Mambajao gets coastal
resource management level III
By Jorie C. Valcorza
MAMBAJAO, CAMIGUIN,
April 8 (PIA) – The local government unit of Mambajao is rated with level III
Coastal Resource Management Certification (CRMC) after successfully enunciating
to the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), the town’s top CRM
practices.
The certification
provides framework in benchmarking the LGUs performance in the delivery of CRM
as a basic service, as well as, a road map for planning future directions and
initiatives.
“Our winning initiatives
includes the delineation of its municipal waters, coastal zoning, fisheries
management, coastal law enforcement, multi-institutional collaboration, revenue
generation, and its campaign on the effective and efficient use of
coastal/marine resources,” Municipal CRMP coordinator, Fe A. Bilara said.
The LGU also enacted and
implemented several local legislations in support to CRM such as the Mambajao
Comprehensive Fisheries and Coastal Resource Management Code and the White
Island Marine Park Ordinance.
A total of 85-hectare
protected areas, covering some seven fish sanctuaries were also established in
the municipality to conserve and improve its marine biodiversity and maintain
the ecosystem’s health and processes. (PIA 10)
Updates: No
election-related incidents in CdeO—PNP
By Mark Anthony Dedoyco
CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY,
April 8 (PIA) -- There have been no records of election-related incidents in
Cagayan de Oro as of March this year based on set parameters by the Philippine
National Police (PNP) Region 10 according to PSupt. Ronnie Francis M. Cariaga,
Chief, Regional Public Information Officer.
In their crime
statistics data, the 598 crimes from January to March listed this year is
lesser than what has been documented in the same months last year which was
650. This is based on crime against person and crime against property.
Further, PSupt. Cariaga
said that they are taking initiatives in the issues on firearms in the whole
region especially with the gun ban mandated by Commission on Elections
(COMELEC) prior and after the elections.
From January 13 to March
2, they have confiscated 142 firearms. Specifically, there have been eight in
Bukidnon, 68 in Lanao del Norte, 12 in Misamis Occidental, 13 in Misamis
Oriental, 18 in Cagayan de Oro, and six in Iligan. (MAD/JMOR/PIA10)
Air passengers to get
fair deal with DOTC-DTI Joint Admin Order No. 1, s. of 2012
By Rutchie C. Aguhob
OZAMIZ CITY, Misamis
Occidental, April 7 (PIA) -- Air passengers can now get a fair deal from the
carriers during o delay of flight schedules and flight cancellations, as
spelled out in the “Air Passengers’ Bill of Rights.”
For example, if already
at the airport at the time of the announcement of the flight cancellation, a
passenger have the right to demand from the carrier, sufficient refreshments,
meals or snacks consisting of at least a bottle of water and sandwich, or
breakfast, lunch, dinner, or a voucher for the same, as the case may be.
The passenger shall also
have the right to demand for a hotel accommodation, conveniently accessible
from the airport, transportation from the airport to the hotel, free phone
calls, text or emails and first aid, if necessary.
Likewise, in case the
air carrier cancels the flight because of force "majeure" or
unforeseen circumstances, safety and/or security reasons, as certified by the
Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP), a passenger shall have the
right to be reimbursed for the full value of the fare.
The above conditions are
only some of the rights of air passengers and carrier obligations enumerated
under the Joint Administrative Order (JAO) No. 1, s. of 2012, of the Department
of Transportation and Communication and the Department of Trade and Industry
(DOTC-DTI) or the “Air Passenger’s Bill of Rights,” which is based on two laws:
RA 776, known as the Civil Aeronautics Act of the Philippines, with DOTC
through the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), as the agency mandated to regulate
the economic aspect of aviation and develop and promote the air potential of
the Philippines with due regard to public interest and convenience.
The second law is RA
7394, also known as the Consumer Act of the Philippines, with DTI as the agency
mandated to protect the consumers against deceit, unfair and unconscionable
sales acts or practices from misleading advertisements and fraudulent sales
promotions, other than those under the jurisdiction of the Department of Health
(DOH).
