Monday

Beboy exposes lies of political enemies

MAYOR Eric C. Codilla urged Ormocanons to give Richard Gomez a chance to express his plans for the city after the actor declared his intention to run for mayor. The chief executive said running for public office is a right of Rep. Lucy Torres-Gomez’s husband whom he refers to as “a stranger in Ormoc.”

On the reason for Gomez’s candidacy, Mayor Codilla could only surmise that the actor might think he’s smarter and superior than Ormocanons. “Maminaw lang ta niya kung unsay ika-offer niya natong Ormocanon. Kung naay estrangherong muanhi nato, maminaw ta unsa bay iyang ikaalagad. Iyang gikita tingali nga mas kahibaw siya kaysa natong mga taga-Ormoc,” he said.

On the other hand, Mayor Codilla warns his constituents in the barangays to be wary of the tricks of his political opponents to draw their sympathy. He received reports that campaign coordinators have been organizing households in the grassroots level with the promise of loans of P10,000-20,000.

They will be gathered for regular “meetings” which the recruits will join in the hope of availing the loan. In reality, only one or two members will be loaned money to spread the word that the loan assistance is true. But simple math will show that the so-called assistance is a scam, Mayor Codilla said.

Lending P10,000 each to 80 families in a single barangay will cost P80,000 and P8 million in 10 barangays. This will reach P80 million if given to at least 100 barangays all over 4th District which is impossible, Mayor Codilla explained, because the Priority Development Fund of congressmen is only P70 million annually.

At least the loan assistance extended by the City Social Welfare and Development Office is real, Mayor Codilla added, referring to the Self Employment Assistance-Kaunlaran wherein an individual can borrow P5,000 interest-free which can be doubled the next time upon full payment of the original loan.

Another deception by his detractors which Mayor Codilla exposed is bribing tricycle drivers to discredit him to their passengers. He said tricycle passengers shouldn’t be surprised to hear drivers speak ill of him as they were paid to do so. “Ila intawon linggahon ang mga tawo,” he said.

He further dismissed survey claims showing that Gomez is leading among other probable mayoralty bets. He recalled similar surveys before the 2010 election showing that he and his party will lose. What happened was the opposite as Mayor Codilla, his vice mayor and majority of his councilors occupied City Hall.
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of May 14-20, 2012)

Editorial: Nanggugulo pala ha?

 DINEKLARA na ng aktor na si Richard Gomez ang kanyang planong kumandidato bilang alkalde ng Ormoc. Bagama’t may nagsasabing matagal na niya itong balak, pawang pinapalabas niya na ngayon lang siya nakapagpasya dahil raw sa mga taong nanggugulo sa trabaho ng kanyang kabiyak na si Congresswoman Lucy Torres-Gomez.

“Ayaw nilang tumigil (sa panggugulo) so maglaban tayo head to head. Lalabanan ko sila”, aniya na tila ba naghahamon. Bagama’t wala siyang binanggit na pangalan ng mga personalidad na diumanoy nanggugulo sa kanila, pawang ang mga Codilla na katunggali ng kanyang kampo sa politika ang pinasasaringan niya.

Subalit sa wari namin ay walang ginawang panggugulo ang mga Codilla sa mga programa ng mga Gomez. Walang ginawang hakbang ang mga Codilla upang hadlangan ang mga gawain ng butihing kongresista, pati na ang mga proyekto ng pamahalaang nasyonal na pilit nilang inaangkin.
 
Kung hindi ang mga Codilla ang pinatatamaan ni Richard, e sino? Wala kaming maisip na ibang grupo na malakas pumuna sa mga kabuktutan ng mga Gomez maliban sa pahayagang ito mismo. Subalit, panggugulo nga ba ang layunin namin? Panggugulo ba ang pagsaway namin sa pange-epal ng mga Gomez sa mga proyekto ng pamahalaang nasyonal?
 
Totoo naman talaga na walang kinalaman si Congresswoman Lucy sa mga ginagawang pagpapaayos ng mga lansangan. Ito’y isang malawakang proyekto sa buong bansa bunga ng pagbuhos ng pondo ni Pangulong Aquino – pondo na kanyang inipit at hindi napakinabangan ng taong-bayan noong nakaraang taon. 

At ngayon ay pinakawalan na niya ang pinagsamang pondo noong nakaraang taon at ng kasalukuyan, mistulan tuloy na may nagaganap na pagsigla sa konstruksyon at ng ekonomiya na siya namang ginagamit ng Pangulo bilang pabango para sa nalalapit na halalan.
 
Maging ang karatig na ikatlong distrito ng Leyte ay nabiyayaan ng mga proyekto na nagkakahalaga ng P273 milyon para sa pagsesemento ng mga daan at paggawa ng walong bagong tulay. Ngunit hindi mo makikita na nakapaskil ang pangalan at larawan ni Kongresista Andy Salvacion sa mga proyektong ito.
 
Dumako naman tayo sa mga karatula. Panggugulo ba ang pagbubuking namin sa paglabag ni Congresswoman Lucy sa panuntunan ng DILG laban sa paglalagay ng mga larawan niya sa mga proyekto ng DPWH, PPA, DepEd at DA? Mismong si Kalihim Rogelio Singson ay pinagbawal na ang ito sa mga proyekto ng DPWH kung saan karamihan ng mga karatula ni Congresswoman Lucy ay nakabalandra.

Bilang isang kagalang-galang na mambabatas, ang pagsunod sa mga panuntunan ng pamahalaan at magsilbing halimbawa sa mga kabataan ang inaasahan sa kanya. Ngunit sa pinapamalas niyang tahasang paglabag, baga ang binibigay niyang mensahe sa mga mag-aaral ay ayos lang suwayin ang mga alituntunin ng paaralan basta’t mayaman at maimpluwensya ang pamilya mo.
 
Sino ang nanggugulo? Marahil ay dapat tumingin si Richard sa salamin. Isa siyang Tagalog na tinanggap ng mga taga-Ormoc, ngunit paano niya tayo ginantihan sa ating ipinamalas na kabutihan sa kanya? Hindi pa nga siya nakakaupo sa puwesto pero ilang barangay kapitan at mga prominenteng tao sa Ormoc ang nakabangga na niya? May mga gurong dumulog sa amin na kinagalitan daw sila dahil hindi nila naimbitahan ang mag-asawang Gomez sa pagpapasinaya ng ilang silid-aralan.
 
Wala siyang ibang bukang-bibig kundi pangungutya sa mahal nating lungsod. Reklamo siya nang reklamo pero kontra naman ng kontra sa mabubuting proyekto gaya ng pinapatayong pagamutan ni Meyor Beboy Codilla para sa mga mahihirap. Sino ngayon ang nanggugulo sa Ormoc?
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of May 14-20, 2012)

Lucy violates DPWH order

DEPARTMENT of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) Secretary Rogelio Singson has reiterated the strict enforcement of his previous order (Department Order No. 39) prohibiting political billboards to be installed 100 meters before and after all projects of the DPWH.

