New hope for hard-up entrepreneurs of Tabuk
>> Sunday, December 9, 2012
By Geraldine Dumallig
TABUK CITY, Kalinga -- A
whole day of repetitive and tedious manual labor, with little time to do
household chores.
This was how the folks of
Barangay Balawag, here particularly fresh coffee processors described their day
to day activity just to produce needed volume of ground coffee to earn a
living.
Produce are sold in a market
located at the center of Tabuk, about 45 minutes away from Balawag through a
rough and partially concreted farm-to-market road.
Coffee processing starts with
roasting of at least 10 kilos of dried beans which takes at least an hour and a
half to do with non-stop stirring to keep the beans evenly roasted.
At the workplace, folks
devised their stoves by digging a small portion in their backyard with a
diameter of around two feet to keep the fire burning and to maintain high
temperature. A shed was also in place to shelter the workers.
An improvised long ladle is
for stirring -- suspended and fastened on the shed’s beam so workers don’t have
to carry it while stirring and they could do the job sitting down.
They have to endure the heat
and monotonous stirring for more than an hour to complete the roasting. Later, they manually grind or pound the
roasted beans to achieve its powdery texture ready for packaging.
Selling it through retail
would at times require a whole day stay vending at the city market. Earnings are
used to buy household needs. But the bulk is saved to buy coffee beans from
traders for processing the next day, in time again for the succeeding market
day.
For most of them, this is
their main livelihood.
Basically it takes all the
time of a worker to do the whole routine of processing to selling the ground
coffee that would satisfy customers who are fond of freshly brewed coffee.
Teresita Baawa, a coffee
processor and member of the Balawag Multi-Purpose Cooperative said coffee
processing has become a full time job, which at times makes it difficult
for the women, as
mother and housewife , to fulfill their other duties.
“Once you started roasting,
you won’t have the time to do other household chores. But this we have to do
since we must first of all earn a living,” she said.
But such would soon become a
thing of the past. These workers, composed mostly of housewives, would now
have time for their families and
themselves with reduced time from strenuous coffee processing activities –
thanks to the Department of Trade and Industry.
On Nov. 23, 2010, the first
set of machines was delivered to the BMPC coffee processors in Balawag.
The package included a
stainless coffee roasting machine, model A-1 which could roast around 20
kilograms (kg) per operation; a stainless coffee grinding machine, model A-1
that has a capacity to grind 40 kg of coffee per hour; a coffee pulper/depulper
with a capacity of 30 kg/hr; coffee huller, stainless coffee drum, and
stainless detachable working table.
These were all fabricated by
a local engineer name Manuel Sarol and purchased at a much cheaper price by the
government.The equipment also includes a packaging sealer.
Funding came from the Rural
Micro-entrepreneur Promotion Program (RuMEPP), a subsidiary of DTI assisting in
developing micro-business in rural areas.
Jeffrey Pasikan, coffee coordinator
of DTI-Kalinga said the coffee processing and packaging equipment would help
the Balawag processors double or even triple their income through the Shared
Service Facility scheme.
The scheme, he said requires
a group, which is the BMPC, to operate and manage the equipment to ensure its
maintenance and that all members are being serviced. Private processors he said,
are also allowed to use the equipment depending on their agreement with the
BMPC.
Kalinga through the BMPC is
piloting said DTI project in the
Cordillera Region.With a machine to help them in their livelihood, each
processor could now come up with more than the usual 7,500 to 8,500 grams of
ground coffee produced from at the usual 10 kilos dried beans which they are
roasting in an average day’s work.
The volume of produce also
relies greatly on the beans’ quality.With this development, members of the BMPC
are elated and looking forward to more profitable activity.The
beneficiaries are also grateful that they could now utilize their time usually
spent in processing the beans to do household chores and farming.
To enhance their
productivity, the DTI through an inter-agency effort is also spearheading a
coffee planting project initially targeting at least 120 hectares for the
project.
This according to Pasikan
would ensure the availability of raw coffee for the processors and to convert
the barren lands and kaingins into more productive areas and as a mitigating
measure to climate change.
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