Approved by DOTC
Secretary Joseph Emilio Aguinaldo Abaya and DTI Secretary Gregory L. Domingo on
December 10, 2012, DOTC-DTI JAO No.1, lists down the following 12 rights of air
passengers and carrier obligations:
Right to Full, Fair and
Clear Disclosure of the Service Offered and All the Terms and Conditions of the
Contract of Carriage, Right to Clear and Non-Misleading Advertisements of, and
Important Reminders Regarding Fares, Right Against Misleading and Fraudulent
Sales Promotion Practices, Right to Transportation and Baggage Conveyance,
Right to be Processed for Check-in and Right to Sufficient Processing Time.
Right to Board Aircraft
for the Purpose of Flight, Right to Compensation and Amenities in Case of
Cancellation of Flight, Right to Compensation and Amenities in Case of Flight
Delay and Exceptions Thereto, Right to Compensation for Delayed, Lost and
Damaged Baggage, Right to Compensation in Case of Death or Bodily Injury of a Passenger
and Right to Immediate Payment of Compensation.
Thus, an air carrier
liable for any and all compensations provided by these rules shall make the
same available to the affected passenger at the air carrier’s counters at the
airport on the date when the occasion entitling the passenger to compensation occurred,
or at the main office or any branch of the air carrier at the discretion of the
passenger.
The air carrier shall
then tender a check for the amount specified, or cash, or the document
necessary to claim the compensation or benefits mentioned above, provided that
such document shall be convertible to cash, within 15 days from the date when
the occasion entitling the passenger to such compensation occurred.
(RCAguhob/PIA10-Misamis Occidental)
Rules on mass media
accreditation for 2013 elections out
By Lorry V. Gabule
ILIGAN CITY, Lanao del
Norte, April 7 (COMELEC) -- The Commission on Elections (COMELEC) has released
the guidelines for mass media accreditation in connection with the May 13,
automated national and local elections.
In Resolution No. 9649,
promulgated February 27, 2013, the COMELEC said that the coming elections will
generate “great media attention” and acknowledged the need to increase the
efficiency in the recording and monitoring of grants of accreditation to “avoid
the proliferation of spurious accreditation papers or media passes.”
“Duly accredited mass
media shall be given free access to polling places, voting centers and
canvassing centers for purposes of observing and reporting on election events
and processes,” the poll body said in the Resolution.
The COMELEC defined
‘media representatives’ as those “who are actively engaged in the pursuit of
information gathering and reporting or distribution, in any manner or form.”
Media representatives, the COMELEC said, include: Print Journalists, Television
Journalists, Photo Journalists, Online Journalists, Radio Journalists,
Novelists, Screenwriters, Playwrights, Feature Film makers, Documentary makers,
Television Production, Professional Photographers, Professional Videographers,
and Public Relations Contrators
All parties requesting
accreditation shall be required to submit a duly Accreditation Application
Form; two recently taken 2×2 colored photographs and an endorsement from the
newspaper, television, radio station or internet news agency employing the
applicant.
Visiting Foreign Media,
on the other hand, shall be required to submit photocopies of both sides of
their International Press Center (IPC) Card for the year 2013, aside from the
requirements mentioned above.
Manila-based Foreign
Media, meanwhile, are also required to submit an endorsement letter from their
Manila Bureau Chief and back-to-back photocopies of their IPC Cards, aside from
the requirements mentioned.
Application Forms for
accreditation shall be available at the COMELEC Education and Information
Department (COMELEC-EID) and in all COMELEC Offices nationwide. Application
forms may also be downloaded from the COMELEC Website
(http://www.comelec.gov.ph) and the website of the COMELEC-EID (http://www.comelec.wordpress.com)
and (http://mycomelec.tv/main).
Applications for
accreditation, according to the COMELEC, must be personally filed at the
COMELEC-EID, in the case of national and foreign media. Applications from the
Local Media shall be filed at the Office of the Provincial Election Supervisor
(OPES) concerned. The period for filing of applications will run from February
1, 2013 to April 15, 2013. “This period shall be non-extendible,” said the
COMELEC.