Similar political billboards are also not allowed in between the project limits or within the road right-of-way. In addition, DPWH contractors shall not be allowed to place names or pictures of politicians on their equipment or carry political billboard on their equipment; otherwise, these contractors shall also be held accountable.
 
This order of the DPWH, however, is blatantly violated in Leyte 4th District as tarpaulins of Rep. Lucy Torres-Gomez are found in all major road projects to mislead the public or give the false impression that the ongoing repairs are done through the lady solon’s efforts.
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of May 14-20, 2012)

Dettie Panis: 25 years of making Leyteños beautiful



A HOMEGROWN beauty parlor in Leyte is doing probinsyanos proud for keeping them in step with the latest beauty and hairstyling trends in Manila. It also offers complete services that can be found in some of the best salons in the national capital. That parlor is Dettie Panis Salon & Spa.

The story behind the business’s success is as interesting as its owner’s who built her chain of salons from the ground up. Today, the salon has six company-owned branches and two franchised outlets. The Ormoc branch just celebrated its first anniversary last May 17.
 
Who would have thought that this mini-empire started at a home garage? Who would have thought that a simple desire to save on haircutting expenses would spawn a chain of salons where people from all walks of life run to in order to look and feel good? But that is exactly how Dettie Panis started out in the beauty industry.
 
It was 1987 and Dettie was on her 2nd year in law school at the now defunct Divine Word University in Tacloban, the capital city of Leyte. As a 30-year-old mother of four, she was enticed to enroll in a four-week extension class on haircutting at Leyte Normal College (now university).
 
Her reason for doing so was simple: to trim on haircutting costs. It turns out that a simple trip to the barbershop with her kids turned costly because they had to stop by for ice cream or other foodstuff. If she can do her kids’ hair, they don’t have to get out of the house, she thought.
The calling
 
Dettie never really thought of becoming a hairstylist, a field far from her degree in Commerce major in Banking and Finance, although she had an inclination for arts (including dressmaking) while growing up in Leyte, Leyte. It was also at that point when she was trying to carve her own niche.
 
It was just a year after the Edsa revolution and Dettie lost her job as an aide of the late Governor Benjamin “Kokoy” Romualdez, who had to step down from power. Going to Law school seemed to be the next logical step so she can join the profession of her politician husband, Atty. Peter Panis.
 
But now a new pastime caught her fancy so Law school had to take a backseat. She became a fast learner of haircutting that after the four-week extensive class, she flew to Manila right away  where she enrolled in classes on advanced perming and cutting as well as salon management.
 
Upon returning to Tacloban, Dettie buckled down to work and began her beauty parlor right in their home garage with only P1,500 capital. It was the best time to be in the business because of only few competitors. The people she met in her previous work along with the connections of her husband who went on to serve as city councilor for 17 years helped in attracting customers that the limited space at the garage soon wouldn’t suffice.
 
She opened her first real salon along the busy Real St. near her kids’ school to be close to them. But Dettie didn’t stop there. She believes beauty is a continuing evolution because of the changing her trends, reason why she continually attends trainings in Manila and abroad.
High level of professionalism
 
Dettie is the only stylist hereabouts who earned a diploma in Creative Cutting at Vidal Sasoon Academy in London and attended courses on classic and contemporary haircutting in Shanghai, Beijing, Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur under Toni & Guy. She also attends an annual beauty convention in Hong Kong regularly.
 
Another success ingredient is the way she runs her parlors professionally. She puts a cap on the earnings of each branch to maintain service quality. For example, a gross income of more than P50,000 a day at her main branch in Zamora St., Tacloban means that the salon received more than the ideal number of customers.
 
This means its 24-man staff was overworked. This has actually happened which prompted her to open another branch in nearby Salazar St. to decongest the main branch. She would rather sacrifice income to sustain the market. But even that new branch was soon packed, resulting to the opening of another branch in Gaisano Central.
 
Dettie Panis Salon & Spa has now three branches in Tacloban’s downtown district that are just a stone’s throw away from each other. “Hindi naman kailangan malaki ang income everyday,” she says. “You just have to target a certain income in a month, say 10-15% to cope up with overhead.”
 
Straining her workers to earn more is a losing proposition because whatever extra money she makes will just go to the hospital if they get sick. This is also the reason why she maintains a workforce of 13-15 in one branch including janitors and two receptionists.
 
Being the most integral part of the business, Dettie believes hairstylists shouldn’t be made to clean the salon which is the responsibility of janitors. Receptionists are also important because they establish the first relationship with clients and give the first impression about the salon. They also schedule the customers and entertain demanding clients who don’t like to wait.Regular trainings
Many long-time regulars want Dettie to personally attend to them. But she assures customers they are in good hands with her stylists whom she teaches everything she knows. Her salon is the only one of its kind in Region 8 with its own training center accredited by the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority where she sources her talent pool.
 
In the Ormoc branch for example where she stays three days a week, Sunday nights are allotted for the training of its staff. The gathering also serves as a meeting wherein they discuss problems that arise during the week and how to deal with them. But by sharing her skills to her employees, isn’t she worried some of them might start their own parlor business?
 
Dettie isn’t a bit bothered by the prospect. She is already considered royalty in the industry that the mushrooming of budget salons everywhere isn’t a problem. She even considers it a personal contribution to her workers’ growth if some of them decide to go on their own.
 
Competition has never been an issue for Dettie. During the early days, she was the only who was regularly stocked with salon products that even competitors from other parts of the region run to her. This arrangement prompted her to become a franchisee of Beauty Magic Marketing, a store selling beauty products and equipment for budget salons. It is run by eldest son Peter Julius and has branches in Tacloban and Ormoc, Leyte; and Catbalogan, Samar.Presyong probinsya
A fully furnished and well-decorated salon is indeed welcome in Leyte but many locals are intimidated, thinking its services are expensive. But Dettie assures that customers will get their money’s worth considering the quality products they use from Davines and also her own signature products not sold in other parlors. She only insists on using only organic products.

Moreover, prices of budget salons may come cheap but the services offered are mostly inferior. For example, foot massages in budget salons target only the feet that the customer will have to pay another fee to include the calves, leaving him paying more compared to the complete Happy Feet package with additional features offered by Dettie Panis spa.
 
Dettie further clarifies that her services are competitively priced with other Manila-based salons that have penetrated the provincial market. The blunder of these Manila-based salons is that they maintained their prices even on their provincial branches. A P1,500 hairstyling from these kinds of parlors costs only P950 in Dettie Panis salons.
 
