COMMUNITY BILLBOARD
>> Monday, September 23, 2013
Espino turns over first Phl orthography primer
LINGAYEN, Pangasinan – Gov. Amado Espino Jr. turned over to Department
of Education officials the Pangasinan Orthography Primer as the highlight of
the Pangasinan Tourism Month celebration here last week.
“We are the first in the entire country to have our Pangasinan
orthography so that our local teachers can teach their students our own
language the right way,” Espino said.
He said the provincial government commissioned this first attempt to
formulate the orthography of the Pangasinan language, and it was done on purely
voluntary basis by the writers of UlopannaPansiansiaySalitanPangasinan (Group
to Perpetuate the Use of Pangasinan Language), and a team of academicians,
linguists, and a cultural worker, under the official guidance of the
KomisyonngWikang Filipino.
Espino said this is part of instilling in students their love for their
province and in support of the DepEd’s program to use the vernacular in
teaching various subjects under the K-12 program.
Through the Pangasinan orthography, he said proper diction and spelling,
among others, are taught.
Espino has been espousing various programs geared toward love for the
province and the local language.
Fr. Immanuel Escano, commissioner of the Pangasinan Historical and
Cultural Commission and member of the committee that created the primer, said
this would be useful to teachers in using the mother tongue as implemented now
by the DepEd.
Escano said it is understandable that teachers encounter difficulties in
the initial use of the Pangasinan language and its orthography, like in any
undertaking in its initial stage, “because no one thought about doing it
before.”
Game
fowl breeders share P30,000
to kids of the blind
BAGUIO CITY -- Local
game fowl raisers last week-end added a humanitarian element to their hobby by
providing P30,000 to help pay for the miscellaneous expenses of 43 children of
members of the Baguio Federation of Visually Impaired Persons (BFOVIP).
Former city councilor
Antonio Tabora Jr., Dr. Edward Dogui-is and Engr. James Oyaman represented
members of the United Baguio-Benguet Breeders Association (U3BA) in handing
over the support fund to the federation headed by Valentine Manginga
during a program last Sept. 14 at the city social welfare and
development office.
The fund came from
earnings of the U3BA in cock derbies in coordination with the national
association of game fowl breeders.
Dogui-is said one
child per family was recommended by the BFOVIP to receive cash support ranging
from P6,000 for each in the elementary grades and up to P1,000 each for those
in high school to augment their regular stipends from their
parents.
Tabora added that the
U3BA is also set to distribute school bags to children before the end of the
year, also as part of its social responsibility thrust.
On his own, U3BA
member Gilbert Tanding recently began setting aside a regular fund from gate
receipts during Monday hack fights at the Shilan Sports Arena in La
Trinidad, Benguet for medical support to indigent patients.
Among those who have
availed of his support are three hemodialysis patients – barangay kagawad
Jocelyn Singson of barangay Bahong and 19-year old DharrenGawili of barangay
Balipi, both in La Trinidad, and Belinda Allosa of Pinsao, Baguio City; Ruben
Tomayan, also of Bahong; and heart patient Ruben Lalan, formerly of Virac,
Itogon, Benguet; and two siblings who are on maintenance medicine for
bipolar disorder. – Ramon Dacawi
Mother
seeks help in dialysis
treatment
Thirty four-year old
Evelyn Guiniguin-Bautista, a truck driver’s wife and mother to two young girls,
has been confined for a month now at the Baguio General Hospital and Medical
Center for complications of kidney failure.
“She has difficulty
breathing and is on oxygen support,” her sister, Joanna Guiniguin-Dang-ay said
last week . Joanna was making the rounds of offices, in search of
gentle souls who could support her sister’s twice-a-week hemodialysis treatment
needed to cleanse the blood and prevent poisoning.
Evelyn, the fifth of
nine children of “kaingin” (swidden) farmers Pedro and Antonia Guiniguin of
Talnag, Ampucao, Itogon, Benguet, was diagnosed for end-stage renal failure
last February.
