By Mortz C.
Ortigoza
Cadets from the Philippine Military Academy
sent to the United States Military Academy and those at military colleges in
South Korea, Japan, Canada, and Australia disclosed some of their sad financial
plights.
USMA Second
Class Cadet Jesson Peñaflor said that he and his co- West Point, New York based
cadet have to pay each $2,000 (P105, 270.00) their education and training supplies
and equipment at USMA before they trudge their four years military and academic
courses.
He said neither
the PMA nor USMA pay for these materials.
This disclosure
was recently posted at the Face Book’s account of Gabriel Ortigoza, a former
military professor at the PMA, when he attended the graduation of the
USMA Class of 2018 in New York last May 26 this year.
WEST POINTERS – United
States Military Academy’s First Class Cadet Renier Dela Cruz (extreme
left) and Second Class Cadet Jesson Peñaflor flanked former Military Professor
Gabriel Ortigoza of the Philippine Military Academy when Ortigoza attended the
USMA Class of 2018 graduation held at the Michie Stadium in USMA, New York
recently.
The two Filipino
cadets are part of the treaty called Foreign Service Academy Program signed
by the Philippines with the United States. The country has other similar
programs with South Korea, Japan, Australia, and Canada.
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The PMA have two
“international cadets” it sent to USMA in Peñaflor and Renier Dela Cruz.
Dela Cruz, who
is from Baybay, Leyte, will be graduating in May next year while Peñaflor, from
Bukidnon, will get his diploma at the Michie Stadium in May 2020.
“The $2000 nonrefundable
payment is for all the initial items we use upon coming to West Point like the
laptop uniforms, etcetera sir. We can either pay it
up front or our allowance will be deducted every month till the end of yearling
year until we pay it all off sir. Either will do sir. We’re already grateful
for the free education, the salary is just a bonus sir!,” he told commenters who were rankled if not
shocked by Ortigoza’s post he styled as
opinion article with a title “Filipino Cadets at West Point”.
The cadet at
West Point has a miniscule monthly stipend of $200.
A Filipino who
has a son at the U.S Coast Guard Academy in Washington D.C reacted when he
thought everything at West Point was free since his son at the USCGA have been
regularly receiving his allowances not only from the Coast Guard Academy but in
the Philippine Coast Guard.
“I
thought it’s all free. My son who is also an international cadet at the US
Coast Guard Academy is not paying anything plus he gets a monthly allowance in
US dollars. He is also getting monthly salary from the Philippine Coast Guard.
Time for PMA to learn from the Coasties,” the PMA alumnus cited.
Peñaflor differed however by saying that a Filipino cadet at West Point
did not pay anything since the $2000 could be deducted by $100 monthly in the
first two years at the Academy.
Ortigoza said as
a nurse in Sacramento California the already deducted $100 monthly allowance of
a Filipino cadet at the USMA is only a two-hour pay of a nurse in California.
Peñaflor cited
that the PMA will not shoulder their air fare in case they want to
go home to the Philippines during their academic break.
The average back and forth airfare according to Ortigoza between the U.S and the Motherland is $1,000 or more than P52,000.00.
The average back and forth airfare according to Ortigoza between the U.S and the Motherland is $1,000 or more than P52,000.00.
“USMA is the one who pays for our airfare not PMA,” he mentioned too his experience when he reported to New York for
his plebe year almost three years ago.
Former President Fidel V. Ramos, alumnus of
the military college near the bank of Hudson River, was heard to say that he spent his breaks with his relatives at Sacramento, California from 1947 to 1950 when he
was a student at the West Point because air travel to the
Philippines was prohibitively priced then.
The father of a
USCGA cadet said that before his son reported to the USCGA, the PCG paid the
$3000 for the personal requirements of the cadet notwithstanding the air fare
from the U.S to the Philippines the PCG pays for its cadet.
“Since West Point
has not accepted a Filipino cadet for two years in a row now. I just hope that
at the next time West Point does (accepts another Filipino) the government
could just help with a plane ticket for a vacation even just once in all his
four years, sir,” Peñaflor retorted.