Another mistake Dettie is avoiding is opening more branches than she can handle. Preparation for a new branch takes one to two years which includes hiring and training personnel beforehand who will be made to sign a contract on what branch they will be assigned to. In fact, Dettie thought of opening the Ormoc branch as early as 2006 but had to carefully study the market first. She spent P40 million for that particular branch.
 
At present, a Dettie Panis salon offer hair perming, hair straight therapy rebonding and Korean curls while its spa gives full body massage, Swedish, hilot, combination, etc. Her business will soon become a complete beauty company with the entry of her dermatologist daughter Dr. Yohann Kae Panis. They now have underarm whitening and will soon introduce laser skin peeling and slimming services.
 
Since she is constantly invited as resource speaker and demonstrator on starting a salon to students, Dettie also plans to turn her training center into a full-pledged beauty school not limited to her own salons. Meaning, even her competitors can source stylists from that school.
There are many ingredients to success but the most important Dettie cites is passion. “You have to be passionate in what you do,” she shares. True enough, there are many expert hairstylists who are not successful in the business as they go from one salon to another.
 
“An entrepreneur who is only after the business side of the industry without passion for the craft will not last for two hours inside a salon,” Dettie says. “He or she will easily get bored.” Dettie Panis Salon & Spa is preparing for its silver anniversary on October, a fitting celebration for an institution and the woman behind it who have kept the people of Leyte looking good. by Felix N. Codilla III
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of May 14-20, 2012)

Hawai’i mayor’s 3-day visit to Ormoc fruitful

Mayor Eric C. Codilla and Mayor Billy Kenoi of Hawai'i.
THE local government unit’s ability to entertain international visitors was put to a test when it played host to the delegation of Mayor Billy Kenoi of Hawai’i, state of Hawaii, USA during his three-day visit to the city as part of the sisterhood ties between his county and Ormoc.
 
Mayor Kenoi and his 14-member delegation arrived last Mar. 26 to learn from Ormoc’s experiences on geothermal exploration and agriculture development. It was Hawai’i that initiated the sisterhood agreement after its officials found Ormoc’s website.
 
They chose Ormoc because of its similarity with Hawai’i on agriculture and geothermal power usage. Cebuano Jean Clement who now lives in Hawaii and also part of the delegation brokered the agreement between the two places. The sisterhood agreement was signed in September last year during Mayor Codilla’s visit to Hawai’i.
 
On their first day, Mayor Kenoi went to Visayas State University (VSU) to sign a memorandum of agreement for a student exchange program between VSU and University of Hawaii, Hilo College of Agriculture. The university will assign a foster home to the VSU student to make his stay there inexpensive.
 
In the afternoon, the party proceeded to Tongonan, this city where they were welcomed by Engr. Manuel Paete, VP of Leyte Geothermal Production Field (LGPF). The visitors were amazed to learn that LGPF is the world’s biggest wet steam field with a capacity of 700MW, many times larger than their 38MW power plant.
 
Mayor Kenoi remarked: “I cannot believe I am now standing in a building that is considered the world’s largest wet steam field. Considering this area supplies electricity to other regions, it is amazing that I am able to see by my eyes the operation.”
 
The guests were presented video and power point presentations on Energy Development Corp.’s (EDC) profile, stages of geothermal exploration, reservoir and watershed management, steam field operation, and EDC’s corporate social responsibility.
 
Michael Kaleikini, manager of the 38MW Ormat power plant in Hawaii and member of the delegate said he was able to have a one-day visit at LGPF’s Mahanagdong plant in 2000 which was then still under construction. He appreciates the plant tour, saying he can apply the things he learned on plant operation. The party then proceeded to the substation of National Grid Corp. of the Philippines in Milagro and the office of Leyte-V Electric Cooperative in Simangan, this city.
 
The following day, the guests went to Sabin Larrazabal’s pineapple plantation in Masarayao, Kananga town. They then proceeded to Candahug, Palo town to visit the shrine of Gen. Douglas MacArthur. They also paid a courtesy call to Tacloban Mayor Alfred Romualdez.
 
Mayor Codilla tendered a sendoff party on the night of Mar. 28 featuring native dances participated by the foreign guests. Other members of Mayor Kenoi’s party are County Research and Development Director Randy Kurohara, Executive Secretary to the Mayor Paulette Cainglet, Immigration Specialist Rose Bautista, Country Energy Coordinator William Rolston, Geothermal Working Group co-chairmen Richard Ha and Wallace Ishibashi, Councilor Angel Pilago, Congress of Visayan Organization President Jane Clement, Hawaiian Electric Light Company President Jay Ignacio, Puna Geothermal Venture Manager Mike Kaleikini, Parker Ranch President Neil Kuyper, Acting Dean Dr. Bruce Mathews of the University of Hawaii at Hilo College of Agriculture, Hawaii Filipino Community Leader Dr. Sonny Genio, etc. by Elvie Roman-Roa
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Mar. 26-Apr. 1, 2012)

No proof on Winnie’s drug links

MAYOR Eric C. Codilla renewed his challenge to the Gomezes to prove their accusation that his brother Winnie is a drug lord. “Sila naman ang naglingkod, naa man nila ang poder nga makapanampit og mga national government offices para pag-verify nianang pagpadakop enkaso tinuod man gali,” he dared.

The Gomez camp is reviving the issue even if Richard Gomez himself admitted on national media that their accusation against Winnie was an election-related propaganda only. But now the tables are turned as the Gomezes take on the defensive after a security aide of the congresswoman was implicated in drugs.
 
Also last Feb. 26, a woman suspected to have links in the drug underworld was gunned down in San Isidro, this city. She was a daughter-in-law of a campaign leader of Richard. Because of the false information that they spread, Mayor Codilla accused the Gomez couple of deceiving the Ormocanons and people of 4th District.
 
“Gipanlinlang nila kitang Ormocanon ug mga taga-4th District. Para nila, mga ignorante ug uwat ra intawon ta; sayon ra intawon ta ilad-ilaron. Mao ra ang ilang prinsipyo nga para nila, motuo man dayon ang mga Ormocanon sa ilang isulti,” Mayor Codilla said.
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Apr. 16-22, 2012)

Beboy extends care to his constituents via CSWDO

A MOTHER of two daughters who have been victims of human trafficking is thankful to Mayor Eric C. Codilla for the assistance extended to her by his administration through the City Social Welfare and Development Office (CSWDO). The woman is just one of the hundreds helped by the CSWDO.

Last Mar. 16, Lilia Agosto, 53 of Nueva Vista, here in Ormoc received a P10,000 check which she will use to start a small business. This is the latest assistance she received from CSWDO after the abuse suffered by her daughters. A single mother, she single-handedly tried to raise her 11 children.
 
Her 24-year-old daughter was trafficked when she was 13 to Cebu where she made to work as a prostitute. Agosto was forced to chain her daughter when she came back home mentally damaged. Another daughter aged 15 was also trafficked to Manila but denied being sexually abused, although she admitted that some men injected drugs on her which affected her psychologically.
 