Media representatives
shall be issued a non-transferrable Media Card upon accreditation.
“Duly accredited
domestic and foreign media shall be allowed maximum access to all stages of the
electoral process subject only to conditions essential for the protection of
COMELEC personnel, property, and privileged information,” the COMELEC ruled.
(Comelec EID/PIA 10-LDN/lvg)
Comelec reactivates
registration records of public school teachers with BEI appointments
By Rutchie C. Aguhob
OZAMIZ CITY, Misamis Occidental,
April 7 (PIA) -- The Commission on Elections (Comelec) has reactivated the
registration records of public school teachers who have been appointed as
members of the Board of Election Inspectors (BEI) for the May 13 elections.
This, after they were
inadvertently deactivated due to their alleged failure to vote in the two
succeeding regular elections.
However, the concerned
teachers claimed to have voted in the May 10, 2010 national and local
elections, the first automated election, and based on preliminary verification,
the Comelec said they might have erroneously voted in the polling place of the
clustered precincts where they were assigned as members of the BEI.
They could not have left
their assignment on the day of the election but just voted in their assigned
polling place and not in the precinct where they were registered.
The Comelec rules that
only the public school teachers who are registered voters can be appointed as
members of the BEI.
Meanwhile, reports from
the field offices of the Comelec raised concern on the shortage of public
school teachers who were appointed to serve as members of the BEIs but whose
registration records were deactivated on the above-stated ground.
Similar issue arose in
the 2010 elections and the Comelec addressed the matter through Resolution No.
8878, promulgated on May 7, 2010, which resolved to activate the registration
records of the BEIs, in order for them to serve in the elections.
For the same reason and
in the exigency of the service, the Comelec said there is an imperative need to
activate the inadvertently deactivated registration records of the BEIs in
order for them to serve in the forthcoming May 13, national and local
elections.
Thus, Comelec Resolution
No. 9650 was promulgated by the Comelec, headed by Chairman Atty. Sixto
Brillantes, last Feb. 28, for the duly appointed public school teachers who
will serve as members of the Board of Election Inspectors (BEIs), in the
upcoming national and local elections. (RCAguhob/PIA-Misamis Occidental)
Outstanding Farmers tilt
is on
CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY,
April 6 (PIA) -- The Junior Chamber International (JCI)-Philippines will hold
its Mindanao launch for the search of The Outstanding Farmers of the
Philippines or TOFARM on Monday, April 8 here.
This year, JCI
Philippines as part of the initiatives to recognize young individuals and other
organization in the agriculture sector, is reviving and institutionalizing the
search and award for TOFARM.
"Our goal is to
foster steady increase of youth venturing in the agriculture sector, invigorating
investment and scientific advancement to achieve sustainable food supply. We
plan to achieve the various interventions such as advocacy promotions, training
and information sharing to cover various farming communities, "said Rommel
M. Cunanan, Chair, JCIP Search and Award for TOFARM.
Meanwhile, JCI
Philippines urges all the agricultural cooperatives or farmer cooperatives
chairpersons and leaders and/or representatives also of associations, producers
and individual farmers in Mindanao, to the event.
The JCI Philippines
established in 1949, is an affiliate of the Junior Chamber International (JCI),
a worldwide organization of young, active citizens creating positive change.
They are a membership-based nonprofit organization of young professionals’ ages
18 to 40 in 162 communities in the Philippines.
They seek targeted
solutions to the unique problems in their communities to build a better world,
creating global impact. JCIP is the same organization that founded the
prestigious search and award initiative for “The Outstanding Young Men (TOYM)”,
and the “The Outstanding Filipino (TOFIL).” (Marie-Zil Malinao/EOR/PIA10)
Saudi Arabia is hiring
1,000 female nurses
By Apipa P. Bagumbaran
CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY,
April 5 (PIA) --- The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) is need of female nurses,
according to the Philippine Overseas and Employment Administration (POEA)
Regional Extension Unit-10.
