By Pearl Nerja Po
The Department of Environment and Natural
Resources (DENR) entered into two agreements with the Land Bank of the
Philippines (LBP) to collaborate on environmental protection and job creation.
Environment
Secretary Ramon J.P. Paje and LBP president and CEO Gilda Pico signed the
partnership agreements on the implementation of the bank’s Adopt-A-Watershed
Program (AAWP) and ‘GawadPatnubay’ Scholarship Program (GPSP) at the bank’s
head office in Manila.
“The
two programs highlight the LBP’s commitment to strike a balance between
promoting countryside development and incorporating environmental management
practices in its operations and services,” Paje said.
Now on
its third phase, the AAWP involves the rehabilitation of 60 hectares of denuded
and degraded forestlands. The LBP and DENR have been partners for the program
since the first phase in 2006.
Pico, for
her part, said the DENR-LBP agreements take their partnership “a step further
as we expand what we have started in 2006,” noting that the partnership
supports LBP’s agenda to tap the power of volunteerism as a key element in
promoting rural development anchored in sustainable development principles.
“As firm
advocates of environmental protection, we at Landbank welcome this opportunity
to contribute not only in the preservation and protection of our watersheds,
but also in the promotion of environmental protection through volunteerism,”
Pico said.
The
undertaking will involve LBP’s workforce nationwide and the different people’s
organizations involved in Landbank’s various poverty alleviation projects,
according to her.
Under their
renewed partnership, LBP will shell out P1.8 million to cover the cost of
planting and maintenance of the planted seedlings, including monitoring
activities and capability building of implementing partners.
The
DENR, will provide technical support in terms of site and species selection,
designation of focal persons and formulation of rehabilitation plans with
concerned people’s organizations.
Some
14 hectares of degraded forestlands were rehabilitated during the first phase
of the project and 40 hectares during the second phase.
Meanwhile,
Pico also expressed her gratitude to the DENR as the newest partner of LBP’s ‘GawadPatnubay’
Scholarship Program, citing the important role the DENR plays in helping the
bank address rural poverty by producing graduates in agriculture-related
courses.
Under the
GPSP agreement, the DENR has opened its facilities and manpower at any DENR
offices nationwide for the conduct of job readiness and skills training or
internship of LANDBANK’s scholars.
GPSP
involves a 10-week internship program dubbed ‘Education-to-Employment’ or E2E
for its graduates to help them develop their career goals and learn the needed
skills in the real world.
The first
batch of GSPS interns consists of 10 graduates of agriculture, agriculture
chemistry and agriculture business courses. Seven of them graduated with honors
either magna cum laude or cum laude.
“The
DENR, too, shares the LBP’s vision of providing a solid base of education for
the next generation of agri-scientists and farmers,” Paje said.
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