Aside from the P10,000 check, the CSWDO will give P5,000 each to the two victims to be released by installment for their medication and regular checkup at Eastern Visayas Regional Medical Center in Tacloban. Today, Agosto’s daughters have restored their physical and mental health.
 
Agosto’s story is replicated by other individuals helped by CSWDO. The agency spent P2.7 million in 2011 for emergency assistance for medicines, surgical operations, transportation fare, blood transfusion, meal and burial assistance, and emergency shelter (see table below).
Just last Apr. 13 in the morning, daycare worker Dayin Sarcol and Gloria Malazarte who is in charge of children in conflict with law accompanied five mental patients (including the Agosto sisters) to EVRMC. One of them is a 38-year-old male nurse who suffered psychosis because of drug abuse.
 
The guy, who agreed to talk to the Express on condition of anonymity, said he began taking shabu in college back in 1993. The following year, despite a scheduled board exam, he began getting his fix from marijuana, solvent and cough syrup that he became paranoid and thought everyone was laughing at him.
 
He passed the nursing board despite his condition. He began treatment in 1991 and got employed as a registered nurse but stopped working in 2001. Since then, he has been under constant medication and rehabilitation as part of the road to recovery with the assistance of CSWDO. by Elvie Roman-Roa

CA issues injunction in favor of LMC

THE Court of Appeals (CA) 19th Division issued a Writ of Preliminary Injunction last Mar. 19 which saved Lide Management Corp. (LMC) from the closure of its water pumping stations by the local government unit (LGU) of Ormoc. The injunction renders ineffective the Cease and Desist Order (CDO) on the operation of LMC’s pumping stations.

The LGU issued the CDO for LMC’s refusal to comply with Ordinance No. 149 imposing regulatory fees on water extraction. The CA injunction restrains the LGU from enforcing said ordinance in favor of maintaining the status quo so that whatever decision rendered by the court on the legality of Ordinance No. 149 will not be made ineffectual or moot and academic.
 
If not for the injunction, water supply will have been affected on areas where LMC maintains water concessionaires particularly in Merida, Isabel and Palompon towns. Associate Justice Edgardo L. delos Santos penned the decision with the concurrence of Associate Justices Nina G. Antonio-Valenzuela and Abraham B. Borreta.
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Apr. 16-22, 2012)

Beboy not behind cops’ sacking

MAYOR Eric C. Codilla denies he is behind the suspension of five Ormoc policemen including PO2 Francisco “Jongjong” Oliva, the close-in security aide of Rep. Lucy Torres-Gomez. The mayor was sought for his reaction following the allegation made by the congresswoman’s camp that politics is behind the cops’ suspension.

The observation is shared by another sacked officer, Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG) Northern Leyte Deputy Chief Insp. Bernard Lao who particularly cited the office given by Rep. Gomez to the CIDG. He said Mayor Codilla might have been offended by the congresswoman’s gesture. He explained he was compelled to receive the offer after being ordered by the mayor to vacate their previous office at the government center.
 
But Mayor Codilla denies the accusation, saying he wasn’t even aware of the office given by Rep. Gomez to CIDG. He also doesn’t believe the country’s highest police official, Philippine National Police Chief Dir. Gen. Nicanor Bartolome could be persuaded by hearsay coming from parties with vested political interests.
 
Mayor Codilla confirmed giving a notice to CIDG to vacate their old office being the site where a new building of the Manpower Training and Research Center is now being built. The mayor is offended that instead of thanking him for allowing them the use of their old office the CIDG is now being accused of politicking. “They didn’t even had the courtesy of informing me about their moving out,” he said.
 
But politics is just one of the probable causes cited by Insp. Lao for their suspension. He also suspects drug lords as behind the campaign to destroy their reputation and credibility following their successful operations in Ormoc and Baybay Cities as well as in neighboring Kananga and Albuera towns.
 
They were able to arrest some big fish in these successful busts, Insp. Lao said. “Paano masusugpo ang droga kung ang nagtatrabaho, yun po ang pino-prosecute?” he laments. Nevertheless, he is willing to face any investigation, saying he has nothing to hide.
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Apr. 2-8, 2012)

Beboy breaks ground for fire station building

MAYOR Eric C. Codilla led the groundbreaking ceremony on the construction of a new fire station building last Apr. 2. The existing 50-year-old fire station in Anubing St. at the government center will be torn down to give way to a new structure to be built at a cost of P9,157,806.92.

Pedro A. Noval Jr., regional director of the Department of Interior and Local Government, lauded the project as a manifestation of the importance given by Mayor Codilla to Ormoc’s fire department. He said that contrary to general perception, firemen are not only called to fight fires but also to rescue people who fall into manholes as well as those who climb tall buildings to commit suicide.
 
Mayor Codilla echoed Noval’s statement, saying he recognizes the fire department as a vital component of the Organized Rescuers and Medical aides of Ormoc City. He also mentioned his plan to procure a trauma van for victims of disasters like fires, earthquakes, typhoons, etc.
The two-storey fire station will have eight service bays, dormitory as well as administrative and training areas. Contractor Magnam Konstrukt is given 208 calendar days to finish the project. The building will be bigger and better than the old structure and will even encroach on the provincial jail next door.
 
As such, Mayor Codilla asked Noval and Bureau of Fire Protection SSupt. Pablito D. Cordeta who was also present, to appeal to Gov. Carlos Jericho L. Petilla to transfer the provincial jail so that the BFP can fully utilize the site owned by the city government.
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Apr. 2-8, 2012)

Wednesday

Beboy breaks ground for tech-voc school building

Mayor Eric C. Codilla and Vice Mayor Nepomuceno P. Aparis bury a time capsule during the groundbreaking of the new OTMTRC building. Between them is Councilor Rafael Omega, chairman of the committee on manpower development. On the left are Councilors Sotero Pepito, Mario Rodriguez, Filomeno Maglasang and Rolando Villasencio. At the extreme right is project contractor Engr. Joseph Frederick A. Pepito. Others in the photo are Councilors Lea Doris C. Villar, Jose C. Alfaro Jr. and Demosthenes Tugonon, ABC President Antonio Codilla and OTMTRC  Administrator Engr. Generoso . Managbanag.
MAYOR Eric C. Codilla led the groundbreaking for the new building of Ormoc Technological Manpower Training and Research Center (OTMTRC) last Mar. 19 after the flag ceremony. The project is one of the three edifices being built and set for completion this year, the other two being the new fire station and city hospital.

Councilor Rafael C. Omega Jr. who chairs the committee on manpower development said the old OTMTRC building was constructed 21 years ago hence the need to replace it with a new structure complete with workshops where the center’s students can have their hands-on training.
 
