Libreng lubi ipanghatag sa PCA

TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol, Aug. 14 (PIA)–Adunay programa karon ang Philippine Coconut Authority (PCA) nga manghatag og lubi.

Kini ang gipahibalo ni Jose Allan Cajilog, ang tigpamaba sa PCA atol sa information sharing sa mga miyembro sa Association of United Development Information Officers in Bohol (AUDIO-Bohol) sa ilang panagtapok niadtong Huwebes sa JJ’s Dimsum Restaurant.

Ang maong programa nga coconut seedling dispersal project sa PCA manghatag og mga libreng dwarf seed nuts sa lubi.

Matud pa ni Cajilog nga kadtong interesadong mangayo, mahimong moadto sa ilang mga lokal nga Municipal Agriculture Office (MAO) sa ilang lungsod.

Kini tungod kay ang mga PCA Coconut Development Officers naggunit naman og upat hangtud lima ka lungsod mao nga direkta na silang nakig-coordinate sa mga MAOs, sigun pa ni Cajilog.

Gawas niini, aduna usab dwarf coconut tree planting project ang kagamhanang probinsiyal diin gi-implementar kini sa pakig-abag sa PCA.

Dinhi, nangita ang kagamhanang probinsiyal og mga viable nga organisasyon ilabi na kadtong mga small coconut farmers association sa butahan sa PCA nga ilang gi-asistahan.

Ang kagamhanang probinsiyal ang mohatag sa mga organisasyon sa mga dwarf seed nuts nga ilang paturokon.

Maghimo lamang sila og nursery ug kadtong mga moturok nga seed nuts, bayaran pa gyud sa kagamhanang probinsiyal og P10.00 matag usa.

Kining maayong programa agi ug pagdasig sa mga mag-uuma sa pagtanom og mga lubi.

Kadtong ma-produce nga mga seedlings sa nursery sa mga organisasyon, ipanghatag ra usab kini sa mga katawhan nga interesadong magtanom.

Alang niining programaha, makig-coordinate lamang sa mga lokal nga MAO sa kalungsoran o moadto mismo sa mga Coconut Officers sa PCA ug libre lamang kining tanan.

Ang dwarf o mugbo nga lubi gi-promote karon sa kagamhanang probinsiyal tungod kay daghang mga investors nga nisulod sa Bohol ang nangita og mga continuous dwarf coconut population tungod sa kakusog sa demand sa coco sugar sa gawas sa nasud. (PIA-Bohol/ecb)

PWDs, gi-aghat sa Comelec sa pagparehistro karong adlawa; Pagparehistro sa mga binilanggo, nagsugod na usab

TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol, Aug. 11 (PIA)–Gi-aghat sa Commission on Elections (Comelec) ang mga adunay kakulian sa panglawas o persons with disabilities (PWD) nga pahimoslan ang special registration karong adlawa, Agosto 11.

Sa usa ka information sharing atol sa tigum sa mga miyembro sa Association of United Development Information Officers in Bohol (AUDIO-Bohol) sa niaging adlaw, miingon ang tigpamaba sa lokal nga buhatan sa COMELEC dinhi nga si Juvenal Beniga nga hatagan og prayoridad karong adlawa ang mga PWDs nga makaparehistro gikan sa alas 8 sa buntag hangtud alas 5 sa hapon.

Gibutyag ni Beniga nga adunay resolusyon nga libre ang pamasahe sa mga PWDs nga magparehistro karong adlawa nga abagahon sa mga local government units (LGUs).

Giingong kinahanglan lang sa mga PWDs nga magdala og valid ID.

Gipahibalo usab ni Beniga nga nagsugod na usab ang detainee registration kun pagparehistro sa mga binilanggo nga 18 anyos pataas ug nakadetena sulod sa mga detension centers nga dili mo-ubos sa unom ka buwan sa dili pa mag-eleksyon. (PIA-Bohol/ecb)

Recruitment pagka-pulis, gibuksan

TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol, Aug. 11 (PIA)–Gipahibalo sa Philippine National Police (PNP)

ang pagpangdawat nila karon og aplikasyon alang sa Police Officer 1.

Sa usa ka information sharing atol sa tigum sa mga miyembro sa Association of United Development Information Officers in Bohol (AUDIO-Bohol) niadtong Huwebes, gibutyag ni SPO1 Jennifer Atanacio nga kadtong mga interesadong mo apply, mahimong mo log-on lang sa ilang Facebook page nga RSS,PRO7 alang sa mga requirements.

