Iloilo City News February 2015

From Philippines
Jump to navigation Jump to search
→ → Go back HOME to Zamboanga: the Portal to the Philippines.

A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z
Create Name's page

Regions | Philippine Provinces | Philippine Cities | Municipalities | Barangays | High School Reunions


Iloilo City - Archived News

Nophoto.gif
Seal of Iloilo City
Interactive Google Satellite Map of Iloilo City, Iloilo
Iloilo city map locator.png
Map Locator of Iloilo City
Iloilo-aerial.jpg
Aerial View of Iloilo City
Iloilo aerial01.jpg
Aerial View of Iloilo City

Dietary supplement is a product that contains vitamins, minerals, herbs or other botanicals, amino acids, enzymes, and/or other ingredients intended to supplement the diet. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has special labeling requirements for dietary supplements and treats them as foods, not drugs.



Manufacturers and distributors of dietary supplements and dietary ingredients are prohibited from marketing products that are adulterated or misbranded. That means that these firms are responsible for evaluating the safety and labeling of their products before marketing to ensure that they meet all the requirements of DSHEA and FDA regulations.

Iloilo molochurch.JPG
Molo Church, Iloilo City
Iloilo dinagyang festival.jpg
The Dinagyang is a religious and cultural festival in Iloilo City, Philippines held on the fourth Sunday of January, or right after the Sinulog In Cebu and the Ati-Atihan in Aklan.

Wars of ancient history were about possessions, territory, power, control, family, betrayal, lover's quarrel, politics and sometimes religion.

But we are in the Modern era and supposedly more educated and enlightened .

Think about this. Don't just brush off these questions.

  • Why is RELIGION still involved in WARS? Isn't religion supposed to be about PEACE?
  • Ask yourself; What religion always campaign to have its religious laws be accepted as government laws, always involved in wars and consistently causing WARS, yet insists that it's a religion of peace?

WHY??

There are only two kinds of people who teach tolerance:
  1. The Bullies. They want you to tolerate them so they can continue to maliciously deprive you. Do not believe these bullies teaching tolerance, saying that it’s the path to prevent hatred and prejudice.
  2. The victims who are waiting for the right moment to retaliate. They can’t win yet, so they tolerate.

APEC delegates to get a glimpse of Iloilo’s best festivals

(PNA), FFC/AJP/PGL/VLO

ILOILO CITY, Feb. 20 (PNA) -- Delegates to the two important ministerial meeting of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit to be hosted by Iloilo City will get a glimpse of this city’s best festivals - Dinagyang and Paraw Regatta.

Mayor Jed Patrick Mabilog said that the winners of this year’s Dinagyang Festival and the Paraw’s Sinamba Mardigras competition will perform during a cultural show for the delegates.

Mabilog hinted of mounting a big stage in front of the Iloilo Freedom Grandstand for the showcase of Iloilo’s best of the best during the said cultural show.

Meantime, the mayor disclosed that the national organizing committee is slated to arrive in Iloilo on February 24 to check on the preparations of the city.

Also, provincial government first lady Cossette Defensor, city first lady Marivic Mabilog, and the wife of the city vice mayor Gina Espinosa have been on discussions as to the preparations and activities to welcome the wives of the ministers who will be arriving during the APEC.

The third floor of the Iloilo City Hall will also be dedicated to the APEC organizing committee.

Iloilo will host the Small and Medium Enterprise (SME) ministerial meeting on September 21 to 25 and the High Level Policy Dialogue on Food Security and the Blue Economy and Related Meetings from September 28 to October 6.

New Year, Old Bond: Celebrating Chinese influence on Ilonggo life

(JSC/LTP-PIA6 Iloilo)

ILOILO CITY, Feb. 19 (PIA6) --- History tells us that the Chinese have long been part of the Ilonggos' way of life.

Historical and archaeological studies indicate that the Chinese have been trading in the Iloilo area perhaps since the Sung Dynasty (960-1279 A.D).

According to the late historian and writer Dr. Henry Funtecha, traditional Chinese influences have been embedded in Iloilo’s past and present.

By the time the Spaniards colonized the country, a good number of them had already settled in the town of Molo, now one of the districts of Iloilo City.

Molo served as the commercial port of Iloilo during this time when Chinese bartered silk, porcelain wares and damask with the natives while the latter engaged in trading products from their farms, the sea and the forests.

