Sunday, June 30, 2024

Milyon-Milyong Peso ang Benepisyo ng mga Brgy sa Quarry

Ni Mortz C. Ortigoza

LINGAYEN, Pangasinan – Umaabot nang milyon-milyon at daan-daang libong pesos kada taon ang naging bahagi ng mga barangay sa pamumuno ni Pangasinan Governor Ramon V. Guico III at Vice Governor Mark Ronald Lambino.

Ayon kay Lambino magmula noong naisabatas ng Guico Administration ang tax ordinance na nag amend sa 11 years old na Revenue Code sa extraction, administrative fees, road maintenance, at iba pa, hindi lang tumaas nang walong tiklop ang buwis na nakoleksyon ng provincial government dito magmula noong bumaba sa pwesto si dating Gobernador Amado Espino III noong June 30, 2022.

QUARRY. A quarry operator with his equipement in one of the villages in Pangasinan.

Sa buong taon ng 2020, P12 million lamang ang nakulekta ng provincial treasurer kumpara sa P120 million magmula Enero at kalahati ng Hunyo ngayong taon, ayon sa bise gobernador noong makausap siya ng mga reporters dito.

Aniya baka mahigit P200 million ang makukulekta ng Guico Administration pagkatapos ng taon na ito.

“And we’re moving toward 18 months after the implementation (ng bagong tax ordinance sa quarry). Ang Probinsiya po ng Pangasinan nagtarget po tayo, I believed, P150 million for the year but ang collection po natin in the first five and half months ay nasa P120 million na po. If I remember for the figures of the treasury so iyang two years ago na collection na P12 million ngayon po sa isang taon anim o lima’t kalahating buwan pa lang ay times ten na po ang koleksyon. So if the projection is correct magtuloy-tuloy na ito we’re expecting at least around P200 million or even higher pag natapos na that’s the collection alone for the extraction business, etcetera”.

Dahil dito ang probinsiya, mga munisipyo at mga barangay na pinagkukunan ng quarry ay naging benepisyaryo ng ilang beses na bahagi ng pondo.

Sinabi sa kanya ng Guzon Barangay Chairman na bukod sa annual budget ng huli na P20 million kumikita pa siya sa unprogrammed budget na P2.5 million kada tatlong buwan magmula nang maisabatas ang amended quarry ordinance.

“E ngayon kung nakaka P2.5 million every quarter that translate to additional P10 million na unprogrammed budget niya. Ano po ang magagawa ng isang barangay sa sampung milyon?

Ani Lambino iyong Brgy Guzon -at ibang pang mga barangay na kumikita ng milyon at daan-daang libo kada taon ay kaya na nilang bumili o tumustos ng mga kailangan sa health services nila, emergency response vehicle, at mga pangangailangan ng mga indigents.

Aniya sa mga maliliit na mga barangay sila ay nakakakuha ng P200, 000 kada tatlong buwan o quarter o P800, 000 kada taon. Iyong halaga na iyan ay malaking bagay pandagdag sa naka programmed na yearly budget nila na P6 million at P7 million kada taon.

“Imagine po ang mga additional na programa na kaya nilang gawin at ito ay directly na napupunta sa barangay. Nakikita, malinis, transparent po ganoon din po doon sa mga munisipyo may shares na din po sila sa collection at directly din pong napupunta sa kanilang treasury”.

Ang mga cheke ng mga barangay ay pinapa-fund transfer na ng provincial treasurer.

Aniya kada quarter nagsasara ng libro ang provincial treasurer kaya every tatlong buwan din nilang kino-compute ang share hindi lang ng mga barangay kundi pati na ang mga bayan na may quarry at ang probinsiya.

Ayon sa Local Government Code, 40 percent ng buwis na nakukuha ay mapupunta sa barangay kung saan galing ang quarry, 30 percent sa bayan o siyudad kung saan ang nasabing barangay ay nasasakop, at 30 percent sa probinsiya.

Dumanas ng birth pain ang implementasyon ng batas dahil sa maraming tumututol noon.

“May mga reports din po na namantala at tinaas po ng nakakatakot ang presyo but eventually nag dive down po ito na regulate at binantayan din po natin ang mga namamantala doon sa mga overpricing,” dagdag ni Lambino.

Sinabi noon ng Mines and Geosciences Bureau ng Department of Environment and Natural Resources kay Governor Guico noong wala pa itong bagong batas na ang Pangasinan ang may pinakamababa na extraction fees sa quarry sa apat na probinsiya ng Region-1.

Kailangan din ang batas na ito dahil umaabot ng mahigit P1 billion ang nagagastos sa mga tulay at kalsada na sinisira ng mga trucks ng mga nagku-quarry pag ito ay kanilang nadadaanan.

Why Prov’l Newspapers go Bankrupt?

 By Mortz C. Ortigoza

While inside my car going for a dinner at the Niña's Café owned by the mayor-missus of billionaire businessman Cezar T. Quiambao of Bayambang, Pangasinan after the latter invited some reporters to have some sumptous chows there, seasoned writer the septuagenarian Rhee Fer Hortaleza told me that a long time publishing provincial weekly newspaper in Pangasinan has folded out.

A NEWSSTAND OWNER fixes her national and local newspapers she peddles at the sidewalk of Baguio City. Photo credit: Joseph Manzano

As a former publisher and the present Editor-in-Chief of the Northern Watch Newspaper I know like the palm of my hand the financial woes of weeklies in the gargantuan province: Printing cost  weekly that runs to eight to ten thousand pesos if the front and back are colored and it is 10 pages and the monthly salaries of the writers, errand boy, and the editor. This not to mention the P800 to P1,000 per week remuneration of the layout artist if the newspaper has eight to ten pages. The cost of production is miniscule if the newspaper has enough advertisement that runs from six thousand pesos to twelve thousand pesos per whole page – as it depends on the kind of pages (the cheaper inside page or the expensive back page) or either it’s black and white or colored printed. 

But with the advent of the internet that turned newspapering publication into website and blog like the vaunted Facebook Page -- where they expand their reach even to readers as far a Burkina Faso in Africa, Turkmenistan in Central Asia and Antartica whenever there are those Filipino diasporas and as near as Barangay Matictic in Norzagary, Bulacan and Barangays Lareg-lareg and Bakitiw in Malasiqui, Pangasinan for free --, traditional newspapering have been meeting their demise while the others are on their borrowed time as they bleed their publishers' pocket. Environmentalist however applauded the tragedy brought by the internet's technology because they save a lot of paper trees.