In an advisory issued
today, the POEA-10 announced a government to government hiring of 1,000 female
nurses with a basic salary of SR 4,080 for the KSA Ministry of Health.
Qualifications include
BS Nursing graduates or with Masteral Degree, minimum of four years’ experience
for BSN graduates or two years’ experience for those with Masteral degree, and
not more than 40 years old.
Qualified applicants are
advised to personally submit a detailed resume with job description, schools
credentials, employment certificates and other requirements at the manpower
Registry Division, Window M, Ground Floor of Blas F. Ople Building, Ortigas
Avenue corner EDSA in Mandaluyong City or at the POEA-10 Office located at the
ground floor of Trinidad Building, in Yacapin Street corner Corrales Avenue,
this city.
They may also register
online at www.eregister.poea.gov.ph. (APB-PIA 10)
April 9, a regular
holiday throughout the country
By Rutchie C. Aguhob
OZAMIZ CITY, Misamis
Occidental, AprIL 5 (PIA) -- President Benigno S. Aquino III has declared April
9, “Araw ng Kagitingan,” (Day of Valor), a regular holiday throughout the
country.
Also known as “Bataan
Day” or “Bataan and Corregidor Day,” April 9 is among the 10 regular holidays
for 2013 listed in Presidential Proclamation No. 459, signed by the President
on Aug. 16, last year.
The declaration is
pursuant to Republic Act No. 3022 entitled “An Act Proclaiming the Ninth Day of
April as Bataan Day and Declaring it as a Legal Holiday.”
Particularly, Section 1
of RA 3022 provides that “the ninth day of April is hereby proclaimed as Bataan
Day, and all public officials and citizens of the Philippines are enjoined to
observe such day with a one-minute silence at 4:30 o'clock in the afternoon,
and to hold appropriate rites in honor of the heroic defenders of Bataan and
their parents, wives and/or widows.”
The observance of the
April 9, 1942 Fall of Bataan, during World War II, brings to mind the infamous
“Bataan Death March” undergone by “close to 80,000 starving and sick soldiers
composed of some 68,000 Filipinos and 11,796 Americans.”
The said soldiers were
made to walk at dawn of the same day, an estimated distance of 140 kilometers
of dusty and muddy road from Bataan to Camp O’Donnell in Capaz, Tarlac.
This, after Major
General Edward P. King, Jr., Commander of the United States Armed Forces in the
East (USAFE) in Bataan surrendered them to the Japanese Forces, against the
orders of General Jonathan Wainwright, Commander of the Luzon Force and General
Douglas MacArthur, Commander of the Far East.
Tired, weary, hungry,
thirsty and stripped of their belongings, not to mention their untreated
wounds, heat exposure and loss of sleep, the Filipino and American soldiers
were ruthlessly beaten by the Japanese, along the way.
Countless soldiers who
fell on the road were killed by the Japanese and only more than 50,000 of the
prisoners of war (POW) reached their destination. (RCAguhob/PIA10-Misamis
Occidental)
DOLE issues guidelines
for the April 9 regular holiday pay
By Rutchie C. Aguhob
OZAMIZ CITY, Misamis
Occidental, April 5 (PIA) -- The Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) has
issued the guidelines for the April 9 regular holiday pay.
Pursuant to the Labor
Advisory No. 06, series of 2012, signed by DOLE Secretary Rosalinda Dimapiles-Baldoz,
last Dec. 10, the following guidelines in the computation for the April 9 pay
will apply:
If the employee did not
work, he/she shall be paid 100 percent of his/her salary for that day or the
daily rate plus cost of living allowance (COLA) times 100 percent [(Daily rate
+ COLA) x 100%].
If the employee worked,
he/she shall be paid 200 percent of his/her regular salary for that day for the
first eight hours [(Daily rate + COLA) x 200%].
If the employee worked
in excess of eight hours (overtime work), he/she shall be paid an additional 30
percent of his/her hourly rate on said day [Hourly rate of the basic daily wage
x 200% x 130% x number of hours worked].