A number of Chinese also settled down in Molo and married Ilonggo women. The descendants of these Chinese could be found among families named Consing, Ditching, Conlu, Ganzon, Guanzon, Jocson, Lacson, Layson, Locsin, Sianson, Yulo, and Yusay.

After the First World War, the growth of Chinese families and consequent presence of school-age children, coupled with cultural pride and political organizations, prompted the building of Iloilo’s Chinese schools for elementary education.

The Chinese Commercial School began in 1911 or a trade school owned by the old Iloilo Confederation of Chinese businessmen. Sixty students enrolled.

This was followed by Sun Yat Sen School which was established through a group of nationalistic Cantonese and Fukienese supporters of the Kuomintang. The third school Chiang Kai Shek was built by the Ong Family Association due to a faction with the leadership of Sun Yat Sen.

The Chinese were also omnipresent in the sinamay or weaving industry which had flourished in Iloilo by the 19th century. The province had begun to develop the reputation as the center of the textile weaving industry in the country.

The introduction of a sugar cane variety called “sakara” was also among the legacies of the Chinese in Western Visayas. Subsequently, the Chinese also taught the natives how to extract sugar juice from the canes and to transform it into solid granules.

As to the sugar industry, it appears that almost all the important technology used in the process or preparation of muscovado sugar are of Chinese origin. The large vat where the sugar juice is cooked to form into “panocha” is “cawa”. To transfer boiling sugar from one “cawa” to another is called “yaya”. To clean the sap of impurities is “suiani”. “Cansaja” on the other hand is the term for the wilted leaf of the cane and “siapo” is the bagasse.

In terms of influencing the Ilonggo culinary palate, the Chinese also left a lasting legacy. Still prominent today are batchoy, bihon, hototai, kimlo, lumpia, pancit (including pancit molo), siomai, and siopao.

La Villa Rica de Arevalo, a particular district that was once part of the Parian (Molo), became famous in the region for its beautiful fireworks or pyrotechnics and was dubbed as the home of Iloilo’s firecrackers industry.

Other lasting early Chinese influences on Ilonggo life include the wearing of the “camisa de chino”, the wearing of slippers, the popular leisure game of “mahjong”, the observance of “feng shui”, among others.

The list would still go long proving how Chinese had made an indelible imprint in the history and culture of Iloilo. The celebration by the city of the Chinese New Year with the theme “United Iloilo on the Rise” is a reminder of the significant role the Chinese play and continue to play in the life of the Ilonggos.

Teen centers program vies for Galing Pook Award

BY GLENDA SOLOGASTOA (PN)

ILOILO – The provincial government is joining the Galing Pook Award. It is fielding its teen centers program.

According to Provincial Population Office (PPO) chief Ramon Yee, his office will be submitting all the needed requirements next month.

“Hopefully, we can make it,” said Yee.

The teen centers program will be fielded under the “population management for the youth” category.

The Galing Pook Award recognizes excellent local government programs and projects.

Teen centers advocate values formation and responsible reproductive health. One of its objectives is to curb teenage pregnancy

To date, according to Yee, the provincial government already has 23 functioning teen centers in various municipalities.

This year, the program aims to cover all municipalities.

Yee said towns with large youth populations like Pototan, Banate, Barotac Viejo, and Oton, which already have teen centers, will have an additional one.

The provincial government has allocated P6.5 million for more teen centers this year.

New teen centers will be established in the following:

• Oton and Guimbal in the 1st District • Zarraga and Leganes in the 2nd District • Maasin in the 3rd District • Dumangas, Anilao and Banate in the 4th District; and • San Rafael, Concepcion, Carles, Ajuy, San Dionisio, Balasan, and Batad in the 5th District.

The PPO recently conducted a stakeholders’ consultative conference for the establishment of school-based multipurpose teen centers. It was attended by mayors and schools officials.

“The success or failure of the teen centers lies in the hands of the stakeholders,” said Yee.

Iloilo City bags Hall of Fame Award in anti-smoking initiative

By Lydia C. Pendon (Sunnex)

ILOILO City is now in the Hall of Fame as it bags another award from the Department of Health for the city’s anti-smoking initiatives.