Legendary Baguio City's Newspaper Gone Under

Just this morning, I saw at Facebook that Baguio Midland Courier just announced that it would close shop on July 22 this year.

Excerpt:

“Your Baguio Midland Courier, after 77 years of unparalleled and credible publication by providing news and information that matter to the public, is ceasing its operation effective July 22, 2024,” statement signed by Gloria Antoinette M. Hamada, Publisher and Chief Operation Officer of Hamada Printers and Publishers Corporation and Baguio Midland Courier.

When I was growing up at the Philippines Military Academy in Baguio City at the early 1970’s, I saw my military father wielded a Baguio Midland Courier and a broadsheet whenever he arrived at our house from the city. When I worked at the public information office of the PMA in the late 1980’s, I bought too the Courier at one of the countless newsstands  - including the daily Sun Star Newspaper - when I trudged the Session Road after attending my Sunday's worship at the Evangelical Church at the then U.S military ran Camp John Hay.  I bought too at the U.S government leased military camp its military newspaper the colored Stars and Stripes before licking my ice cream in cone that tasted Stateside I bought at the ice cream parlor there for some U.S cents (of course convertible to the Philippines currency).

Why Provinical Newspapers Go South?

The predicament for local newspaper publishers why they go in the red not only on the expenses but because of the dearth of advertisers who absconded them by going to those online publication being patronized by the masa. But you wonder why there are still more than 20 newspapers in Pangasinan that still circulate –some at 200 copies only per week publication, susmariosep! - despite the economic malaise they are facing? Most of these weeklies are ubiquitous not on the newsstands of some of the 44 towns and four cities’ province but inside the offices of the judges of the municipal and regional trial courts.

These weeklies survived on the hefty payments of court petitioners who need to meet the legal requisite of a three-week publication of their Self-Adjudication with Deed of Donation, Extra-Judicial Settlement of Estate with Quit Claim, Deed of Extra Judicial Settlement of Real Property with Deed of Absolute Sale, Deed of Extra Judicial Settlement Among the Estate heirs of XYZ, to name a few.

 A four inches in width and six inches in length publication on a newspaper page cost more or less P20, 000 for a litigant who will pay the publisher in exchange for the latter to issue a signed Affidavit of Publication – of course notarized by a lawyer – to consummate the requirement.

These more than 20 weeklies – whose news items are less interesting because they’re mostly taken gratis from government propaganda offices -  agreed to get their publication from the office of the executive judge through raffles or a pro rata distribution among themselves. The problem however if there are few legal publications to be distributed and the publisher needs to pay the printing press, the reporters (but most of them in the province are not paid at all because they use the paper for P.R with politicians in a quid pro quo for some sums), and the layout artist, these give headache to the owners where some of them have closed shops even some decades ago. Those who survived until now are the publishers who owned the printing press. Some of them even owned five newspapers fronted by their dummies. A few of them told me that despite being recipient of countless of publications from the court the revenues are still not profitable enough.

“Pang prestige at power projection na lang para sa akin na malaman ng community at mga pulitiko na meron akong newspaper,” a publisher told me once. She could tap her writers and columnists to attack a government official she thinks crossed her path.

Was this foresight similar to the Taipans who bought the Philippines Daily Inquirer and the Philippines Star from their previous publishers who saw that the venture was no longer profitable?

She said that her less profitable newspaper business is offset by the other lucrative printing jobs like books and magazines contracted with her by the public - particularly the Department of Education - and private sectors.

Why Other Newspapers Survive?

Other traditional Pangasinan newspapers – like my Northern Watch Newspaper – avoided extinction because some folks – like those big time politico and trader - funded if not bought them to perpetuate their interest. My 2007 founded newspaper was funded by Abono Partylist where two of us columnists and our editor were hired as consultant and later as monthly paid workers – it means we have monthly remuneration that made us an envy of writers in other newspapers who turned green eyed upon discovering that even the payments from the court petitioners - that were tens of thousands of pesos monthly - we divide them among ourselves.  The Party even paid the printing cost of Northern Watch to advance its agenda by distributing the Watch to folks all over the province for free. The downside, however, nobody dared to buy our newspaper because it usually bannered the conceited news of Abono and they were like plague to serious readers. Our financial heydays since 2010 ended in 2020 when the lethal pandemic Corona Virus 19  ripped off the economy that our patron dropped us like hot potato.

Luckily, my businesswoman friend bought it from us in late 2020 seeing the profit she could get as Northern Watch is certified by the courts – through my tireless efforts before - to join raffles and bill the litigants who were ordered by the court to publish their concern at our paper.

“Bahala ka nang maglagay ng mga news mo diyan,” she exhorted me thus those fiery and screaming headlines being carried by the Watch that you folks could read on my blog in advance as newspaper take three days from layout, completion of the printing job, and landing at the newsstands. Publication at my three personal blogs took only some minutes for posting for all and sundry to read after I drafted my column and my reporters submit their news reports.

Online Publications get the Ads

I was amused more than a month ago when the public relation officer of SM Supermalls haggled with me for the price I billed for her principal’s regular advertisement cum P.R news not on the newspaper I edit but on its popular online version – that I still owned.

“Pero Sir lagyan niyo rin ng isang news ng SM ang newspaper niyo every week. Ang ex-deal namin kumain na lang kayo ng libre sa lahat ng stores ng SM dito sa central and northern Luzon pag andoon ako,” she said.

“Okay!” I retorted for the free meal and the compensation on the ads at my blog.

So my poser for everybody, who said that newspapering business is dead for the pocket and the tummy?

Thursday, June 27, 2024

72 Bagong Trabaho sa Sta. Barbara

 

Ni Mortz C. Ortigoza 

Sa inisyatiba ni Sta. Barbara Mayor Carlito S. Zaplan, isinagawa ang deployment orientation ng local government unit (LGU) para sa 72 Special Program for the Employment of Students (SPES) beneficiaries sa Conference Room ng Sta. Barbara Town Hall kamakailan.