Ortigoza said
that after he posted the sorry states of cadets from the Philippines in the U.S,
a PMA cadet sent to military college in South Korea narrated the same
predicament not only with those at the West Point but those Filipino cadets at
the Army, Air Force, and Naval Academies in South Korea, the National Defense
Academy of Japan in Japan, the Royal Military College
in Australia, and Royal Military College of Canada.
“This message seems inappropriate but I just cannot
keep myself from sending my gratitude to what you posted about cadets in West Point,
sir. I am also a cadet sent to a foreign academy, sir. We are 15 here in Korea,
sir. Three cadets are sent to the army air force and the naval academy (sic)
every year here, sir and three are at the language institute studying the
required language, sir. There are also cadets in Japan, Australia and Canada,
sir. Everyone of us are experiencing the same thing, sir but for the service we
want to give in the future we are trying to keep ourselves firm and strong so
none of us will even think of quitting and leaving the service. Thank you for
what you've posted, sir. People who can help us may not see it but simple
people who see and appreciate our small sacrifice will give us more strength
and become our inspiration to work harder. Thank you again, sir and may God
bless you always, sir,” the cadet in
South Korea, Ortigoza did not name, cited.
A certain Wilfredo Mejia smarted that if the Philippine government
used the military services of these young Filipinos to sacrifice their life and
limb against the enemies of the state, the government should correct these
holes.
“If it is true that Filipino cadets at West Point have to pay for their admission to West Point, it's about time the Philippines government stepped up and took care of paying for the "cost" of admission to USMA,” Mejia exhorted the government.
Ortigoza in his post called the attention of Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana to iron out the kinks in the country’s financial obligation to its cadets in the USMA.
“If it is true that Filipino cadets at West Point have to pay for their admission to West Point, it's about time the Philippines government stepped up and took care of paying for the "cost" of admission to USMA,” Mejia exhorted the government.
Ortigoza in his post called the attention of Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana to iron out the kinks in the country’s financial obligation to its cadets in the USMA.
Since the time
of Vicente Podico Lim in 1910, PMA cadets have been sent to these
foreign military colleges through a treaty called Foreign Service
Academy Program.
Presently, the
Philippine has the following alumni from the West Point. They are Lim (USMA
Class of 1914), Rafael Ileto (USMA Class of 1943), Fidel Ramos (USMA Class of
1950), Florencio Magsino (USMA Class of 1951), Gregorio Vigilar (USMA Class of
1953), Thelmo Cunanan (USMA Class of 1961), Narciso Abaya (USMA Classof 1971),
Danilo Lim (USMA Class of 1978), Jose Rene N. Jarque (USMA Class of 1986),
Dennis Eclarin (USMA Class of 1993), Floren P. Herrera (USMA Class of 2013),
and Don Stanley Dalisay (USMA Class of 2017).
READ MY OTHER ARTICLE: These LGUs should honor new West Pointer, Mom
READ MY OTHER ARTICLE: These LGUs should honor new West Pointer, Mom
(You can read my selected columns at http://mortzortigoza.blogspot.com and articles at Pangasinan News Aro. You can send comments too at totomortz@yahoo.com)
Manuel Lopez: BAKIT GANUN? ang lupit! may bayad pa pala pag nag USMA ka? samantalang parang change scholar ang status nyan! hinde nga! eheg eheg eheg
ReplyDeleteRemegio Lapaz: Di na angay adto mo escuela sa USMA & other foreign military academies ug ma o nai situation. Balik mo sa bagyo (PMA).
Nevik Siosancan : $2,000 lng ba para sa goberno? ila ra man gni na usahay kwton sauna.. issue-han na na uy pila ra man na..
you forgot to mention the late LUciano Gaboy originally from PMA Class of 1975 and graduated at USMA in 1976 and joined the then PC,,,there are so many others
ReplyDeleteThe article was not clear if the 2 USMA Filipino cadets entered thru the RP-US Defense Agreement and officially sent to study by the Philippine Government thru the AFP. If they were indeed sent thru official defense agreement, then they have their own salary as a Cadet in the AFP, which like their counterpart Cadet in PMA, are also using their salary as a Cadet to pay for their uniforms, foods and other personal necessities since the government only provides free education. They should be grateful that they were given an opportunity to study in USMA at the expense of the US taxpayers money and do still receive salary as a Cadet provided by Filipino taxpayers money with an assured job as a Commissioned Officer in the AFP after graduation.
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