC recognized the peaceful conduct of the local polls in the province, in the absence of the usual pre and post-election violence which characterized previous political exercises.

He furthered that for so long the province was tagged as an election hot spot. “We were number one in Central Luzon until Abra came along. But in the last elections, we were able to show that there was no untoward incident and hopefully, the COMELEC will take the cue and remove us from the list,” he said.

Umali explained that when he first ran for governor in 2007, he asked the COMELEC to place the province under Comelec control. When he won, he as the sitting governor asked the Comelec again to place the province under its control.

“Many were surprised when I did that considering I was the sitting governor. Some were saying that was an admission that I had no control of the situation. But I just want to deliver the message that we need to have peaceful and orderly elections in 2010 so we can change Nueva Ecija and that’s what exactly happened,” he said.

Umali recalled that during the campaign period, he instructed the Philippine National Police (PNP) to provide area security to his political rivals to avert any occurrence of violence, adding that he was fully aware that if something untoward happened to them, people might pin the blame on me so it’s better to take precautions.

Umali said without taking offense on other politicians, everybody in Nueva Ecija can now speak freely and openly on any issue under the sun without fear of recrimination or reprisals. “The local media can vouch for that. They are now very open. In fact, some of them have been slapped with libel cases for exercising their freedom of the press,” he said.

Vice Gov. Jose Gay Padiernos welcomed Umali’s call for the Comelec to remove Nueva Ecija from the hot spot’s list, saying the political landscape in the province has changed considerably.

He said that before, there was a time when none of the local politicians would want to be a leader for Umali but they have since maintained an open mind and they now gravitate towards to the new leadership in the Capitol.

“Of course, there are still incidents of killings but these are no longer politically motivated,” he said, saying that this is the new Nueva Ecija and political violence is now a thing of the past.” (Jason de Asis)

Cabanatuan is not yet ready for highly urbanized city status says Umali

CABANATUAN CITY, Nueva Ecija, May 26, 2011-In the recent press briefing, Governor Aurelio Umali insisted that this city is still raw and not yet ready to undergo the transition into a highly urbanized city (HUC). 

“Speaking of Cabanatuan development-wise, it will be “crippled” if it becomes a separate political subdivision because many development projects that were undertaken here in the past by the Umali administration would be stopped once the HUC bid is realized,” Umali said, saying that in assessing the plan, Cabanatuan is not only raw and unripe for HUC. “It is also ill-prepared and not ready,” he said.

“The city government cannot even fix basic problems in governance like garbage disposal, how much more the gargantuan task of being politically independent,” Umali said.

Umali reacted to the controversial plan which resulted to a falling-out with his erstwhile political ally, Cabanatuan Mayor Julius Cesar Vergara wherein Vergara has said that the HUC bid is still under study even when he launched the plan last November.

Umali denied that the HUC plan of Vergara is still being studied, saying that as early as 2004, during the latter’s third and last term, he was already pushing for it.

“In fact, sometime in 2004, I got a call from (then-presidential adviser on political affairs) Gabby Claudio informing me of a request from Mayor Vergara for Malacanang to approve the conversion,” he said. “So as early as 2004, Vergara was already pushing for it.”

“It is my moral obligation for the provincial government to continue helping the people of Cabanatuan in their various needs and concerns, particularly when the city government is incapable of doing so, Umali said, saying that said Cabanatuenos benefited immensely from the Umali administration’s assistance in infrastructure, education, health and even during calamities.

He said that in past typhoons, he took it upon himself to have a social contract to help Cabanatuenos more than the political leadership of the city. The people of Cabanatuan recognize that. And they have been telling me, “Governor it’s you who was with us. I owe it to the people of Cabanatuan. It’s my obligation to serve them,” he said.

He cited that many infrastructure projects in Cabanatuan’s barangays were bankrolled by the provincial government, a fact not lost in the city government and its populace.

Umali pointed out that the provincial government maintains considerable presence in Cabanatuan, consisting of a 16-hectare old Capitol compound which caters to the needs of many Cabanatuenos.

At the same time, Umali said P125 million worth of Internal Revenue Allotment of the provincial government will go down the drain if Cabanatuan fully becomes HUC. He said the IRA of the province, instead of going to Cabanatuan, will revert back to the national treasury and will be divided equally among the provinces.

Umali also said the IRA of Cabanatuan won’t increase in case it becomes a HUC, saying it’s a gross misconception. (Jason de Asis)

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Legarda calls for disaster preparedness as typhoon chedeng is to hit the country

SENATE OFFICE, Manila, May 25, 2011- Senator Loren Legarda, Chair of the Senate Committee on Climate Change calls for disaster preparedness as typhoon Chedeng entered the Philippine Area of Responsibility where she reminded local government units (LGUs) and communities who are expected to be hit by the storm as the Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical and Astronomical Service Administration forecasted the possibility of it to become a super typhoon as it will land fall.

Legarda reiterated her call that by now, LGUs and barangays should already be prepared for Typhoon Chedeng as it is expected to become a super typhoon which will bring strong winds and rains, saying that there is a need for them to be ready to implement disaster management and early warning systems in their respective areas.

“LGUs should now have their respective climate action plans, which include improvement of disaster risk information through risk identification or assessment, and making people more responsive to government-issued disaster warnings,” Legarda said, adding that the local governments must reduce sources of risk and exposure of the vulnerable sector by providing house upgrading and relocation options for settlers located in hazardous areas, and ensure effective disaster preparedness and recovery mechanisms by encouraging active participation of the vulnerable communities.

“Nakahanda na dapat ang mga pito, batingaw pati na mga maliliit na watawat na maaring ipagaspas sa pag-aalerto,”   she said.

“The LGUs must activate all forms of early warning systems, ensure that canals and drainage systems had been cleaned up to avoid flooding, and evacuate families living in landslide-prone, flood-prone and other vulnerable areas,” Legarda explained, adding that heavy rainfall on clogged esteros will cause flooding because the water passageway is being blocked.

“Disaster preparedness is essential to minimize, if not totally prevent, loss of lives and property damages when natural hazards like typhoons strike,” Legarda explained.

Legarda concluded that on disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation agenda, a better preparation is needed especially the LGUs who are closer to the people in a strategic position to deliver effective and lasting results on effective mitigation. (Jason de Asis)

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