Kumatawan kay Mayor Zaplan sa oryentasyon ng mga 72 na benepisaryo ay si Municipal Administrator Benigno L. Cruz. Layunin ng nasabing orientation na magabayan ang mga SPES workers sa kanilang magiging trabaho bilang office staff, barangay staff, at LGU survey enumerators sa loob ng 22 na araw.

Sa tulong ng Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE), nagkaroon ng 31 LGU-DOLE shared funding SPES beneficiaries at 41 LGU fully funded SPES beneficiaries. Ang layunin ng gobyerno dito ay upang mabigyan ng "summer job" ang ilang kabataan bilang tulong sa kanilang pag-aaral.

BYB-Metro: “Sparkplug” sa Cityhood ng Bayambang

 Ni Mortz C. Ortigoza

BAYAMBANG, Pangasinan – Ang P2.5 billion BYB Metro ay magiging “sparkplug” sa pagiging siyudad ng munisipyo na ito kung pagbabasehan ang kikitain nitong hanggang P200 million kada taon na buwis pandagdag sa kasalukuyang P300 million na local taxes na nakukulekta nito.

Ani dating Mayor Cezar T. Quiambao na ang BYP Metro ay makakapagbigay ng P50 million to P200 million na estate taxes sa kaban ng bayan na ito taon-taon pag ito ay fully operational na.

BYB–METRO. Bayambang Mayor Mary Clare Judith Phyllis Jose Quiambao speaks before the crowd who attended the groundbreaking ceremony of the 67-hectare Bayambang Metro Town Center dubbed as BYB-Metro held at Brgy. Bani of the landlocked town on June 25, 2024. The Metro is under the auspices of the Agricultural Infrastructure & Leasing Corporation (AILC) whose President and Chief Executive Officer are Dr. Cezar T. Quiambao and Philip B. Jose, respectively.

Ang Metro ay itatayo sa 22 ektarya na lupain sa loob ng 67 ektaryang na binili niya sa Central Azucarera de Tarlac (CAT) Realty –  kumpanya na pag-aari ng pamilyang Cojuangco ng Probinsya Tarlac.

Ang 77 barangays na landlocked na bayan na ito ay may kasalukuyang annual appropriation budget na P750 million ayon sa dating alkalde.

Si Dr. Quiambao ay kasalukuyang Presidente ng Agricultural Infrastructure and Leasing Corp (AILC).

Aniya 40 porsiyento o P300 million ng P750 million budget ngayong taon ay galing sa mga local na buwis na business, real properties at iba pa ng mga tao dito.

Ayon sa Republic Act 11683 na bumago sa Section 450 ng Local Government Code of the Philippines, ang isang bayan na gustong maging siyudad ay kailangan makamit niya ang dalawang pangangailangan gaya ng P100 million na local taxes kada taon base sa year 2000 constant prices (na maging P500 million) at population na hindi baba sa 150 thousand o 100 square kilometers na lupain.

Ang first class na bayan na ito ay may halos 130 thousand na populasyon at 55.58 square kilometers na lupain. Bukod sa P500 million na local taxes na dapat kitain, kailangan ng Bayambang ng dagdag 20, 000 na populasyon para makamit ang cityhood.

Nakalagay sa Republic Act No. 1194 (Automatic Income Classification of Provinces, Cities, and Municipalities, and for other Purposes) na pinirmahan ni President Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. noong October 26, 2023 na kailangan ng isang 5th class city na kumita kada taon ng average annual income na P500 million.

Noong pinalitan ni Quiambao si dating Mayor Ricardo Camacho noong June 30, 2016, ang local taxes na nakukulekta ng huli ay P40 million lamang sa huling taon niyang panunungkulan. 

"We are anticipating a surge in unemployment, especially among the youth, but this project will usher in investments, and job opportunities. It is not for the economy alone but also for culture and commerce," ani Mayor Mary Clare Judith Phyllis Jose Quiambao – ang maybahay ng dating alkalde - sa kanyang speech noong groundbreaking ceremony ng BYB dito sa Barangay Bani noong Hunyo 25.

Ang Metro ay lalagyan ng commercial-residential township project kung saan meron itong theme park, open spaces, hotels, housing, and business areas na matatapos limang taon magmula ngayon.

Magbi-benepisyo ang mga karatig bayan sa proyekto na ito, ani Mayor Quiambao.

“It would also boost tourism in the town and neighboring areas since it is adjacent to the famous St. Vincent Ferrer Prayer Park, where the tallest engineered bamboo statue is located, and pilgrims visit”.

Ang BYB Metro’s Blue Sky theme park theme, paliwanag ni dating mayor Cezar, ay mag tatampok ng 50-meter-high Ferris wheel, roller coaster na maging main attractions, 14 na mga rides, snow world, at isang ice-skating rink.

Magbubukas ang first phase ng theme park sa Nobyembre 30 ngayong taon. Ito ay makapagbigay ng limang libong trabaho.

Samantala, ang digital theme park ay magbubukas din dito sa Hunyo 2025.

Kasali sa commercial business district dito ay ang shopping mall, restaurants, at amusement park, habang magpapatayo rin ng residential subdivision para sa modernong pamumuhay ng mga tao.
Ani ng dating alklade na makakahikayat ang BYB Metro ng mahigit kalahating milyong turista sa iba’t ibang bayan para tankilikin ito.

Tuesday, June 25, 2024

Mga Numero di Hudyat na Puputulin na Sila

 

INVENTORY SA MGA PUNO VERSUS MGA “KILLER” TREES

Ni Mortz C. Ortigoza

LINGAYEN, Pangasinan – Ang mga puting numerong mga marka sa mga punong kahoy sa paligid ng Sison Auditorium at Capitol Resort dito ay hindi hudyat na sila ay puputulin.

MARKINGS. Some of the trunks of the trees around the Capitol Complex of the provincial government in Lingayen, Pangasinan marked with bold white numbers for inventory by the joint endeavor of the administration of Governor Ramon V. Guico, Jr. and the Community Environment and Natural Resources  of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources.

Ang mga pag marka ng mga numero kahit na doon sa mga puno sa harap ng Capitol building ay ‘for inventory” na joint-undertaking ng provincial government at Community Environment and Natural Resources (CENTRO) ng Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), ani Provincial Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Chief Alvin Bigay.

