COMMUNITY BILLBOARD
>> Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Old-timer family donates land to
city government
An old-timer Baguio family donated a 95-hectare land to the
city government for maintenance as a forest and research area.
This is a welcome development for the city now mired in problems on land
grabbing, squatting and spurious ancestral land claims.
Mayor Mauricio Domogan on Wednesday received the lot documents for the donation
from the family of Virginia De Guia, former vice mayor and acting city mayor.
“We thank the family for their generous donation to the city. This is
really a good development for the city,” he said.
The mayor said apart from the land, the family also donated the road lots
adjacent to the property located in Sto. Tomas, Green Valley.
The mayor said the lot was bought by the De Guia patriarch, Victor, from the
Carino family a long time ago and it is only now that the intestate proceedings
have been completed.
He said the family’s only condition in the donation was for the city to
maintain the area as a forest and research center.
He said the documents will be forwarded to the city council for approval.
The area will also be subjected to a survey and evaluation for the city to
determine other suitable uses the land may serve in line with the city’s public
service mandate. – Aileen P.
Refuerzo
Council cites two athletes for
medals in Asian Games
The city council recently passed Resolution No. 004, series
of 2014 congratulating and commending two Baguio-based athletes who won in the
recently concluded 27th South East Asian Games held at Myanmar.
Said two Baguio-based athletes represented the Philippines
competed in the sports competition.
Helen Dawa garnered a
silver medal in the judo event and Maricris Igam was able to get the bronze
medal in the boxing competition.
“Their hauled medals in the tough competitions have not only
brought honor and pride to our beloved city but to our country as a whole, and
that their astounding talents and skills are testament to our country’s heart
and strong will in the sports competition, the council said in their citation.
-- Jho Arranz
Signboards
imposed on Ifugao biz establishments
By
Marcelo Lihgawon
LAGAWE, Ifugao --
The municipal council recently
placed sign boards containing
reminders for welfare of minors here in
business establishments.
The posting
in internet cafes, computer shops or gaming centers, billiard halls and other similar
establishments was authorized by a municipal ordinance to protect children
against exploitation.
The said
ordinance said the local government unit (LGU) is duty-bound to protect its
constituents against establishments whose unregulated operation would
contribute in the formation of rebellious and defiant character or jeopardizing
the well-being of children.
“We hope
this would send a strong message to establishments concerned on their moral and
social responsibility to keep minors from engaging in activities that are not
appropriate for their age and may destroy their future,” mayor Ceasario Cabbigat said.
The mayor
urged the cooperation of everyone particularly business owners.
Removal of
signboards in establishments is punishable with P1,000 for the first offense;
second offense - P3,000 and one month suspension of license or permit to
operate and P5,000 and permanent revocation of license or permit to operate for
the third offense.
Samaritans give young dad, girl new lease on life
BAGUIO CITY -- Housewife Ofelia
Nalos found relief there are more Samaritans out there. She wrote she was
amazed “to know that in our cruel world, there are still a lot of people who
are willing to help the needy ones like us”.
In a note to them, the 29-year old
mother to a three-year old girl said “you were able to extend or save someone’s
life”.
Her husband, 31-year old Leonard
Nalos, made it to the new year because Samaritans earlier pooled P15,200 that
paid for six hemodialysis treatments he underwent at two sessions
per week.
Early this January, Ofelia asked
that her family’s gratitude to them be published. Her gesture of thanks drew
more benefactors who contributed a total of P17,136,
A family from the United States
sent P7,136 through Juliet Cosep of BPI Family Bank. Mackay Enterprises at the
third floor of Abanao Square handed over P2,500 while a woman who introduced
herself as from Sagada, Mt. Province gave an equal amount.
Capt. Ramon Ernesto Tagle from the
VTA Foundation delivered P5,000 for two hemodialysis sessions.
Last Christmas break, a certain
Jad Pasan read of Leonard’s plight and opened up with a P5,000 donation.
Engr. Taule of the La Trinidad Water District contributed P2,500 while a
Session Road restaurant owner gave P2,200, the cost of one treatment.
The Willy Family of Pinsao
shared while Adelie Faed of Bontoc, Mt. Prov ince added P500. A man claiming to
be from Ifuago handed over P2,200.
A few days before Christmas day,
Ofelia was desperate as Leonard was about to miss his treatment due to
fund lack. A carpenter and native of San Quintin, Pangasinan, he had been
sidelined since last February when he underwent his first four-hour
hemodialysis session after doctors told him his two kidneys had failed.
Ofelia, whose roots are from
Besao, Mt. Province, and in Lamut, Ifugao, spends her hours taking care of her
husband and Ira, their three-year old daughter and trying to figure out from
where to pay the next hemodialysis session.
Those who can help may visit
Leonard during his dialysis sessions scheduled at 1 p.m. on Mondays, 4 p.m. on
Wednesdays and 9 p.m. on Saturdays at the Baguio General Hospital and Medical
Center. They can call Ofelia’s cellphone number: 09084672238.
As Ofelia’s story of gratitude was
about to be sent to the weeklies, another kidney patient came and asked if her
own expression of thanks could also beat the deadline.
Leah Lyn Talangan’s medical
condition published last Jan. 12 triggered response from several Samaritans who
came up with a total of P2600 she badly needed to sustain her thrice-a-week
hemodialysis treatment at the BGHMC.