Mayor Jed Patrick Mabilog, Councilor Joshua Alim, who is the chairman of the Iloilo City Anti-Smoking Task Force (ICAST), and ICAST Executive Director Inigo Garingalao will receive the plaque of recognition in a ceremony at the SMX Convention Center in Metro Manila on Friday, February 20.

ICAST was organized in 2007 as a core group to lead in the anti-smoking program implemented in public places and buildings, parks and plazas, public and private vehicles, schools, restaurants and other areas congregated by many people.

Alim said the award recognizes the City Government’s innovations and initiatives against the use of tobacco and smoking in public.

Alim added that this is the third year that the city received recognition from the Health department as a livable and smoke-free city.

DOST, DA to install automated weather station for use of rice farmers

By Perla G. Lena [(PNA), CTB/AJP/PGL/VLO]

ILOILO CITY, Feb 16 (PNA) -- The Department of Science and Technology (DOST) and the Department of Agriculture (DA) are now working closely for the installation of five automated weather stations (AWS) in Western Visayas.

DOST regional director, Engr. Rowen Gelonga, said that the AWS will be used by DA to monitor weather conditions and use the information for the benefit of farmers, especially rice farmers.

DOST will install the equipment. DA, on the other hand, has shelled out more than P2 million for the project, according to Gelonga.

One AWS will be installed in every province in the region, he added.

Gelonga added that while DA has eyed rice farmers as its users of information, yet the data gathered from the AWS will also be made available to the public through the Project Noah.

He added that the installation of the AWS is an ongoing project. The DA equipment will be part of the project to be implemented this year.

Fisheries, food security take center stage in Iloilo APEC gab

By NORMAN D. CORDON (Special Correspondent for Asean and APEC, PN)

MANILA — The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Ocean and Fisheries Working Group (OFWG) and Policy Partnership for Food Security (PPFS) will come together in Iloilo City this October for the High-Level Policy Dialogue on Food Security and Blue Economy.

According to the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), one of the key deliverables is the APEC Food Security Action Plan – a long-term OFWG strategy for addressing food security aligned with the APEC food system and PPFS Roadmap.

DFA said the development of a blue economy in the APEC region is an important approach to attain sustainable development and utilization of marine resources and ecosystems, as well as achieve inclusive economic growth.

During the recently concluded First APEC Senior Officials’ Meeting (SOM) and Related Meetings, the OFWG highlighted how fisheries and sustainable aquaculture are critical to ensuring food security, sustainable livelihoods, and economic prosperity worldwide.

A way to achieve food security in the coastal and marine environment is to combat illegal, unregulated and unreported (IUU) fishing, improve biodiversity of all support-ecosystems, and create well-maintained ecosystems that provide more ecological goods and better ecological services.

Also during the First APEC SOM held at the Clark and Subic Freeport Zones, initiatives on management of health threats and improvement of natural disaster risk reduction to support the APEC 2015 priority “Building Sustainable and Resilient Communities” were tackled.

DFA reported that at the Life Sciences Innovation Forum (LSIF) and the Health Working Group (HWG) meetings, APEC economies reaffirmed their commitment to strengthen health care systems as a step toward APEC’s goal of a healthy Asia-Pacific region by 2020.

The APEC LSIF and HWG agenda directly feed into the APEC 2015 theme of inclusive growth through the development and promotion of innovative healthcare systems and products.

For 2015, LSIF and HWG will concentrate on the following areas: universal healthcare coverage, prevention and control of non-communicable diseases, health financing, food safety, and preparedness for effective management of infectious diseases and health pandemics.

On the other hand, during the meeting of the APEC Emergency Preparedness Group (EPWG), APEC member-economies shared experiences and best practices on four thematic areas of disaster management — prevention and mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery and rehabilitation.

The meeting also highlighted the importance of research and science and technology in reducing damage during disasters and the significance of business continuity in ensuring livelihood and trade flow.

City readies Chinese New Year celebration

(LCP)

ILOILO City, the first to celebrate the Chinese New Year in Western Visayas, is gearing up for the sixth-year celebration in the year of the Wooden Goat.

The celebration is spearheaded by the Iloilo Chinese Chamber of Commerce under president Francis Sio and implemented by the Sun Yet Sen High School.

Sio is currently the chairman of the Iloilo Chinese Cultural Association, and the New Year celebration is coordinated by four Fil-Chinese schools and three Chinese organizations in the city.