“The reasons why we are putting some markings because you inventory and instruction din iyan ng DENR na magkaroon ng markings para makamit namin alin ba diyan ang mga punong e-earth ball,” aniya sa Northern Watch Newspaper.


Nakipag coordinate ang kanyang opisina sa DENR para sa imbentaryo dahil mas maalam sila tungkol sa klase ng mga kahoy, aniya.

 “Alam nila kung ano ang puedeng kahoy na puede anong punong kahoy na puedeng anong punong kahoy na dapat tanggalin when we conducted the inventory (when) we were with them”.

Aniya ang mga mahogany trees ay mapanganib na kahoy na dapat putulin

Ang mga environmentalist dito sa Pilipinas ay nanawagan na ihinto na ang pagtatanim ng ganitong klase na kahoy dahil sa masamang dulot nito sa kalikasan at sa mga hayop dahil sa soil acidification.

Merong 208 mahogany trees sa buong Capitol Complex. Noong June 2020, pinagbawal ng DENR ang nasabing kahoy dahil pumapatay siya ng mga katabing halaman.

“Pag may invasive trees tatanggalin siyempre,” ani Bigay.

Mahigit isang daan ang mga puno na tumatayo sa dalawang government buildings na ito at hanggang doon sa gilid ng kahabaan ng kalsada papuntang Alvear Street ng bayan na ito.

Aniya sa bawat isang punong mapuputol kapalit naman nito ay 50 na seedlings ang itatanim.

Wala pang mga puno sa kasalukuyan na puputulin sa harap ng Capitol building, sa paligid ng Sison Auditorium, at sa Capitol Resort dahil wala pa silang mga permit galing sa DENR.

“Inventory pa lang, correct. Wala pa ngang permit e inventory palang iyon”.

Bukod diyan di pa dumadating ang dalawang earth balling machines para ilipat ang mga puno ng niyog sa lupa ng provincial government sa Brgy. Estanza dito at ang ibang mga puno sa Eco-Park sa kabilang bayan ng Bugallon, Pangasinan.

Ang planong pagputol sa mga puno sa harap ng Capitol ay para masolusyunan ang mga problema ng pagbaha sa paligid ng complex.


Ani Bigay lumalala ang pagbaha taon-taon dito.

 Ang mga dating catch basin natin ay natabunan na. Yong mga supposedly napupuntahan sana ng floodwaters umapaw na”.

 Itong mga natabunan na catch basins ay iyong sa likod ng Urduja House, iyong sa Pangasinan State University (PSU), at iyong sa Narciso Ramos Sports and Civic Center.

Sinisi rin ni Bigay ang accretion, pagpataas ng Baywalk, at ang sand bar sa bunganga ng Limahong Channel na  naging sanhi ng pagbaha sa complex.

“Although they already put up a drainage system in the Baywalk area, kung titignan po natin ngayon ay heavily silted na ang drainage system kung kaya hindi na po umaagos yung tubig na nagku-cause ng baha”.

Ang sandbar aniya ay pumipigil sa takbo ng ilog sa dagat at naging sanhi sa pagbalik niya sa Kapitolyo.

Binigyan diin din ni Bigay na huling na dredge ang Limahong Channel ay noon pang panahon ni Gobernador Oscar Orbos noong June 30, 1995 hanggang June 30, 1998.

 


Sunday, June 23, 2024

LTO Initiates Free TDC in P'sinan

 TO SIGNIFICANTLY REDUCE VEHICULAR DEATHS, ACCIDENTS

By Mortz C. Ortigoza

SAN CARLOS CITY, Pangasinan – The Land Transportation Office (LTO) regional office initiated a theoretical driving course (TDC) to two towns in Pangasinan to significantly reduce road accidents and safer driving environment.

Basista Mayor J.R Resuello (3rd from left, photo) poses for posterity with officials of the Land Transportation Office in his town.  The staff of the LTO initiated a theoretical driving course (TDC) at the landlocked municipality.




The two-day course held simultaneously in the Municipality of Basista and Brgy. Kita Kita, Balungao, Pangasinan benefitted a total of 714 aspiring drivers. The free TDC educated participants with essential knowledge and skills to navigate the roads safely. It covered topics like traffic rules and regulations, defensive driving techniques, and road courtesy.

Department of Transportation (DoTr) Secretary Jaime J. Bautista and Land Transportation Office Chief Assistant Secretary Atty. Vigor D. Mendoza introduced this program in the wake of the increase of vehicular deaths and injuries in the country.

The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) report in 2021 showed an increasing trend of road traffic deaths in the past decade—from 7,938 fatalities in 2011 to 11,096 deaths—for a 39-percent increase. PSA said that at least 84 percent of road traffic deaths were among males, while road traffic injuries were a major cause of mortality for children, with motorcyclists, pedestrians and bicyclists among those considered vulnerable road users. On an economic scale, it said that road traffic injuries are estimated to cost about 2.6 percent of the country’s GDP.

The Metro Manila Accident Reporting and Analysis System (MMARAS) said that in 2022, a total of 71,891 road crashes occurred in Metro Manila that year for an average of 197 road crashes daily.

The free TDC conducted early this month in Pangasinan was under the leadership of Regional Director Glorioso Daniel Z. Martinez and Assistant Regional Director Engr. Eric C. Suriben.


Friday, June 21, 2024

A Weak Marcos Gov't Downplays what China did to our Soldiers

By Mortz C. Ortigoza, MPA

We're a weak nation with a craven government. Malacanang downplayed the aggression of the Chinese against our Navy SEALs last June 17 at Ayungin Shoal.
President Ferdinand Marcos should be warned that Filipinos have been affronted on that incident. We should have apprised Beijing that we're going to ask the U.S to escort us the next time we have resupply mission to our Marines hold in at our decrepit naval ship's BRP Sierra Madre we intentionally snagged there.
Again, what the personnel of Chinese Coast Guard (CCG) have done was a casus belle or an act of war when they threatened with ax, machete or bolo and fish hook cum spear our men, confiscated eight of the firearms of the uniformed SEAL members, rammed our vessels that chopped off a thumb of one of the SEALs, and punctured and towed our rubber boat with passengers on board.
SEAL teams of other countries especially the U.S and the British Special Air Service (SAS) were lauded for their gallantry and intrepidity despite being outnumbered.