A certain Ate Flor visited while
Leah was confined at the hospital last Jan. 12 and handed P3,000. A certain
Celestina later went to her boarding house and gave P4,000. A donor, believed
to be an expatriate with the initials DJA sent P6,000 through Cebuana Lhuiller.
A couple from Bontoc, Mt. Province
met Leah at the St. Vincent Church here las tjan. 15 and contributed P3,000.
While she was on dialysis last Jan. 2, a man who requested anonymity visited
and handed P10,000.
Last Friday afternoon, a man who
said he was from Bontoc, Mt. Province added P5,000.
“May God bless you more,”
Leah wrote in letter she handed last Friday afternoon.
Leah, 26, is the eldest of six
children of an aging farmer-couple from Talubin, Bontoc, Mt. Province. She was
working at Texas Instruments-Baguio when she was forced to quit last year due
to chronic kidney disease.
She began her thrice-a-week
dialysis treatment the other May and is now scheduled on the 4 p.m.-8 p.m.
shift at the BGHMC every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.
She had wanted to be a
geodetic engineer but failed to finish the course at the Mountain Province
Polytechnic College due to fund lack. She now stays with cousins in a boarding house
at Purok 6, Military Cut-off here in Baguio.
“I have to be in Baguio to be near
the hemodialysis treatment center,” she said.
Samaritans may call her number –
09297348367. – Ramon Dacawi
Housewife appeals for husband blinded by diabetes
Housewife Glory Tandoc waited for
this Sunday morning, when the medical case of her husband Leandro is carried in
the weeklies so Samaritans out there would read and be able to respond.
Leandro. A 64-year old father of
three and a native of Bakun, Benguet, won’t be able to read his story. He has
been blind for about 11 years now, a complication of diabetes which also
triggered kidney failure.
Glory, 51, said Leandro was
diagnosed for stage 5 or end-stage kidney failure in 2005. Since then, he has
been on expensive, thrice-a-week hemodialysis treatment needing P2,200 per
session at the Baguio General Hospital and Medical Center.
Last Friday morning, Glory was out
seeking cash donors to be able to purchase five vials of iron sucrose her
husband badly needs. A donation of P3,000 from a city hall lady employee
enabled her purchase two units at a discounted price of P1,400 using Leandro’s
card as a senior citizen.
Half of the donated amount was
used by, another mother, Benita Ayson, who was also searching for donors so she
could by two units of type O+ needed by her daughter Nancy, who is also
undergoing hemodialysis for kidney failure.
The Tandoc family stays at No. 72,
Purok 11, Upper Pinget here in Baguio. The members are dependent on Leandro’s
monthly pension of P13,000 and the earnings of his daughter April who works as
a nurse.
April’s brother Kansas, 22, is
also a nurse, while Noel, the youngest sibling at 20, finished electrical
engineering. Both, however, are unemployed.
“(Leandro’s) pension is mainly for
the medicines and basic needs of the family, which is sometimes sacrificed for
the for the client’s medication,” noted social welfare officer Jeterda Junio in
a social case study report on the patient.
Those who can extend their support
may ring up Glory’s cellphone number:09283234400. They may see Leandro during
his hemodialysis schedule at the BGHMC at 7 a.m. on Monday, Wednesday and
Saturday. – Ramon Dacawi
Registration for employment of
students on in Baguio
The registration for the Special Program for the Employment
of Students (SPES) is now on at the Public Employment Service Office (PESO) at
City Hall.
PESO Baguio labor and employment officer Romelda Escano said
that as in the past years, 300 slots are available under the program on a
first-come-first-served basis.
Applicants must be bonafide residents of Baguio, physically
fit, 15-25 years old, must be currently enrolled or a student who has not been
able to enroll for the past semester of academic year but is intending to enroll
this school year.
They must have garnered an average passing grade during the
last school term attended and must belong to families whose combined net income
after tax does not exceed the latest annual regional poverty threshold level
for a family of six pegged at P116,898.
Registrants must bring two sets of the following documents:
dully filled out pre-numbered SPES application form with 1x1 ID pictures; birth
or baptismal certificate or Form 138 where the date of birth is indicated;
certification from the school registrar as to the applicant’s last enrolment
and average passing grade or Form 138 or copy of original class card; copy of
parents’ or guardians’ most recent Income Tax Return (BIR Form 2316) or BIR
certification of tax payment exemption or barangay certificate. For
out-of-school youth, a certificate of good moral character will be required
issued by the barangay.
Applicants including former SPES grantees must register personally at the PESO
at the 2nd Floor of the Baguio City Hall from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Mondays to Fridays until February 28.
Registered SPES applicants will undergo a general orientation on March 2 9 a.m.
at the Multi-Purpose Hall City Hall while the qualifying examinations will be
held on March 9.
The program is designed to help poor students and out-of-school youth
support their education.
The grantees are entitled to receive over P8,000 in
wages. Sixty percent of said amount will be paid by the city government
while the DOLE will shoulder the remaining 40 percent through education
vouchers.
The SPES is based on Republic Act No. 7323 or an Act to Help
Poor but Deserving Students Pursue their Education by Encouraging their
Employment during Summer and/or Christmas Vacations, through Incentives Granted
to Employers, Allowing them to Pay only Sixty per Centum of their Salaries or
Wages and the Forty per Centum through Education Vouchers to be paid by the
Government, Prohibiting and Penalizing the Filing of Fraudulent or Fictitious
claims and for other purposes. – Aileen
P. Refuerzo
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