Engr. Joseph Frederick A. Pepito, the contractor of the two-storey P12 million building said they will finish the first phase within three months and the entire edifice hopefully by September. The center attracts 500 students annually from all over 4th District and even as far as Camotes, Cebu.
 
OTMTRC was created 31 years ago by Ordinance No. 97 s. 1981. It offers short courses on shielded metal arc welding, automotive servicing, refrigeration and air-conditioning, building wiring installation, consumer electronics, plumbing, carpentry, and dressmaking courses.
After the groundbreaking, Mayor Codilla took time out to inspect the existing classrooms and workshops. He saw students working on engines at the automotive servicing section. The instructor showed the mayor an engine from the General Services Department that could be considered as scrap but which the students were able to restore.
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Mar. 26-Apr. 1, 2012)

55-year-old grandpa finishes high school

Estopin with Mayor Eric C. Codilla
AFTER being deprived of a formal education, a 55-year-old grandfather can now call himself a member of a graduating class as he proudly marched onstage to receive his high school diploma. Wilfredo Estopin finally finished his high school studies thanks to the night studies offered by New Ormoc National High School (NONHS).

Estopin is one of the 1,043 graduates who participated in the 60th Commencement Exercises of NONHS last Mar. 28. He is not only the oldest graduate, he also belongs to 15 other pioneering students of ONHS’s night school who also received their diplomas that day.
 
The 4th child of 11 siblings, Estopin was forced to drop out of high school during his younger days out of poverty. He passed an acceleration test in 1987 which accelerated him to 4th year high school but couldn’t attend classes because of work. His wife Fedelina is employed at the city government.
 
The couple prioritized their kids’ education who are now degree holders. Michael, 32 graduated in BS Psychology and now works in the Human Resource Management Office of Western Leyte College. Jessie, 31, finished Management at University of the Philippines Tacloban Campus (UPTC) and now works for Philippine Health Insurance Corp.
 
Lowela Jane, the youngest at 27, finished BS Psychology also at UPTC and is now on 4th year at law school. Among the three, both Jessie and Lowela are married with one and two kids, respectively. Now that their children have their own lives, Estopin decided to fulfill his own dream of finishing his studies.
 
In line with his work as a driver, Estopin plans to take up Automotive Mechanic at Ormoc Manpower, Training and Research Center on June. This year’s graduating class of NONHS also include three hearing-impaired from the Special Education. NONHS opened the night class in 2008 to allow workers like Estopin to study. The class starts at 4:30 pm and ends at 9:45 pm and takes five years to complete the entire curriculum. by Elvie R. Roa
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Mar. 26-Apr. 1, 2012)
Team leader Insp. Benigno Niemes holds Ernest Sidney Keeler as they land on the shores of Ipil, this city.
THE primary suspect in the slaying of a businessman last year finally fell into the hands of the police last     Mar. 23. The perpetrator is identified as Ernest Sidney Keeler alias “Kano” who is tagged as the most wanted man in Ormoc with a reward placed on his head.
 
Keeler is responsible for the death of Kris Dy, a scion of a wealthy Chinese family who was found with a fatal gunshot wound inside his car in Simangan, this city after he was robbed in Aug. 20 last year. The suspect is also responsible for the shooting of seaman Jun Salvador “Besoy” Juba at the plaza five days before Dy’s robbery-slay.
 
Keeler was arrested in San Isidro, San Francisco town in Camotes Island, Cebu based on a warrant issued by Judge Apolinario Buaya of RTC Branch 35. The Regional Public Safety Batallion based in Milagro, this city conducted the operation headed by Insp. Benigno Niemes.
 
Keeler sustained a gunshot wound on the neck after engaging the arresting officers to a gunfight using his cal.45 pistol. His wound was dressed at San Francisco General Hospital after which, the party boarded a pumpboat and landed at the shores of Ipil, this city.
 
Aside from the mentioned two celebrated cases, Keeler is also responsible for the robbery holdup of a businesswoman last May 18. The victim is 45-year-old Natividad Elumir-Calabia who was robbed in front of his house in San Isidro, this city.
 
The operatives learned of this from the evidences found in the house of Keeler’s live-in partner where he was picked up in Camotes. The evidences included cheques payable to Calabia, P150,000 cash, cellphone, necklace and other personal items found inside three bags.

Calabia herself positively identified Keeler as the one who pointed a firearm at her and took her bags. She made the identification at Ormoc District Hospital where the suspect was confined for treatment of his wounded neck. The businesswoman gave the police a pat on the back for a job well done.

Keeler is now faced with various charges. Aside from robbery-homicide for and murder for the killing of Dy and Juba, he will also be charged of illegal possession of firearms and ammunition as well as violation of RA 9165 or the Dangerous Drugs Act because of more evidences found.

These include two kilos dried marijuana leaves, a matchbox filled with shabu, two cal.45 pistols one of which attached with a silencer, two blank magazines and a KG9 machine pistol also known as an Ingram with three fully loaded magazines. Police said Keeler was high on drugs during the arrest.

With this development, another suspect arrested earlier was immediately released. The same police unit caught a suspect also called “Kano,” the same alias used by Keeler in Caneja St., PI Garcia, Naval town, Biliran last Mar. 21. The false suspect was promptly released.

Norma Juba, mother of one of Keeler’s slain victims, is thankful for the arrest of killer of her son who would have turned 26 last Mar. 10. For his part, Insp. Niemes thanks some people for helping them locate the suspect’s whereabouts including San Isidro Barangay Captain William Tano and members of the Knights Ulphans Fraternity and Sorority Int’l. by Elvie Roman-Roa
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Mar. 19-25, 2012)

DILG lauds Ormoc’s IT system as the best in EV

TWO officers of Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) described City Hall’s information technology (IT) program as worth replicating nationwide. The remark was made at the outcome of the two-day documentation of best practices on Business Permits and Licensing System.

Regional Planning Center Manager Lilian H. Madjus noted that while other metropolitan cities have the same IT capability, most of their software are brought from vendors and their programs outsourced. Ormoc, on the other hand, developed 27 of its own software.
 
Administrative Asst. III Melchizedec Yap of the IT Department informs that in-house software development saved the local government unit (LGU) P135 million with each software costing up to P5 million if procured from an outside supplier. But the LGU invested on hardware to the tune of P15 million through high-end IBM computers and servers that allow the units to operate 24 hours a day and seven days a week without interruption.
 
Ormoc’s superior IT capability allowed it to pioneer the streamlining of business permit application in the Visayas. What used to take days to issue a business permit now takes an hour because the 17 steps have been reduced to five. Madjus interviewed several businessmen who said business permit application is now convenient with friendly and accommodating staff, no fixers and no holidays nor weekend offs during peak season.
 