One example of that when seven SAS men sneaked behind enemy line in Iraq to destroy the Scud missiles of that butcher Saddam Hussein but was exposed and sorrounded by tanks and superior in number Iraqi soldiers probably the elite Republican Guards. Those lads fought by using what they had including their portable Javelins - that lethal heat seeking missiles or rockets used by the Ukrainians to obliterate Vladimir Putin's tanks when they invaded Kiev in February 2022.
This ( Pinoy) was the only SEAL Team I know who were humiliated before the eyes of the people in the world. Tit for tat they should have punctured too the rubber boats of the CCG.
Pag ganoon lang pala ang mangyayari sana Barangay Tanod o CAFGU (Citizens Armed Forces Geographical Unit) na lang ang pinag escort niyo sa resupply mission.
Adding insult to injury was the pronouncement of the Philippine National Maritime Council and Executive Secretary Luis Bersamin that the donnybrook and the scuffle with the Chinese were all misunderstanding.

"Well, you know this was probably a misunderstanding or an accident. We're not yet ready to classify this as an armed attack. I don't know kung 'yong mga nakita namin is bolo, axe, nothing beyond that." Bersamin, a former Justice of the Supreme Court, said.
Susmariosep! What happened to our country, General?!
This to paraphrase Philippines Vice President Emmanuel Pelaez posing the question to General Tomas Karingal when he was ambushed and wounded by two car loads of malefactors in 1982 near his home in Quezon City
Bersamin just emphasized our being a sissy and a whipping boy of the CCG.
It's high time to ask our military ally the U.S and its armed juggernauts to escort our soldiers in the resupply mission.
Time too to bring construction materials there to strengthen the Sierra Madre and its sorrounding. It's treason to just give up that reef to the enemy.
It is a symbol of our sovereignty - not discounting the countless millions of barrels of crude underneath - and it is worth dying for!
Of course with the backs up of the Yanks through our Mutual Defense Treaty with Washington.

Thursday, June 20, 2024

𝗚𝗼𝘃. 𝗚𝘂𝗶𝗰𝗼 E𝘆𝗲𝘀 a 𝗣𝗮𝗻𝗴𝗮𝘀𝗶𝗻𝗮𝗻 𝗧𝗿𝗮𝗱𝗲 𝗖𝗲𝗻𝘁𝗲𝗿

 

LINGAYEN, 𝗣𝗮𝗻𝗴𝗮𝘀𝗶𝗻𝗮𝗻 – Governor Ramon V. Guico III seeks the establishment of the Pangasinan Trade Center following the recent success of the Manila Fame and International Food Expo (IFEX), which opened the door to more opportunities for various local entrepreneurs.

Products and delicacies from Pangasinan being showcased in this year’s International Food Exhibition (IFEX) at the World Trade Center in Pasay City.

The governor has expressed eagerness and is optimistic about pushing the project, which will eventually further bring economic prosperity and sustainability to the province.

For this dream project to be realized, Gov. Guico sought the support of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, headed by Vice Gov. Mark Ronald DG. Lambino.

Let us coin the term Pangasinan Trade Center, the governor told SP together with the department heads.

He also called on PEDIPO, an investment promotion office, to further promote or market the province as a place for investors.

“Kasi yung ating Provincial Economic Development and Investment Promotion Office (PEDIPO) is an investment promotion office. Yun naman ang magdadala dito ng mga malalaking investors like San Miguel, Aboitiz,” the governor said.

A Pangasinan Trade Center will be integral to boosting the province’s economy, considering that the present administration’s priority thrust is to create greater opportunities that will fuel economic growth, benefiting Pangasinenses. (PIO News)

Mayor Bona Bumuwelta kay VM Mejia

HINDI NIYA ALAM ANG GINAGAWA NIYA

Ni Mortz C. Ortigoza

MANGALDAN, Pangasinan – Sinabi ng alkalde dito na hindi alam ng bise alkalde at grupo niya ang protocol ng isang medical mission sa local government unit (LGU).
Lumabas itong pahayag ni Mayor Bona Fe D. Parayno matapos pumutok sa mainstream at social media na sinabotahe daw niya ang medical at surgical mission ng bise mayor noong pinatigil sila sa Brgy. Gueguesangen dito.
RIVALS IN 2025 POLL? Mangaldan Mayor Bona Fe D. Parayno (left) and Vice Mayor Mark Stephen Mejia.



Ani Mayor Parayno na kahit araw-araw magpa medical mission si Vice Mayor Mark Stephen Mejia ay okay lang sa kanya basta sundin lang ng grupo niya ang Executive Order No. 2024-002 Series of 2024. Partikular ang E.O ay nagsasaad: An Order Reconstituting the Special Temporary Permit Committee for Surgical, Medical and Dental Missions, and other Allied Services, Providing for Guidelines Thereof.

“Okay lang kahit everyday! Sumunod siya. Hindi sinusunod ng isang vice mayor ang Executive Order hindi niya ata naintindihan,” sagot ni Parayno sa Northern Watch Newspaper noong makapanayam siya sa kanyang opisina dito.

Aniya noong pinapahinto ng Municipal Health Office (MHO) ang medical mission ng grupo ni Mejia ang huli ay ang acting mayor ng bayan na ito dahil si Parayno ay nasa tatlong araw na seminar sa Thailand.


“So he’s incriminating himself kasi siya ang acting mayor e! Tapos gumawa siya ng medical dental mission o hindi naman iyan nagsabi o di nagkakahulugan hindi niya alam ang ginagawa niya, period!”

Ang E.O na nilagdaan ni Mayor Parayno noong one Enero 2 ay nagsasaad:

Step 1: Pinapayuhan na kumuha ng checklist sa Municipal Health Office ang mga organizers;
Step 2: Kapag natiyak na kumpleto na ang checklist ay maari nang magbigay ng Letter of Intent addressed to Mayor Parayno, sampung araw bago ang aktibidad; sa sulat ay mahalagang nakalagay ang mga sumusunod: Event Title, Date of Event, Venue, Organizer, Parter Agencies/Organizations, Target Number of Beneficiaries, Name of Lead Coordinator, Address, Contact Number, Scope of Services, Other Provisions, List of Medicines, others, Name of Attending Physicians.
Step 3: Magsagawa ang komitiba ng ebalwasyon at ipapatawag ang mga organizers para ipaliwanag ang mga panuntunan sa pagsagawa ng medical, dental, surgical missions at allied services.
Step 4: Magkakaroon ng pinal na ebalwasyon at magbibigay ang MHO ng letter of recommendation sa office of the mayor para sa final approval.