Gikinahanglang naa sa 30 anyos paubos ug gradwado sa 4-year course ang usa ka alpikante.

Apan kun wala nakahuman og kurso ang interesadong aplikante, kinahanglan mokuha kini og pasulit sa National Police Commission (NAPOLCOM).

Sa Agosto 15 gitakda ang screening sa mga aplikante.

Gipahibalo usab ni Atanacio nga nagsugod na sila niadtong Miyerkoles sa pagpamilit og mga ‘Be safe be secured’ stickers sa mga pampublikong sakyanan dinhi sa syudad sa Tagbilaran.

Nakabutang dinhi ang mga hotline numbers sa Bohol Provincial Police Office.

Gi-require na usab kining maong mga stickers sa tanang mga lungsod nga ibutang dinhi ang mga hotline numbers sa ilang police station ug sa provincial headquarter. (PIA-Bohol/ecb)

Presyo sa mga nag-unang panaliton, ‘stable’ – DTI

TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol, Aug. 10 (PIA)–Giseguro karon sa Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) nga nagpabilin sa suggested retail price (SRP) ang presyo sa mga basic commodities ug igo ang supply sa mga nag-unang panginahanglan sa katawhan bisan gipatuman ang “price freeze” tungod sa gideklarang state of calamity.

Sa gipahigayong price monitoring ni DTI Secretary Gregory Domingo sa nagkalain-laing grocery stores sa Manila sa mga presyo sa mga nag-unang panaliton, nagpabiling stable gawas lamang sa mga presyo sa utan ug isda tungod sa dautang panahon.

Matud pa sa Kalihim, giingong nihatag na og pasalig ang mga tag-iya sa nagkalin-laing supermarkets, wet markets ug mga major manufacturers sa mga nag-unang panaliton nga adunay igong supply ug dili angay mag-panic buying ang mga katawhan.

Dugang pa ni Domingo nga ang mga nataho nga kakulang sa supply sa mga sardinas ug instant noodles tungod sa binultong pagpalit niining mga produktoha alang sa relief operations. (PIA-Bohol/ecb)

Visayas, ulanon sa bag-ong low pressure

TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol, Aug. 10 (PIA)–Giingong posibleng mosulod na sa Philippine area of responsibility sa Lunes ang gibantayang low pressure area (LPA) sa sidlakang bahin sa nasud.

Matud pa ni Pagasa forecaster Ricky Fabregas, daku ang posibilidad nga maapektuhan sa LPA ang sidlakang bahin sa Visayas ug madugangan pa kini sa epekto sa southwest moonsoon o habagat.

Kung mahimong bagyo ang maong weather disturbance, hinganlan kini og bagyong Helen.

Samtang mipatuman na usab og thunderstorm watch ug uban pang alerto ang Pagasa alang sa mas epektibong public awareness.

Matud pa sa Pagasa, ang maong alerto lahi pa sa rainfall alert ug typhoon signal warning aron mahibaw-an sa publiko ang mas espesipikong kahimtang sa panahon nga angay nilang tutukan.

Miingon pa usab si Pagasa Administrator Nathaniel Servando nga gihimo na nila ang mga innovation karon alang sa mas tin-aw nga pasidaan gikan sa mga opisyal sa gobyerno nga magdeklarar og kanselasyon sa mga buhatan ngadto na sa yanong katawhan. (PIA-Bohol/ecb)

Kalahi makes a difference To the Eskayas of Lundag

Rey Anthony Chiu

TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol, July 28, 2012 (PIA) – Perched atop the mountain fastness of Lundag in Pilar town, a community of indigenous people has held on to the tradition of the Eskaya for generations.

About twenty kilometers away, in the hazy flatlands west of the mountains lie the town center.

Other than the visual connection, a dirt road that winds up the mountains is the Eskayas only connection to the outside world.

While preserving the culture and tradition ranks high in the government’s priorities for the tribe that occupies the boundaries of Duero, Guindulman, Candijay, Pilar and Sierra Bullones towns, would relegating them in their tiny remote worlds be enough justification that they be kept away from civilization?

This question nagged the past mayors of Pilar town who also thought these people do not deserve shrugs of indifference.