For his part, Myles E. Colasito, manger of DILG’s GoFar Program appreciates that the system connects the Business, Permits and Licensing Office to six other departments including the City Treasurer’s Office through Local and Wireless Area Networks. It also allows immediate posting of accounts and generate delinquent accounts to speed up the printing of notices and demand letters. Records are also more up-to-date.
 
These innovations contributed to increased collections which doubled from P30 million in 2004 to P72 million in recent years (see figure 1), Permits, Licensing and Franchising Chief Emilio G. Tingson said. The renewal and registration of new businesses also doubled from 4,459 in 2004 (see figure 2).
 
The GoFar Program is a facility to assist LGUs in building their capacities to enhance development planning, fiscal administration, accountability and service delivery by replicating good, innovative and sustainable practices. It aims to institutionalize the sharing and replication of sustainable good practices in local governance to enable LGUs improve their delivery of basic services to their constituencies. by Jun Tarroza  
(West Leyte Weekl;y Express issue of Mar. 12-18, 2012)

153 indigent elderly receive pension fund

Councilor Lea Doris Capuyan-Villar helps in the paperwork for the release of pension for indigetn senior citizens.
THE Department of Social Welfare and Development distributed P618,000 to 153 indigent senior citizens last Mar. 16 as part of its social pension program. A hundred of the beneficiaries received P3,000 each representing their P500 monthly pension for the 3rd and 4th quarters last year. The rest received P6,000 for the full year.

Councilor Lea Doris Capuyan-Villar who chairs the committee on social welfare in her inspirational speech during the program said she will legislate a local counterpart which will replicate an ordinance for such purpose already enacted in Cebu City.
 
Those qualified to participate in the program are senior citizens who are frail, sick and disabled not receiving any pension, without a permanent source of income or regular support from families and relatives. One beneficiary expressed his appreciation to the program: “Bisan ginagmay ang kwartang hinabang makatabang lang gihapon sa kalisod sa tigulang labi na karon nga panahon nga kami walay panginabuhian na.”
 
Social Worker Officers II Raquel B. Moralde and Nena L. Getalado distributed the cash assisted by Asst. City Social Welfare and Development Officer Imelda Dadulla, and Self Employment Assistance-Kaunlaran Project Evaluation Officer Nelia Oledan. by Joseph Levi Sausa
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Mar. 12-18, 2012)

Ormoc Bay cleared of starfishes


THE City Agriculture and Services Office (Caso) has begun clearing the seabed of Ormoc Bay of Crown of Thorn Starfishes (Cots) last Mar. 11. Irish Belmonte who heads Caso’s Animal Production and Fisheries Division said they have since collected more than 300 Cots that destroy the corals.

Belmonte said they are able to collect 100 Cots for every hour of diving. Cots multiply easily and some of them grow in hard to reach areas like under the rocks. There is now a Cots outbreak in Southern Leyte while in Ormoc, the starfishes have actually began eating into the corals. by Elvie Roman-Roa
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Mar. 12-18, 2012)

Isla Noah declared a danger zone

THE Sangguniang Barangay of Lilo-an passed a resolution endorsing Isla Noah in said village as a “danger zone” and “unsafe to live on.” This is because the said sitio is the first area to be flooded in Ormoc everytime Pagsangaan River overflows during heavy rains.
 
In such cases, all 50 residents of Isla Noah pack their belongings, stay awake the whole night and remain vigilant for floodwaters. Even members of the Organized Rescuers and Medical aides of Ormoc City are complaining because not everyone at the sitio wants to evacuate.
 
If approved, residents will be relocated and no settlement will be allowed on the sitio. Barangay Captain Cheryl Batucan handed a copy of the resolution to Mayor Eric Codilla during his visit to the barangay hoping it will be approved.
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Mar. 12-18, 2012)

DILG secretary asks Beboy to lift closure order on LMC

MAYOR Eric C. Codilla said only a written instruction from Interior Secretary Jesse M. Robredo will make him lift his cease and desist order (CDO) on the water operation of Lide Management Corp. (LMC). The mayor laid down his condition in a meeting with Robredo himself and Lide officials in Cebu last Mar. 5.

Mayor Codilla issued the order two years after the implementation of Ordinance No. 14 charging regulatory fees on water extraction which LMC refuses to comply. Robredo asked him to reconsider his position as it will also affect household consumers in LMC’s water concessionaires in Merida, Isabel and Palompon towns.
 
Mayor Codilla told Robredo to put his instruction in writing to shift the blame to his Department in the event of a disaster. The mayor is concerned that over-extraction of water might result to sinkholes caused by land subsidence and salt water intrusion in the aquifer.
 
The local government unit (LGU) billed LMC P93 million for its water extraction the past two years for P5 per cu.m.. But LMC is willing to pay only 10¢ per cu.m. or P511,000 annually based on the 13,000-14,000 cu.m. it claims it draws out a day. But the LGU suspects LMC sucks up to 20,000 cu.m. a day.
 
LMC also failed to secure a business permit from City Hall since 2002 but regularly applies for a permit from the Isabel LGU in which it declared P63 million in gross sales for the latest year. Mayor Codilla pointed out that LMC should pay 70% of its tax to its water source in Ormoc and 30% to its head office in Isabel based on the Local Government Code.
 
LMC has filed an opposition to Ordinance No. 14 at the Court of Appeals which remains pending. A source at LMC told the express they will pay only how much the court decides them to. For his part, Mayor Codilla argues that until the court hands down a decision, his actions on LMC remain valid. 
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Mar. 5-11, 2012)

Group behind violent robberies identified

THE police finally identified the group behind the string of violent robberies last year after the arrest of one of the suspects in the holdup of JGC Financing Corp. Authorities are now in the lookout for a certain Carlito/Sherlito Torralba of Inopacan, Leyte who heads the Torralba robbery group.

The identification of the mastermind was made by Rodolfo Gonzaga Jr. whose participation in the robbery holdup of JGC last Mar. 2 led to his arrest two days later. His group took off with almost P100,000 and the security guard’s pistol that haven’t been recovered yet.
 
Gonzaga tagged his group as responsible for the robbery holdup of AGD Bakery in Doña Feliza Mejia Subdivision in Aug. 16 and Petron gas station in Cogon in Oct. 5, both last year in Ormoc. The robbers shot dead the lady vendor and cahier on both incidents.
 
But he denied he was part of those two robberies, saying he is a rookie who just heard his companions talk about it. He just joined the group recently and as a beginner, was paid only P5,000 for the JGC job. The bulk of the money will be used to purchase firearms and reserve to be used for bailing out members who get arrested.
 
While Torralba had connections with the underworld in other places like Manila and Cebu, Gonzaga said their group worked independently in the 4th and 6th Districts of Leyte. Gonzaga was submitted for inquest last Mar. 5 for robbery holdup with the use of firearm and intimidation, and violation of RA 9165 or Dangerous Drugs Act Art. 2, sec. 2 for the shabu taken from his possession during his arrest.
 