The grand cultural show will be started by a grand cultural parade on Friday, February 20, from the Bonifacio Drive up to the Chinese Chinatown at Iznart Street for the cultural show and pyrotechnics and fireworks display.

Sio said this year’s celebration has a theme “United Iloilo Rise to Excellence” to feature the shared heritage of the Chinese people and the Ilonggos through a photo exhibit courtesy of Bahay Tsinoy, Kaisa Heritage Center and the cultural association.

Invited to the Iloilo celebration are perennial visitors Teresita Ang See, Chinese Consul in Cebu and officials of the Chinese Chamber of Commerce in Manila.

Sio said that hopefully, this year’s celebration will exhibit the biggest lion and dragon dance parade participated by the local Fil-Chinese schools in Iloilo City.

Childbirth now covered by PhilHealth

(JCM/LTP/PIA-Iloilo)

ILOILO CITY, February 12 (PIA) --- All women about to give birth are now covered with social health insurance and benefits under the National Health Insurance Program (NHIP), said PhilHealth-6.

Lourdes Diocson, PhilHealth-6 Regional Vice President, said all women about to give birth shall be covered by the NHIP to enable all mothers and their newborns to have financial access to essential health services.

“We want to ensure that all women about to give birth are provided with financial risk protection during their pregnancy, delivery, and post-partum period,” she said.

She explained that these pregnant women upon consultation or even during their deliveries found to be not enrolled with PhilHealth or with lacking contributions are still eligible for PhilHealth benefits.

PhilHealth policy on benefit availment requires payment of three (3) months within six (6) months prior to the first day of confinement, wherein the month of confinement is included in the six qualifying months.

However, in the case of pregnant women who lack the qualifying contribution, payment of the missed quarter will be required plus the remaining quarter of the year to be entitled of PhilHealth benefits.

For non-PhilHealth members who are confined, they will be referred to the medical social worker for assessment to Point-of-Care enrolment as hospital sponsor or under the Informal Economy Program of PhilHealth wherein payment of premium contributions equivalent to one year will be required prior discharge.

According to PhilHealth-6, Maternity Care Package will be to these pregnant women which include prenatal, delivery and postpartum care at P8,000 or Normal Spontaneous Delivery (NSD) Package at P6,500; Antenal Care Package at P1,500, and P19,000 for Caesarean Section.

Additional package for the newly-born babies at P1,750 is also provided.

Diocson said that Philhealth now pays the 5th and subsequent deliveries of women.

“Before, only the first four births were covered by PhilHealth but this time, we will pay the maternity benefit regardless of the number of previous deliveries,” she said.

This development is in line with the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) which is to reduce the risk of stillbirth and maternal deaths during pregnancy.

Little egrets top list of migratory birds in Western Visayas

(PNA), CTB/AJP/DENR-PR/VLO

ILOILO CITY, Feb 10 (PNA) -- The white-winged creatures that we usually see on the fields called Little egrets (Egretta garzetta) top this year’s list of Asian Waterbird Census 2015 that was conducted throughout Western Visayas in January 2015.

In its regional census report, the Protected Area Management and Biodiversity Conservation Section (PAMBCS) under the Technical Service of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) Region 6 disclosed that Little egrets numbered to 3,310.

It was followed by Black-winged stilt (Himantopus himantopus) with 2,430; Cattle egret (Bubulcus ibis) with 1,462; and Common tern (Sterna hirundo) with 885. The number is yet to change when reports coming from DENR field offices in Negros Occidental and Guimaras are consolidated with that of the regional report.

The annual Asian Waterbird Census is conducted throughout the region to monitor the presence of waterbirds or migratory birds.

“They usually inhabit the wetlands and have impact not just ecologically but economically as well. The presence of waterbirds in wetland areas is an indicator that the ecosystems of that certain wetlands is still in good condition,” said PAMBCS Chief Dennis Piñosa.

In the region, the DENR-PAMBCS has identified 24 bird counting sites.

In Iloilo City and Iloilo Province, the sites are Brgy. Airport, Mandurriao; Brgy. Sooc, Arevalo, and Brgy. Hinaktakan, Lapaz, all in Iloilo City; Brgy. Nabitasan, Leganes, Iloilo; Brgy. Tubigan, Zarraga, Iloilo; Brgy. Pulao, Pabrica-Ermita, Dumangas, Iloilo; Brgy. Tinuri-an, Btac. Nuevo, Iloilo; Brgy. Plandico, Concepcion; Brgy. Pantalan-Nabaye, Ajuy, Iloilo; Brgy. Tuble, San Dionisio, Iloilo; Brgy. Padios, Sara, Iloilo.