Nakasaad pa sa E.O na dapat umaayon sa mga accepted local at international standard ang mission.
Dapat ang mga gamot ay dapat may clearance galing sa Bureau of Food and Drug (BFAD) para sa kaligtasan at kahuyasan at may expiry date na one year.

Dapat ang mga gamot ay may Certificate of Product Registration na inisyu ng BFAD.
Lahat ng kaso sa medical at surgical mission ay dapat naka dokumentado at merong survey report na kailangan isumite sa Center for Health Development pagkatapos ng dalawang linggo ng mission.

Si Vice Mayor Mejia ay anak ni Region-1 Medical Center Director Dr. Joseph Roland Mejia. Ang bise alkalde ay sinasabi ng mga political kibitzer dito na lalabanan si Mayor Bona sa reelection niya sa Mayo 12, 2025 eleksyon.

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Ph should Use C-130 thru GPES at Ayungin

 By Mortz C. Ortigoza         

I saw a provoking part of the video where personnel of the Chinese Coast Guard (CCG) and members of the Philippines’ Naval Special Operations Group (NAVSOG) - the version of the U.S elite Navy SEAL – clad on their usual camouflage, body bullet proof vest and Kevlar helmet sans wielding assault rifles in a fracas and melee at the sea of the Second Ayungin Shoal near the Philippines decrepit and snagged naval BRP Sierra Madre – the country’s outpost and beleaguered symbol of the ownership of the Shoal.

RESUPPLY MISSION. (Top photo and clockwise) An almost 20 –ton payload carrying C-130 Hercules makes a Low-Altitude Parachute Extraction System (LAPES) supply drop at Jo Ju Air Strip during the joint Korean-U.S Military Exercise. (Wikipedia); Two personnel of the Chinese Coast Guard (with red circle) brandished an ax and a knife to members of the Philippines’ Naval Special Operations Group (NAVSOG) - the version of the U.S elite Navy SEAL; the melee between a cornered Philippines rigid-hulled inflatable boat (RHIB) and Chinese boats where shoving, pushing, fisticuff, throwing of stones, puncturing of the RHIB of the Filipinos, destruction of their navigational equipment and confiscation of their eight firearms in a cache by the Chinese ensued.



In a video given by the Armed Forces of the Philippines to social media’s like History Channel Philippines at Facebook three days after the rumpus ensued at the morning of June 17, you can see two rigid-hulled inflatable boats (RHIBs) surrounded by countless CCG RHIBS, wooded boat, and steel vessel where some of their personnel threatened with ax, machetes (they called that here in the Flipland, err, Filipino land as bolos), and knives the NAVSOG. Our Navy SEAL – supposed to be honed on reconnaissance, close combat, demolition, intelligence and underwater operations –where no match to the aggressors as one of them was seen using a fish hook retrieved from the Philippines military vessel a huge backpack – probably one of the bags that contained eight of the disassembled firearms the Filipinos carried.

AFP Chief of Staff Romeo Brawner, Jr. told reporters last June 19 that two of the Philippines RHIBs were surrounded by eight RHIBS and other boats of the Chinese.

I saw there too how two CCG men yelled and threatened while brandishing and waiving their ax and knives to the NAVSOG while on the other rubber boat and steel hulled vessel, the Chinese onboard bullied with knife and machete the outnumbered Filipinos and another Chinese used military grade laser to blind the navy personnel at the bigger ship who were taking videos. The Filipinos contented themselves by dousing water probably from a pail, susmariosep! Where are our water cannons?

 The water in the pail should contain some human feces to make the donnybrook and scuffle at least equal with those bellicose enemies.

 Why not our navy puncture if not ram the Chinese obstructing rubber vessels with our bigger Navy ship? Remember one of the SEAL guys had his right thumb chopped off after the Chinese hit it with their boat. Brawner – who used to be our cadet at the Philippines Military Academy when I was with the public information office there in the late 1980s - told media men that the LS-57 and its crew were armed to the teeth but did not want to escalate the melee because the Philippines avoids a full blown war.

The video showed too some Chinese and Filipinos threw hard objects against each other while someone from the navy ship shouted they were throwing rocks against each other.

The video corroborated the AFP Chief statement that the Chinese punctured the rubber boats of the Filipinos with the spear/hook and knives.

Brawner said there were fisticuffs, shoving and pushing when the Chinese boarded the Filipinos RHIB.

“Despite this lumaban po ang ating sundalo lumaban in (sic) their bare hands. Makikita ninyo tinutulak nila iyong wave ng Chinese Coast Guard pataas o palayo. They were preventing the Chinese from hitting them with their bolos their machetes and other bladed weapons. Kaya ako po ay hanga sa ating mga sundalo despite the absence of weapons or certain items to defend themselves ay lumalaban pa rin sila (Despite the lack of weapons the Filipinos fought with their bare hands the Chinese. You can see how they pushed away outside their vessels the men of the Chinese Coast Guard. They were preventing the Chinese from hitting them with their bolos their machetes and other bladed weapons. I was awed by the intrepidity of our soldiers despite the absence of weapons or certain items to defend themselves they still fought with the enemies),” Brawner told reporters at a press conference in Manila he called two days after the brouhaha in June 17.

Aside from taking the weapons of the AFP, the Chinese have the audacity to take the mobile phones, destroy the navigation equipment and engines of the Philippines vessels, and deflated them through their sharp weapons.

“We are demanding that the Chinese return our rifles and our equipment. We are also demanding from them to pay for the damages that they have caused. Babayaran nila iyong dahil hindi tayo papayag na basta na lang sisirain nila iyong ating kagamitan at kunin na lang nila (We would not allow what they have done. They should pay the damages to our properties and those that they confiscated),” Brawner added.

Brawner said the CCG committed sheer piracy.

***

We should cease these kinds of resupply mission like what happened on June 17. I’ve been badgering the national government and the AFP in my previous columns and blogs that we should resort what the U.S military have been doing during the 1968 Khe San aerial resupply and similar resupplies in other countries in later years.