Precinct 1 Station Commander CInsp. Shevert Alvin L. Machete confirmed that Torralba, who previously lived in the mountain barangay of Cabingtan, here in Ormoc, has a standing arrest warrant for attempted murder. His brother Lucio alias “Toto” is now in city jail for frustrated murder and has not paid for his bail for P520,000. by Elvie Roman-Roa
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Mar. 5-11, 2012)

LMC shuts down water pumping stations

SHOW OF POLITICAL WILL. Mayor Eric C. Codilla serves the cease and desist order (CDO) to Water Supply Operation Section Head Mardenio T. Tapang as Vice Mayor Nepomuceno P. Aparis I reads the enlarged copy of the CDO posted at LMC’s gate.
MAYOR Eric C. Codilla finally ordered Lide Management Corp. (LMC) to shut down its pumping stations in Ormoc last Feb. 28. Accompanied by city and police officials, the mayor personally went to LMC’s main pumping station in Salvacion at 4:30 pm.
 
LMC maintains eight pumping stations in Salvacion and Sto. Niño where it draws water from underground 250 meters deep. Some employees led by Water Supply Operation Section Head Mardenio T. Tapang met Mayor Codilla’s party at the gate. The mayor didn’t enter the compound and just read aloud his cease and desist order (CDO).
 
The order directs LMC “to immediately and completely cease and desist from doing, performing, or continuing” extraction of water “from all sub-surface.” It is also ordered to stop its water pump operations “and all machineries and implements used or devoted, whether partly or wholly, to raise, pump, transfer, transmit, compress, or by any other similar means deliver water extracted from all” sources “within and forming part of the city of Ormoc and its barangays.”
 
Mayor Codilla issued the CDO because of LMC’s refusal to comply with Ordinance No. 149. Aside from charging regulatory fees, section 4 of the ordinance requires extractors to install a device to measure the quantity of water extracted and submit a monthly report of the volume of drawn out.
 
LMC was billed P93 million for the past two years since the ordinance was passed which it refuses to pay, citing a Letter of Instruction (LOI) by the late President Ferdinand E Marcos exempting the company from local taxes and ordinances on the ground that it serves the national economic interest.
 
But Mayor Codilla believes the LOI’s legality has already expired after the two industries served by LMC – Philippine Associated Smelting and Refining Corp., and Philippine Phosphate Fertilizer Co. – have been privatized in the early ‘90s during the Ramos administration.
 
Mayor Codilla also said LMC has been engaging in the water business without paying taxes to Ormoc where its source is located. It hasn’t even bothered to secure a business permit from the city government for the past 10 years, it was learned.
 
LMC maintains water concessionaires including two water districts in Merida and Isabel towns, and one barangay in Palompon town. It also sells bottled water under the product name Tubig. Isabel Water District General Manager Renen Geraldo told the express they paid P90,000-100,000 a month to LMC.
 
Isabel Relocation Water Consumers’ Association Inc. Board Chairman Manuel Tabucanon also confirmed to the express that their 700 household consumers pay over P80,000 a month to LMC. During the interview last Mar. 1, Tabucanon said they experienced low water pressure because of the water pumps’ shutdown.
 
This confirms the claim of LMC’s Community Relations Officer Nilo Comaling that they turned off their operation 3:00 pm of Feb. 27 before the CDO was served. Geraldo said they are looking into enforcing water rationing if the dispute between the Ormoc and LMC is not resolved.
 
Also affected are barangays in Ormoc served by LMC namely Salvacion, Sto. Niño, San Juan, Licuma, Libertad, Airport, Lilo-an, Curva and Margen. Despite this, Salvacion Barangay Captain Orland Nellas said they did not sign a petition prepared by LMC opposing the CDO because water can easily be found in springs and deep wells in their community.
 
Besides, many of his constituents are preparing to connect to Ormoc Waterworks and Sewerage Administration (Orwasa) which charges P3.50/m2 compared LMC’s P16 per cu.m. which is five times more expensive. Even if LMC gives free 3,000 cu.m. to every household consumer, the difference in the overall bill is still big compared to Orwasa.

For example, Nellas claims he used to pay P600 a month to LMC for his two houses. Today, he pays only a little over P100 to Orwasa for both houses that have level 3 connection. A barangay kagawad also said LMC has stopped giving free 3,000 cu.m. to new connections.
 
During the serving of the CDO, Mayor Codilla was accompanied by Vice Mayor Nepomuceno P. Aparis I; Councilors Sotero Pepito, Rafael Omega Jr., Jose C. Alfaro Jr. and Demosthenes Tugonon; Legal Officer Augustine Vestil, City Polilce Director SSupt. Elizar Egloso and barangay officials of Salvacion. by Elvie Roman-Roa
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Feb. 27-Mar. 4, 2012)

Beboy tags political foes behind crimes

MAYOR Eric C. Codilla said he will soon get to the bottom of the high profile crimes committed in Ormoc, believing that politics is behind the incidents to embarrass his administration. The mayor is optimistic about this following the arrest of a minor-aged carnapper during a shootout with members of Precicnt 1’s Investigation Detection Management Office last Feb. 1.
 
The 15-year-old suspect carrying the alias “Dodong Gamay” of Tugbong in neighboring Kananga town, is responsible for the series of carnapping incidents in which the stolen vehicles were abandoned and recovered in other places in and outside Ormoc, the farthest of which was in Alangalang town.
 
“Dodong” was shot on the leg during a firefight with the men of SPO1 Rudy Maglasang. During interrogation, he confessed that someone from Albuera town paid him P15,000 for every vehicle he carnaps only to be abandoned someplace else. He has been released recently from Ormoc District Hospital and is now in police custody.
 
Aside from the carnapping incidents, Mayor Codilla believes the series of robbery holdups that claimed two lives are also politically motivated. He finds it odd that the robbers would take the lives of their victims without taking any loot. The police are already conducting a manhunt for the suspects with orders not to kill them to know who their masterminds are.
 
In Aug. 17 last year, a bakery in Doña Feliza Mejia Subdivision wherein the perpetrators shot dead a salesgirl for P500 only. In Oct. 5 last year, culprits pounced on a Petron gas station in Cogon, killing the cashier but not taking any cash. by Jun Tarroza
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Feb. 27-Mar. 4, 2012)

Ormoc City Jail is model for other similar facilities

THE Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP) will make the Ormoc City Jail as a model for the implementation of the Therapeutic Community Program (TCP). This was learned during the visit last Mar. 2 of newly installed BJMP Regional Director SSupt. Hernan Grande at the city jail.

He was accompanied by his assistant Supt. Edwin Riel six other jail wardens of Leyte and Samar to see for themselves the successful implementation of TCP for the past two years spearheaded by Inmates Welfare Development Office Chief Insp. Arlene Barraca.
 