Attempts to connect the tribe to the Poblacion in Pilar started then in the past, but the makeshift road that links the two centers has dilapidated itself, and some portions of it are best navigated on foot.

Although not your all weather type of road, the access drastically cut walking time from Lundag to the town center in half, not yet so ideal for Eskaya vegetable traders to get their products to the market before they wilt.

Spring onions and cabbage can not be sold at premium price when wilted, confesses a woman tribe member.

Remote and inaccessible for most part of the time, especially on rainy days, the Eskayas of Lundag learned high value commercial crop cultivation aided by the high altitudes and the kind of soil that most forest fringed communities.

But with a road carved out of the mountain sides, rains erode the road surfaces and brings in knee deep mud that cuts off the village, said Lundag Eskaya elder Eugene Lloren.

We have to devise a plan to strengthen the portions that are most impassable, said Mayor Wilson Pajo, who was among those chief executives who vigorously believes Eskaya or not, they deserve access too government help like any other minority groups.

But, at a loss of development funds, the town can only do as much: scrape land-slid portions and pray the road retains its form until the next rainy season.

When the Kapit-Bisig Laban sa Kahirapan Comprehensive Integrated Delivery of Social Services implemented by the Department of Social Welfare and Development came, things emerged bright, admits Gualberto Jaspe, Pilar Information Officer.

With it, the Eskaya and the barangay council organized to come up with a community participatory assessment of the village needs, and deciding on fixing the inaccessible parts of the 18 kilometer makeshift road earned no objections.

Funded by the Word Bank, Kalahi helped bond people of the Eskaya and the rural community in Lundag, pushed them to identify more critical portions of the road so the appropriate rehabilitation works could be done to assure the steady stream of vegetable buyers from transporting the products.

When the project funds ran out, another round of project funds from the Millennium Challenge Account opened, and this lengthened the rehabilitation, Gualberto Jaspe said.

Jaspe, who sits as SB Secretary, information officer and personnel officer said the Eskaya and the baragay leaders picked the most difficult parts of the road for rehabilitation and put in community labor to complete the project.

Now after rehabilitating portions of the farm to market roads, tribe traders said getting their products to the town center can be done in 30 minutes, way better than the two hours then.

It also means that their products get less product spoilage owing to better roads, even if much could be desired.

We just make do with the little we have and make sure traders can get their trucks up the mountains, Mayor Pajo added.

This way, we make sure the Eskaya gets a much better financial freedom, even if we would wish they keep their traditions with them, the mayor said.

In Pilar, local officials desire that the Eskaya keep their culture from contamination. But keeping them in their world high up in the mountains deprive them of the services they deserve. The road network is just a link, when people use it, it opens up a different kind of life for their kids.

They deserve it. (30)

A KALAHI MCA feature… Mabini farmers tame Tabunok floods with 300 meter river dike

Rey Anthony Chiu

MABINI, Bohol, July 21, 2012 (PIA) –Then, most farmers could only look helplessly as the floodwaters from the overflowing Tabunok River creep up and drown their rice crops.

Now, armed with the participatory assessment skills, plus an engineering inspiration, they have high hopes that their efforts give them a good fighting chance against the notorious floods that has claimed several lives here.

For most farmers, “tabunok” spells good harvest. Here, Tabunok is also fatal and destructive.

Tabunok, a local term for rich loam deposits left after a flood, is what most farmers here capitalize to produce the harvest in the more that 150 hectares of rice and prime farmlands.

The rich loam deposit, which the river brings, also causes the river to be called Tabunok.

Tabunok River partly assures people of good harvest when it brings in the rich soil during its flow. And when the water is just a bit too much, the flow also portends death and destruction, when the collected rainwater from the grazing grounds upriver converge to wash down Cogtong Bay, said Barangay Chairman Rodrigo Vallespin.

When that happens, he admits he could not sleep as he has to direct the barangay disaster council to effect the evacuations, knowing that the flooding may not only destroy crops.

When the floods come, it would be in a flash, he said adding that a school girl crossing the ankle deep stream down river was suddenly washed out to sea when the raging water tumbled down.

When the rains come at night, I could not sleep tight, knowing that down the village center, the water built up in the mountains could easily flood the ricefields and endanger the people.

To protect the barangay from the breaching of the river, the people in one participatory situational analysis identified a river control dike to guide the water’s flow and spare the barangay from the gush.