In Antique there are five sites, namely: Brgy. Supa, San Jose; Brgy. Cubay-Napultan, Sibalom; Brgy. Lapaz, Hamtic; Brgy. Ilaures, Bugasong; and Brgy. Lipata, Culasi. In Aklan, there are three sites, namely: Brgy. New Buswang, Kalibo; Brgy. Lawa-an, New Washington; and Brgy. Lalab, Batan. In Capiz, there are four sites, namely: Brgy. Balijuagan, Roxas City; Brgy. Cudian, Ivisan; Brgy. Agustin Navarra, Ivisan; Brgy. Intongcan, Pontevedra; and Brgy. Dulangan, Pilar.


DENR-6 tops in school site patent applications

(JCM/LTP/PIA-Iloilo)

ILOILO CITY, Feb. 10(PIA)—The Department of Environment and Natural Resources reported that it is now processing 118 school site patent applications, the highest number so far in all regions.

“We have set the 2014 school site patent applications at 115 only,” Jim Sampulna, DENR-6 Director said, adding that this posted a 102.61 percent accomplishment for the regional office.

The patent or title for a school site is a document required for an educational institution in seeking funding assistance to improve its buildings or facilities.

Hector Garrido, OIC chief of the Licensing Division of the DENR Technical division said that the Commission on Audit now requires schools to present the titles of the sites they occupy.

Garrido said that schools which occupy lot areas that are not titled find it difficult to implement structural development and upgrading of schools facilities because they lack proprietary rights.

“We are glad that the Department of Education had encouraged the schools to process their land titles,” Garrido said, as they have actually signed a memorandum of agreement with the department.

On the other hand, Engr. Mamerto Caballero, OIC Chief of the Surveys and Mapping Division, said that through DepEd’s initiative, the schools in the region are preparing for their security of tenure, a legacy for the future of the children and the generations to come.

Caballero said they are fast tracking the region’s target for all land surveys to be completed before end of 2015.

Per records, the Licenses, Deeds and Patents Division is now validating 1,650 school sites in the region, whether it is owned by DepEd, or it has other licences or located in alienable and disposable lands.

Salakayan agro-trade fair showcases town products

(JCM/LTP/PIA-Iloilo)

ILOILO CITY, Feb. 9 (PIA) --- The Salakayan Festival of the municipality of Miagao here featured an Agro-Trade Fair that showcased the town’s rich agricultural and fishery products.

In a PIA interview, municipal agricultural technologist April Joy Depamaylo said that all 119 barangays of the town participated in the agro-trade fair to promote products indigenous in their respective communities.

“The agro-trade fair provided an opportunity for the town’s farmers and fisherfolks to exhibit their products and earn extra income,” she said.

She said the fair displayed products such as vegetables, fruits, ornamental plants, other crops, and fruit and vegetable by-products.

She said that Agro-Trade Fair was a venue for farmers and fisherfolks to show the skills they have learned from various seminars and workshops they have participated through the produce they exhibited.

The Municipal Agriculturist Office has been providing the town’s farmers and fisherfolks with technical assistance and equipment to improve their products.

Meanwhile, the agro-trade fair also promoted hablon, a globally-marketed product that the town is known for.

Miagao is one of the hablon centers in Iloilo where craftsmanship and fine texture of its hablon products are valued by high-end clients such as local and international fashion designers and boutiques.

Korean flutist shares talent with Ilonggos, for free

By PATRICIA BUYCO (Intern, PN)

ILOILO City – The calming and soothing music from different types of flutes filled the late afternoon air on Feb. 4, 2015 at the University of San Agustin’s (USA) Nursing Review Center.

The hall was transformed into a concert arena as Korean flutist Prof. Sa Hoen Soon held a flute lecture-soiree in partnership with the USA’s College of Music.

This partnership, however, will go a long, long way because Sa will stay in this city for a year or more, as he teaches the art and discipline of the flute to the university’s students – for free!