She was experiencing
dizziness and her face had bloated,” Joanna recalled. “She has been on dialysis
since then, scheduled at 3 p.m. on Wednesdays and 8 p.m. on Saturdays at the
BGHMC.”
Problem was she had
just used up a P17,600 guarantee support from the Philippine Charity
Sweepstakes Office for the dialysis treatments pegged at P2,200 per session.
“She had applied for
Philhealth membership but it will take sometime before she will be eligible for
coverage,” Joanna rued.
In a social case study
report, social welfare assistant Sharon Baroa of the municipal social welfare
and development office in Itogon said Evelyn’s latest dialysis sessions were
paid from a P5,000 donation of members of her church – the Assembly of God.
“The meager income of
the client’s husband (Ariel) as a driver earning P5,000 a month is being
stretched to buy…the basic needs of the family, and if there is excess, it is
often used for the education… of the children,” Baroa pointed out.
The two kids, Arlene,
12, and Lyka, 11, go to school at the Philex Elementary School.
As Evelyn’s cellphone
was stolen, people who can help may ring up her sister Joanna’s mobile
(09109162377) or they may directly pay the cost of one dialysis session
at the BGHMC during her scheduled treatment on Wednesday or Saturday. – Ramon
Dacawi
;
Number
coding scheme suspension
set Oct. 3-4
BAGUIO CITY
- With the city of Baguio hosting the “Kabayan Ko, Kapatid Ko” medical
mission sponsored by the Iglesia ni Cristo this coming October, Mayor
Mauricio Domogan issued Administrative Order No. 117, suspending the
implementation of the Baguio number coding scheme for private vehicles on Oct.
3 to 4.
Over 100,000 local residents
and visitors are expected to attend the medical mission at the Baguio Athletic
Bowl.
“There is a need to
suspend the implementation of the Baguio number coding scheme for private
vehicles to provide our local residents and visitors, particularly the
organizers, sponsors, and participants from the different parts of Northern
Luzon and their families convenient and stress-free journey around the city to
help boost the city’s identity as the tourist destination in the country,” said
the mayor. – Paul Rillorta
Crackdown
on vs rich CCT
beneficiaries
DAGUPAN CITY,
Pangasinan — The city government here
will crack down on individuals listed as beneficiaries of the government’s
PantawidPamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps) despite being affluent members of the
community.
Under the 4Ps, the
conditional cash transfer (CCT) program of the national government is only for
indigent families to assist them in sending their children to school and
augment their basic needs.
A city official who
declined to be identified said an investigation has showed that at least two
affluent families in this city have been receiving benefits under the 4Ps.
Rules
set for ambulant
vendors
BAGUIO CITY
- Mayor Mauricio Domogan imposed rules in the implementation of the “zero
vending policy” in all roads, streets and sidewalks in the different parts of
the city.
The Baguio City Market
Authority (BCMA) adapted a “zero vending policy” through its Resolution No.
009-2013 and 9a-2013.
The city government
implemented clearing and cleaning operations against all sidewalk vendors even
as vending time for certain areas was allowed until such time that a relocation
site for the affected vendors be identified.
The designated
relocation areas include the parking area of Block IV, between Rillera and
Block III and between Block III and Block IV. Vendors were advised to submit
applications for screening and evaluation in order to be accommodated for a
possible slot.
However, BCMA will
give priority to vendors who are paying their obligations to the city and to
vendors with arrears but are still paying. Delinquent vendors since 2012 will
not be included in the priority list.
It is the
responsibility of the allocatees of vending slots to pay in advance during the
last week of the month to the city treasury office P600 to cover a one-month
occupancy of the slot.
Renters will not be
allowed to rent out or sub-lease the same, to observe cleanliness within
his/her vending space at all times. No allocatee will be allowed to lend
his/her vending space to another vendor for a certain period of time.—JhoArranz
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