If the employee worked
during a regular holiday that also falls on his/her rest day, he/she shall be
paid an additional 30 percent of his/her daily rate of 200 percent [(Daily rate
+ COLA) x 200%] + [30% of his/her daily rate of 200%)].
If the employee worked
in excess of eight hours (overtime work) during a regular holiday that also falls
on his/her rest day, he/she shall be paid an additional 30 percent of his/her
hourly rate on said day (Hourly rate of the basic daily wage x 200% x 130% x
130% x number of hours worked). (RCAguhob/PIA10-Misamis Occidental)
Comelec sets aside P30M
for insurance of DepEd, non-DepEd personnel serving in the May elections
By Rutchie C. Aguhob
OZAMIZ CITY, Misamis
Occidental, April 5 (PIA) -- At least P30 million in insurance have been set
aside by the Commission on Elections (Comelec) for the Department of Education
(DepEd) and non-DepEd personnel serving in the upcoming elections.
The amount will be used
by the said personnel who may sustain election-related death or injuries in the
performance of election duties on May 13, 2013.
In the case of death
while in the performance of election duties, however, the heirs of the deceased
official/employee shall be given the amount of P200,000.
This provision is found
in Comelec Resolution No. 9640 promulgated last Feb. 15, entitled “General
Instructions for the Board of Election Inspectors (BEI) on the Testing and
Sealing, Voting, Counting and Transmission of Results in Connection with the
May 13, 2013 national and local elections.”
Meanwhile, the same
resolution provides that there shall be at least one DepEd Supervisor and one
support staff for every voting center and in cases of polling centers with more
than 10 clustered precincts, an additional DepEd Supervisor with one support
staff.
On the other hand,
Comelec Resolution 9640 has set an honorarium of P3,000, each, for the chairman
and members of the BEI’s and an additional P500, each for the Testing and
Sealing of the Precinct Count Optical Scanner (PCOS) Machines and another P500,
each, for one-time transportation allowance and the BEI Support Staff, an
honorarium of P1,500, each.
The DepEd Supervisors
shall, likewise, receive an honorarium of P3,000, and their support staff, an
honorarium of P1,500, each.
Comelec Resolution 9650
also provides that all the BEI members and their staff, as well as the DepEd
Supervisors and their staff will be given, each, three days of service credits,
i. e., day before elections, during the elections day itself and day after
elections. (RCAguhob/PIA10-Misamis Occidental)
Marawi City mayoralty
bets sign peace accord
By Apipa P. Bagumbaran
MARAWI CITY, Lanao del
Sur, April 5 (PIA) -- The four mayoralty candidates here signed a peace
covenant to affirm their commitment to a peaceful and clean elections this May
2013 elections.
Re-electionist Fahad
Salic led incumbent vice-mayor Noryasmin Calandada and the other two mayoralty
aspirants, Acmad Maruhom and Punduma Sani, in signing the covenant.
As part of the
agreement, each of the aspirants vowed to settle their differences in the past
and not to cause anything that will affect the lives, properties, and dignity
of their relatives, supporters and the general public.
They also pledged to
uphold the rule of law and not to resort to any forms of violence and cheating
during the elections.
The signing of the peace
covenant, held yesterday at Plaza Cabili in Barangay Banggolo, was initiated by
Task Force Kasalimbago to ensure safe, fair, and peaceful elections.
Task Force Kasalimbago
is composed of the Commission on Elections, Philippine Army, Philippine
National Police, Department of Education and civil society organizations.
The covenant signing was
also witnessed by some members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front Ad Hoc
Joint Action Group (MILF-AHJAG), Bangsamoro Development Authority, and
International Monitoring Team (IMT).
Also present were
mayoralty bets in Kapai, Marantao, Saguiaran, Piagapo and Tagoloan towns who
also signed a separate peace covenant.
Brigadier General Daniel
Lucero, commanding officer of the 103rd Infantry Brigade, meanwhile assured the
public that he will not allow any soldier to be involved in election
irregularities.
Lucero, who also chaired
the Task Force Kasalimbago, reiterated that he will not push his soldiers to
harm’s way just to guard cheating during the elections. (APB/PIA10)
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