The six accompanying jail wardens are SJO4 Alfie Paraiso of Catbalogan, Samar; Insp. Maning Tomaning of Borongan, Eastern Samar; SInsp. Aselcrito Encio of Calbayog, Samar; SInsp. Rill Sonon of Burauen, Leyte; SJO3 Julius Palada of Tanauan, Leyte; and SJO4 Salvador Rotairo.
 
Under the TCP, jail occupants are no longer called inmates but community residents. They also learned to address each other as kapatid instead of kakosa. The residents presented a program before the visitors that included a comedy skit, news reporting, Bible-reading and testimonies. It was capped by a touching singing of May Bukas Pa by everyone while holding hands.

The TCP brought about a positive outlook among the community residents, making them more cooperative as they look forward to becoming productive and law-abiding citizens upon their release. SInsp. Sonon said he has already started implementing TCP to the 65 residents in his jail in Burauen. by Elvie Roman-Roa
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Feb. 27-Mar. 4, 2012)

More attractions for city plaza

ORMOC Supreme Lions Club will put benches at the city plaza in cooperation with Energy Development Corp. Club President Wenceslao Arcuino Jr. assured that 30 benches will be installed at the seawall facing the bay before his term expires on June this year.

An architect by profession, Arcuino said there is a need to provide benches to enable strollers to appreciate the sunset at Ormoc Bay. Upon turnover the benches, he hopes the city government will be able to maintain them well and protect these from vandals.
 
Meanwhile, Mayor Eric C. Codilla bared that Andok’s Litson Corp. and Indiana Aerospace University (IAU) won the bidding last Feb. 13 to occupy prime spaces at the plaza. Adok’s won the 644 sq.m. site formerly occupied by Chito’s Chow while IAU will take up the former Executive Building.
 
Bids and Award Committee (BAC) Secretariat Gina Abenio said there were no bidders for the former Sangguniang Panlungsod (SP) building. Andok’s will pay P150 per sq.m. a month for the lot along Imelda Blvd. while IAU will pay P200 per sq.m. a month for the two-storey 704 sq.m. building.
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Feb. 27-Mar. 4, 2012)

DA grooms Ormoc-Kananga to become region’s salad bowl

THE Department of Agriculture (DA) gathered the key implementers of the Ormoc-Kananga (OK) Upland Range Development Program for a two-day Orientation and Project Proposal Writeshop to orient them on certain standards required in packaging research and development activities as set forth by funding agencies like the Bureau of Agricultural Research.

DA Regional Executive Director Antonio G. Gerundio in his welcome address informed that initial activities have been started and some logistic support are already in place to transform the Tongonan mountain range into a major grower of semi-temperate vegetables and high value crops. But to ensure sustainability of our programs and services and to systematize everything we need to translate all this into viable and doable proposals,” he explained.
 
The OK Upland Range project is a public-private partnership arrangement between DA and Energy Development Corp. Both agencies have pledged P92 million to develop suitable areas surrounding the Leyte Geothermal Production Field to provide livelihood to about 5,600 farmers.
 
The area covers 107,625 hectares along the Tongonan mountain range spanning across 16 barangays in Ormoc and Kananga town. Subsistence farmers there grow assorted vegetables and fruits like cabbage, green onion, tomato, eggplant, radish, chayote, cucumber and pineapple. About five tons are harvested weekly and sold at the public markets of Ormoc and Kananga.
 
Under the five-year project, farmers will be encouraged to plant other fruit crops like durian, rambutan and jackfruit as well as coffee and abaca. National Agribusiness Corp. (Nabcor) will assist farmers in land preparation, cultivation, harvesting, processing, and marketing of vegetables and other high value commercial crops.
 
Of the P92 million funding, Nabcor will share P29 million to build a consolidation center and pilot packinghouse, and provide marketing support. Another P13 million is earmarked for research and development.
 
Participants of the two-day activity include technical experts from Visayas State University and EDC namely Dr. Jun Acedo, Prof. Pasky Quirol, Dr. Lito Bestil, Dr. Tony Abamo, Dr.Tony Quimio, Mario Sumabat,. Jojo Paredes, etc. Also present are Rufino B. Ayaso III, Raul T. Repulda, Dr. Carlos de la Cruz and Dr. Veronica J. Berenguer, all of DA-Regional Field Unit 8.
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Feb. 27-Mar. 4, 2012)

Beboy banners good governance in SOCA

MAYOR Eric C. Codilla attributes the success of his administration to putting good governance at the forefront of his development agenda. In his State of the City Address, the mayor placed emphasis on guarding the people’s money from wastage by putting in place institutional safeguards to ensure proper accounting, recording and disbursement of funds.

The mayor cited the New City Hall inaugurated in Apr. 26, 2010 where the Ormocanons can transact business with comfort and convenience. He described the modern building as a testament of good governance as it was completed at the least cost without incurring any debt.
 
The New City Hall’s building has a gross floor area (GFA) of 14,800 sq.m. and costs P380 million or P23,000 per sq.m. only. Mayor Codilla compared this to the new City Halls of Bacolod and Tagum that are smaller in size but are more expensive at P450 million and P720 million, respectively. The Tagum City Hall has not even been completed as of last year, he said.
 
He then enumerated the characteristics of good governance as transparency, accountability, participative leadership, as well as effectiveness and efficiency of public service. These characteristics reaped for Ormoc recognitions like the Most Business Friendly City ’04 award from the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry and its inclusion in Asian Institute of Management’s 10 Most Competitive Cities.
 
Recently, Ormoc was recognized as 1st runner-up in the Search for Child Friendly City. Mayor Codilla said the local government unit (LGU) wasn’t prepared, much less aware of the search because the Social Welfare Department merely submitted Ormoc’s child and youth welfare programs to the national search. The LGU was just surprised to be informed that it placed 2nd after Santiago City.
 
Another important citation was the Seal of Good Housekeeping (SGH) in which the Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) declared the Ormoc excellent in four key areas of governance namely:
 
A. Sound fiscal management - no adverse findings from Commission on Audit;
B. Transparency and accountability - full disclosure policy;
C. Use of performance monitoring tools and regular reports; and
D. Good planning (comprehensive city development plant)
 
Provinces, cities and municipalities nationwide that were stamped with SGH were given cash rewards from the DILG’s Local Government Support Fund with Ormoc receiving the highest amount of P45 million in Region 8 and another P2 million for being conferred the Gawad Pamana ng Lahi award.
 
While not all the recognitions reaped by Ormoc have been publicized or made it to the news, Mayor Codilla said what is important is that his administration has implemented programs without intending to win awards. “Everything is primarily done because of the needs of the community without any anticipation of receiving a recognition or award,” he said. “We will work for a cause, not for applause.”
(West Leyte Weekly Express issue of Feb. 20-26, 2012)