“He just wants to bring music to us,” said Dean Salvacion S. Jardenil of the Conservatory of Music. “Devoted to his music, Prof. Sa came on his own to the USA’s Human Resource Office asking if he could teach music to students for free. He was even the one who provided the flutes, and brought almost 200 books for his expected students to use.”

During the lecture-soiree, Sa played various classical pieces using seven different kinds of flutes. Aside from the classical pieces, his repertoire included Arirang or traditional Korean spiritual melodies, and three original compositions based on Sa’s life.

Hearing his music, the audience was transported into a different dimension, all amazed with his astounding performance. The dexterity of his fingers in playing the flute painted smiles on the audience’s faces.

Sa started playing the flute when he was in his teens. He also underwent trainings in the US.

“The flute is an instrument with different styles and kinds,” said Sa.

He added that he has fallen in love with its melody and because “it sounds very beautiful and active.”

Aside from sharing his expertise in playing the flute with the USA students, Sa said he hopes to learn Filipino music as well. He also plans to compose Filipino music through his flute.

“I am very honored to have witnessed such a famous professor give a lecture and perform live,” said Angela Kim, a Korean student studying in the USA.

On the other hand, Jardenil said Sa will have another show on Feb. 10 at 5:30 p.m. at the USA Auditorium.

Old Iloilo capitol restoration nears completion

(JCM/ESS/PIA-Iloilo)

ILOILO CITY, Feb. 7(PIA)—The restoration of the old Iloilo capitol is expected to be completed by April this year, in time for the Independence Day celebration on June 12.

Iloilo Governor Arthur Defensor, Sr., said in a media interview, that the old capitol is intended to be the site of an event involving President Benigno S. Aquino III, who is expected to lead the Independence Day rites in the historic town of Sta. Barbara on June 12.

Defensor said that officials of the National Historical Commission have already inspected the old capitol building considered as the alternate venue for the vin d”honnuer which is held for the diplomatic corps after the Independence Day ceremonies.

“If this pushes through, the President does not have to rush back to Manila after the event in Sta. Barbara,” Defensor said.

The restoration of the capitol started in April 2012, with the first phase of the work for the exterior design worth P20 million.

The second phase costing P15 million, includes interior designs, function room or ceremonial hall that could be rented for small occasions like weddings, birthdays and others, to generate funds for local government.

The second phase also includes the construction of a bridge connecting the new and the old capitol buildings.

Phase III, meanwhile, which is up for bidding, costs P10 million involving installation of electrical and air conditioning unit and two more function rooms.

Passersby said the old capitol’s restored external features look impressive and elegant.

DTI Negosyo Center fosters public-private partnership

(JCM/LTP/PIA-Iloilo)

ILOILO CITY, Feb. 6 (PIA6) --- The Negosyo Center established by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) here further strengthens the partnership between the government and the private sector.

In the grand launching of the Negosyo Center held Friday at the DTI Iloilo Provincial Office, Valerie Maravilla, President of the Iloilo MSMED (Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Development) Council, said the Negosyo Center is a welcome undertaking for the private sector.

The Negosyo Center is a one-stop shop for services that cater to the entrepreneurs’ need in processing requirements to establish a business, and in accessing information essential for their growth.

“The center’s aim of promoting job generation and inclusive growth through the MSMEs is a shared passion of the private sector,” she said.

She stressed that the private sector also shares the country’s goal of attaining inclusive growth which is the growth that really matters to the majority of the population and not just a few.

“It is the sustained economic growth that can be felt by all levels of society especially the poor and the marginalized,” she said.

She said that Iloilo is blessed that there is a strong and progressive government and private sector partnership.

Iloilo is considered number 2 in the country in establishing the Go Negosyo Center and number 1 in Western Visayas.

“We also advocate business with positive impact to society and the environment,” she said.

She said that the Negosyo Center would also allow them to practice corporate social responsibility (CSR).

“In CSR, all business enterprises no matter how big or small must behave ethically and contribute to improving the quality of life of their workforces, the workforces’ family, and the society in general,” she added.

Free NCD screening at rural health centers

(JCM/LTP/PIA-Iloilo)

ILOILO CITY, February 5 (PIA) --- Individuals who want to know if they are at risk of developing non-communicable diseases (NCDs) can have themselves screened for free in rural health units (RHUs) or health centers here, said the Department of Health (DOH)-6.