We can use one of our five U.S made four-engine Lockheed C-130 and the seven two-engine Airbus C-295M transport and cargo plane that has a capacity of carrying 19,090 and 9,000 kilos of cargo payloads, respectively, so we can shun the brow beating of our forces by the Chinese. I know the nuances of the C-130 because I’ve been riding this monster countless of times as an air force kid growing up in the then war torn Cotabato. Nakakahiya tayo despite we used to as propaganda this Beijing’s series of harassments before the world. We’ve been bullied there since time immemorial. Enough for ‘em!

  We should cease using the smaller Philippines Navy one-engine BA 2A-21 Islander - that has no ramp like the C-130 and the C-295 - for air dropping of supplies where some of them fell far away from our ghost ship’s Sierra Madre thus the CCG on their rubber boats clashed with the RHIBs of the Philippines Coast Guard (PCG) in retrieving those food and medical supplies that the Chinese suspected to be construction materials to the Marines holed in at the idled naval ship

The AFP can either use the low-altitude parachute-extraction system (LAPES) or the ground proximity extraction system (GPES).

LAPES -- according to the Handbook of The SAS And Elite Forces -- is a tactical military airlift delivery method where a fixed-wing cargo aircraft can deposit supplies in situations in which landing is not an option, in an area that is too small to accurately parachute supplies from a high altitude.

GPES -- according to The Airborne and Special Operations Test Board, 1940-1990, A commemorative History by Robert L. Johnson II (October 1990)-- is similar to the arrester technique used on aircraft carriers. The cargo aircraft flies low over the delivery area. A hook is attached to the pallet load. Another hook at the other end of the cable line is attached to the rear cargo door. When the plane nears the delivery site, the hook at the cargo door snags an arrester wire that is placed perpendicular to the plane's flight path thereby yanking the pallet load out of the aircraft to the intended delivery site.

You can read the details of the LAPES and GPES at my previous blog titled: Bagsakanang Sierra Madre ng Semento, Bakal Galing sa C-130 and Huddling with DFA’s Top Guns on the Spratly’s Conundrum


Tuesday, June 18, 2024

Resuello Leads Awarding of Cleanest Brgy

 By Mortz C. Ortigoza

BASISTA, Pangasinan – The mayor of this landlocked town led recently the awarding of the Most Ecologically Sustainanble and Cleanest Barangay among the 13 villages here he governs.

Basista Mayor Jolly R. Resullo (center) congratulates a village chairman during the awarding on the Most Ecologically Sustainanble and Cleanest Barangay among the 13 villages he governs. . Photo credit: Progesibong Basista Information Office


The tilt recognized the best top three villages that successfully implemented and maintained program for the most ecologically sustainable and cleanest area among their counterparts.

The first, second, and the third places went to Barangays Bayoyong, Poblacion, and Palma. Each of them got P50, 000, P40,000, and P30, 000 with individual trophies and certificates, respectively.

Mayor Jolly R. Resullo was accompanied to the competition by Vice Mayor Dante P. Bustarde, Sangguniang Bayan Members and officers and staff of the Solid Waste Management Office (SWMO) here led by Gellie G. Saldivar – SWMO’s Senior Environmental Management Specialist –, the 13 barangay chairmen and their council members that chaired the Environmental Committee, their secretaries, tresurers, and chairpersons of the Sangguniang Kabataan at the function hall of the Avelino Resort and Hotel.

The guest of honor and speaker was Regional Director Maria Dorica Naz-Hipe of the Environmental Management Bureau (EMB)of Region-1. Naz-Hipe was represented by Eng. Ryanne N. Narvaez who is the Chief EMS, Environmental Monitoring and Enforcement Division.

Sunday, June 16, 2024

P’sinan Muslims Observe Eid ul-Adha

 

By Datu  Allan M. Maasir

This major Islamic holiday today (June 17) falls 10 days after the sighting of the crescent moon. This Feast of Sacrifice commemorates Prophet Ibrahim (also known as Abraham) unwavering faith where God commanded him to sacrifice his son Ismael.

Photo credit: LinkedIn

Ibrahim willingness to obey what fate lies to his son is remembered through Eid ul-Adha. It also commemorates Ibrahim acid test to God that coincided with the Hajj Pilgrimage around Mecca that involves feasting, charity, and spiritual reflection.

 In the Province of Pangasinan, the founding leader of North Central Luzon Council for Muslim and Christian Inc. (NCLCMC) who is the columnist of this newspaper, reminds fellow Muslim in faith and members of the Council that the essence and Eid ul-Adha was able to deepen the Muslim brothers’ appreciation and understanding of the core message being used in the celebration of the feast worldwide and determined how they can effectively use this occasion as good Muslim. 

The Eid-ul Adha provides a venue of sacrifice and sharing of resources to others by giving something to the needy as part of their obedience to Allah who gives mercy and wisdom.

 Muslims are also reminded about the suffering of the poor thus it affirms the brotherhood and equality of man before Allah.

Let’s help buttressed peace and reforms among us!

Thursday, June 13, 2024

Wala ng Titibag sa Puwersang Caramat-Macanlalay

 Ni Ernesto Cayabyab

CALASIAO, Pangasinan – Nakikita ng mga experto na wala ng puedeng bumanga sa bullet train nila Patrick Caramat at Kevin Macanlalay sa susunod na taong mayoralty election dito.

FORMIDABLE TANDEM. The tandem of Calasiao Liga President Patrick Caramat (3rd from left) and Calasiao Mayor Kevin Roy Macanlalay (4th from left) sizzle with formidability for the May 12, 2025 election where Caramat and Macanlalay agreed to run for the mayorship and vice mayorship, respectively. The duo meets at the Bread House in Dagupan City with other political heavyweights of the burgeouning town to show to all and sundry their unity. Others in the photo are Barangay Chairman Art Gaspar (extreme left), former Mayor Roy Macanlalay (2nd from left), former Mayor Celso de Vera (5th from left), and former Provincial Accountant Art Soriano (extreme right). Photo by Erning Cayabyab Texts by Mortz C. Ortigoza

Sa isang pagpulong sa Bread House sa Dagupan City pinakita ni Liga President Caramat at Mayor Macanlalay na naka-kasa na ang tandem nila sa mayorship at vice mayorship election kung saan si Caramat ang tatakbong alkalde habang bababa naman si Macanlalay bilang bise alkalde.