An 80 meter river dike funded by the barangay calamity fund proved to be one huge help then in 2008.

But during bigger rains, the water overflows before the wall, still filling the vast plains, shares Margarita Vallespin.

With several other concerns the barangay has to face, completely putting up the river dike as floodwater control was only a dream for the people. Until Makamasang Tugon (MT) came.

A fund granted by the Millennium Challenge Account (MCA) to continue the government package of assistance for identified communities previously named Kalahi, the MT stirred the hope of the people of flood-prone San Isidro.

Having already identified the dike as a priority, the barangay tapped the sub-project fund for another 285 meters of flood control dike.

The fund grant is only a sub project, explains DSWD Regional Social Marketing Officer Simeon Remata III, as the primary project is training and mentoring communities to function on their own, driven by the development they earlier identified.

To make sure they get the most out of the funds, the Barangay Sub-Project Management Council decided to implement the project on their own, in a system DSWD called the community force account.

In fact, we made sure that the project is completed within a month, to let us be assured that the dike is in place before the rains come in July, chairman Vallespin, who also sits in the BSPMC admitted.

Implemented in February this year, the 285 meters flood control project even accomplished 15 meter more, Vallespin boasts.

Now snaking along the river path, the dike rises a good two feet above the plains, the approximately a feet above the usual flooding height, the community members attest.

Now with a dike that is designed to protect them and their fields, it is now up to the coming rainy season to prove if the taming of the river works.

It, however is not a problem for the barangay chairman who knows exactly what to do if that happens. (30)

ready to harvest rice during off season rains, confesses Barangay Chairman or feeds solves loess n inundation brings Rain water falling to the vast catch-ment of rolling cattle grazing grounds, collect to small creeks and tributaries until they converge into a river that gushes out to Cogtong Bay.

on an To the sea, Tabunok River flows through Barangay San Isidro as a major blessing to the river delta formed at its mouth Like any

DOST-Bohol Kicks Off National Science and Technology

Department of Science and Technology – Bohol Science and Technology Center kicks off its celebration of the National Technology and Science Week with a Kapihan sa PIA at the Prawn Farm Grill and Restaurant at the Island City Mall on July 23, 2012. The Kapihan started at 1:30PM with a presentation of the various programs of DOST that will assist small and medium enterprises (SMEs) with access to finance, technical assistance.

DOST-7 Regional Director Engr. Rene Burt N. Llanto graced the activity and presented the Small Enterprises Technology Upgrading Program (SETUP), Manufacturing Productivity Extension Program (MAPEX) and Consultancy For Agricultural Productivity Enhancement (CAPE).

Engr. Marcial Tanggaan, Provincial Director of DOST-Bohol, assisted in answering questions from the audience.

After the press conference, Llanto and Tanggaan presented awards to Hon. Edgar M. Chatto, governor of Bohol for his “meritorious commitment to the advancement of science, technology and innovation” in the province. Ms. Victoria Sandidge of the Bohol Bee Farm was awarded for her “innovative application of technologies in food processing, organic farming, health and wellness, tourism and handicrafts development”.

Also awarded is Mr. Leonard Alturas for his “distinguished advocacy in science and technology in the application and integration of food safety standards in business operations”. Mr. Marlito Uy of the Alturas Group of Companies, represented by Mr. Loy Palapos, was also recognized for his “invaluable support in the implementation of science and technology in the countryside”.

Dr. Elpidio T. Magante of the Bohol Island State University was also awarded for his “invaluable support to the implementation of science and technology, S&T Plans, programs and activities at the university. He was represented by Prof. Ernesto Rulida, College Director, BISU Main Campus.

The recipients of the DOST SETUP for the month of July 2012 with Bohol-DOST PSTC director Engr. Marcial Tanggaan (left most) and DOST-Region 7 Director Engr. Rene Burt N. Llanto.


Checks released from the SETUP were distributed to the recipients for the month of July 2012 namely, Mr. Walter L. Ramirez of the WL Ramirez Cakes and Pastries, Mr. Jose Manlupig III of Ato ni Bai! Litson Manok ni Sr. Jose, Ms. Caraciola Grace T. Alcala of Total Woodkraft and Mr. Rene P. Baquial of Loboc Youth Band Parent Producers Cooperative, represented by its operations manager.