This is through the strengthening of the implementation of the Philippine Package of Essential Non-Communicable Diseases (NCD) Interventions (Phil PEN) for the prevention and control of lifestyle-related NCDs.

The Phil PEN protocol aims to diagnose and manage non-communicable diseases such as cardiovascular disease, heart attacks, stroke, diabetes, kidney disease, among others.

In a PIA interview, Richard John Lapascua, DOH-6 Senior Health Program Officer, said that the protocol involves a free screening method to assess if an individual is at risk of having NCDs.

“Individuals aged 25 years and above can visit a rural health unit (RHU) or health center to avail of the screening,” he said.

He said that 83 out of the 133 local government units in Western Visayas have been implementing the Phil PEN protocol, as of June 2014.

Meanwhile, WHO reported that NCDs were responsible for two-thirds of all deaths globally in 2011, up from 60 percent in 2000.

The four main NCDs are cardiovascular diseases, cancers, diabetes and chronic lung diseases. Cardiovascular diseases alone killed nearly 2 million more people in 2011 than in the year 2000.

It is estimated that 35 to 50 percent of NCD deaths occurred before age 60 years.

Based on Philippine data from the National Statistics Office in 2009, cardiovascular and cerebro-vascular diseases topped the list in the top 10 causes of death, along with diabetes and malignant neoplasm.

On one hand, statistics from DOH last year showed that over 276 Filipinos die of heart disease everyday and at least one Filipino suffers from stroke every nine minutes, also making both among the top leading causes of death in the country.

DAR to implement "Tulay ng Pangulo" program

(JCM/LTP/PIA-Iloilo)

ILOILO CITY, February 4 (PIA) --- Projects under the Tulay ng Pangulo para sa Kaunlarang Pang-Agraryo (TPKP) that will benefit agrarian reform communities here are just awaiting for implementation, said the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) Iloilo provincial office.

According to DAR-Iloilo, the identification of proposed sites including the submission of proposals and the validation of the feasible sites for the TPKP project have been completed.

The TPKP project involves the construction, installation and establishment of "universal bridges" in priority agrarian reform communities (ARCs) and Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP) covered areas.

The TPKP unibridges will connect ARCs and the CARP-covered areas and road networks to main markets nationwide under DAR’s Program Beneficiaries Development (PBD) support services delivery component.

It aims to promote rural development by linking the ARCs in the economic mainstream and open up development potentials in order to increase productivity and income.

As per DAR-Iloilo report dated Feb. 15, 2012, the project covering the site Bingauan-Ginawahan Bridge located in Bingauan, Badiangan, Iloilo already has a memorandum of agreement and with materials available and ready for installation.

The Camangahan-Bacong Bridge in Camangahan, Guimbal, Iloilo, the Cadinglian Bridge in Cadinglian, Oton, Iloilo, and Ginot-an Bridge in Ginot-an, San Joaquin, Iloilo are under on-going surveys and for geo-testing.

The Calumbuyan Bridge in Calumbuyan, New Lucena, Iloilo, and the Nabitasan Bridge in Nabitasan, Pototan, Iloilo are for survey and geological testing.

In the same report, nine other bridges in the province also underwent validation.

DAR-Iloilo said that the validation of feasible sites involved criteria which included the density of agrarian reform beneficiaries (ARBs), density of CARP-covered areas and ARCs.

On one hand, the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH)-6 said the implementation of the TPKP projects here is under the Project Management Office (PMO) of the DPWH Central Office.

DENR finalizes manual for environment related issues

(JCM/ESS/PIA-Iloilo)

ILOILO CITY, Feb. 3(PIA)—The Manual of Operations for the conduct of the Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) to resolve environmental-related issues is being put in place.

This as the Department of Environment and Natural Resources held a three-day writeshop to complete and finalize the manual.

Jesse L. Vego, DENR-6 Assistant Director for Technical Operations, said this serves as the “bible” of the accredited ADR mediators.

The DENR in Western Visayas has created a mediation board composed of 17 mediators trained by the Philippine Mediation Center.

Vego said that the ADR Manual will guide them in the conduct of mediation procedures as they make the effort to attain out-of-court settlement of environment and natural resources-related disputes.

He added that they have made revisions and polishing of the manual, customized to the need of the mediators, wherever area they may be assigned.

Atty. Noel Empleo, chief, DENR-6 Legal Division, said that the ADR Manual is the first among the DENR offices in the country.

“We are working hard, as stewards of peace, on achieving meaningful settlement of these controversies,” Empleo said.

Last year, the DENR was able to settle three land disputes out of the 19 cases mediated, where concerned parties signed a Compromise Agreement which they are expected to abide.

Empleo said that cases do not get settled fast, some cases failed, some are reset for another mediation schedule and some are subjected to formal investigation.

Republic Act No. 9285 or the ADR Law provides for the adoption of the alternative dispute resolution to resolve environmental and antural resources-related issues, disputes and controversies other than by adjudication of any magistrate, court or tribunal.

PHL to host Madrid Fusion

(JCM/LTP/PIA-Iloilo)

ILOILO CITY, February 2 (PIA) --- The Department of Tourism (DOT) in Western Visayas urged local chefs and food aficionados in the region to take part in Madrid Fusion, one of the biggest gastronomic events in the world.

The Philippines, hosting the first Madrid Fusion in Asia on April 24-26, is one of the highlights of Visit Philippines Year 2015.

In a media release, DOT-6 Regional Director Helen Catalbas said that Madrid Fusion aims to highlight the country as a culinary center of excellence in Asia.

“It is one great opportunity for all the chefs and food aficionados to learn new things and share their talents,” she said.

Madrid Fusion, held annually in Madrid Spain, is attended by elite chefs and experts in the culinary field to discuss trends, the evolution of tastes and new food habits.

Arum Estratigias Internationalizacion, S.I., and Foro de Debate S.I., the legal owner of the Madrid Fusion trademark inked an agreement with DOT to jointly organize the activity dubbed as Madrid Fusion – Manila 2015.

The international event will feature a Gastronomy Congress and a Trade Exhibition with a nationwide month-long “Flavors of the Philippines Festival” in April.

The activity envisions to showcase an encounter between Spanish and Filipino chefs to celebrate 300 years of shared history.

Around 1,400 participants (700 international delegates and 700 Philippine delegates) are expected to join the Gastronomy Congress and 170 exhibitors from Spain and the Philippines for the Trade Exhibition.

Nineteen most influential and avant-garde Spanish, Asian and Philippine chefs will share the latest culinary trends and techniques during the congress: eight from Spain, one from Asia and 10 from the Philippines.

Madrid Fusion – Manila will also feature the regional lunches where finest dishes and produce from the country’s three main island: Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao will be presented

Interested food aficionados can register online at www.madridfusionmanila.com and take advantage of the special 5+1 group rate. Early bird rate (10% off) is also available for local delegates and local students if payment is made by February 28, 2015.

Iloilo population breaches 1.8M

(PIA-Iloilo/PN)

ILOILO City – The population of the province of Iloilo stands at 1,835,099 based on the result of the 2011 Comprehensive Population Data Banking and Management Project (CPDBMP) of the Provincial Population Office (PPO).

The CPDBMP result, which is now in book form, was formally launched in a ceremony attended by Gov. Arthur Defensor Sr., Commission on Population executive director Juan Antonio Perez, local chief executives, heads and representatives of national government agencies and departments of the provincial capitol, and population officers of the different municipalities.

CPDBMP is a summary of important events and information from the 2011 household survey of the province undertaken by the personnel of the PPO with the support of the provincial, municipal and barangay officials, community workers and volunteers and other stakeholders.

The 2011 survey placed the population growth rate at 1.97 percent in the period 2010-2011.

In the 2010 Census of Population and Housing conducted by the then National Statistics Office, the population of the province is at 1,805,576 with a growth rate of 1.48 percent in the period 2000-2010.

Further, the 2011 CPDBMP result showed that of the total population, the component city of Passi registered the highest number with 84, 464 among the 42 municipalities and one component city of the province.

Other municipalities included in the top five in terms of population size are Oton with 83,179, Pototan with 72,123, Lambunao with 71,059 and Dumangas with 66,631.

The municipality of Bingawan registered the lowest number of population with 14, 235.

Aside from demographics, the book also contains data that reflect people situation in the province on areas of economics, education, and activities that impact on environment.

PPO chief Ramon Yee said they have come up with the survey in their desire to answer one of their mandated functions under the Local Government Code to establish and maintain an updated population databank for program operations, development planning, and educational program to ensure people’s participation and understanding of population development.