Dating vice mayor ng bayan na ito si Macanlalay pero noong pumanaw noong Enero 8, 2023 si Mayor Mamilyn “Maya” Caramat – ina ni Patrick – by operation of the law of succession naging alkalde si Macanlalay.

Nakita rin sa pagpupulong ang pagsanib puwersa ng mga dating magka karibal sa pulitika sa first class na bayan na ito. Sila ay si Barangay Chairman Art Gaspar, former Mayor Roy Macanlalay, former Mayor Celso de Vera, at former Provincial Accountant Art Soriano.

Naging susi si Liga President Caramat sa isinagawang pagkaka-isa at pag-aayos ng mga personalidad na ito.



Jobseekers

 JOB HUNTERS mostly young adults queue at the entrance of SM City Rosales for the job fair being held there during the 126th anniversary of the Philippines Independence.


Two thousand nine hundred (2,900) and 1,600 slots of employment overseas and in the Philippines, respectively, have been offered by various entities to the job hunters in the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) sponsored Kalayaan Job Fair 2024. Lawyer Amado Gazmin, mediator and arbiter of the DOLE – Region 1, announced in welcoming the job seekers at the second floor of the super mall where 16 local and four overseas employers wait to welcome them. (Mortz C. Ortigoza)

Mga Dahilan Bakit Flooded ang Kapaligiran ng Kapitolyo

 

KAYA KAILANGAN PUTULIN, I-EARTH BALL ANG MGA KAHOY

Huli ng Dalawang Serye

Ni Mortz C. Ortigoza

LINGAYEN, Pangasinan – Nalulubog sa baha ang kapaligiran ng Kapitolyo dito dahil sa maliit na drainage canals, silted na kailogan, at epekto ng accretion, ayon sa mataas na opisyal ng provincial government.

Paliwanag ni Provincial Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Chief Alvin Bigay na ang mga problema sa paglubog ng kapaligiran sa malakas na pagbuhos ng tubig ulan ay dahil sa mga maliliit na waterways na hindi na kayang tanggapin ang pagbugso ng daloy ng baha.

FLOOD. Photos of some of the sourroundings of the Capitol Complex of the provincial government in Lingayen, Pangasinan submerged in flood because of the heavy downpour last year. The complex hosts the provincial and  some national government offices.

“Actually ang isa sa naging problem natin diyan iyong mga dating natural na catch basins within the capitol complex in the nearby areas na restrict na natabunan na”.

Isinisisi ni Bigay ang paglala ng pagbaha sa accretion o pagdaragdag ng buhangin dala ng paghampas ng mga alon na naging dahilan sa pagbagal ng umaapaw na tubig na dumadaloy patungo sa karagatan.

Noon madali lang mag drain kasi malapit lang sa tubig (dagat). Ngayon na restrict na iyong mga waterways natin, tapos iyong carrying capacity so to speak iyong mga tubig hindi na po kaya ng ating drainage system”.

Aniya ang silt o banlik ng Limahong Channel ay kumapal na kaya pag malaki ang buhos ng ulan ay umaapaw na at dumadaloy para bahain ang Kapitolyo.

“The last time magkaroon ng dredging diyan sa Limahong Channel was during the term of Governor (Oscar) Orbos pa – so ganoon na po katagal”.

Naging gobernador ng Pangasinan si Orbos noong June 30, 1995 hanggang June 30, 1998.

Dagdag pa niya na lumalala ang sitwasyon ng kapaligiran ng Kapitolyo pag high tide dahil sa paghigpit ng mga lagusan ng tubig sa Channel papuntang dagat. Ito  ay umaapaw na naging sanhi ngayon ng paglala ng pagbaha.

Kailangan putulin o i-earth ball machine ang 300-400 punong kahoy para sa “adequate drainage system” para mapagaan kung hindi ganap na malutas ang problema.

“Yes, that’s why we need to widen itong mga roads dito”.

Ang mga invasive trees gaya ng mahogany at ipil-ipil ayon kay Celso Salazar, dating Community Environment and Natural Resource Office - Dagupan City chief at kasalukuyang pangulo ng Pangasinan Native Trees Enthusiasts, Inc., ay nagpapalabas ng kemikal na sumisira sa mga habitats at bioregions.

Dalawang earth ball machines ang binibili ng provincial government para maumpisahan na ang proyekto.

Ani Bigay, hindi dehado ang kalikasan dahil papalitan ang bawat kahoy na puputulin ng 50 seedlings na itatanim.

Kasali na dito ang pagtanim ng Tabebuia rosea na kahawig ng cherry blossom sa Japan at mga native na mga kahoy para maging berde ang kapaligiran sa Kapitolyo at maging santuwaryo ng mga ibon at mga alitaptap.

Aniya pinagbabawal ang magpalabas ng tubig baha sa Lingayen Gulf sa pamamagitan ng drainage system galing sa Kapitolyo bagkus ito ay pinapadaan sa San Vicente-San Jose River na malapit sa Maramba Boulevard.

Buwelta ni Bigay sa mga kritiko ng local government unit na huwag padalos dalos sa paghusga sa administrasyon ni Governor Ramon V. Guico III

“Ang sa amin naman kasi nagja-jump into conclusion sila kaagad iyong mga tao hindi nila alam na ang mga ito ginagawang development plan ng provincial government ay masusing pinag-aralan ito ng mga urban planners, environmentalist,” aniya.

 

Wednesday, June 12, 2024

Guv Guico a G.O.A.T

By. Z.J Rosario Ortigoza

Why I call Pangasinan’s young visionary Governor Ramon “Monmon” V. Guico III a G.O.A.T?

It’s an abbreviation in the sports’ world of the “Greatest of All Time”. It’s reserved for elite athletes who have outperformed their rivals.

Now I have unilaterally anointed in this blog the acronym to the charismatic chief executive of one of the colossal provinces in the country.

Pangasinan Governor Ramon V. Guico III

The Guv’s list of achievements is far more superior than his predecessors in the present 3,163, 190 (2020 census) populated province.

Barely two years in his three years’ term post, he has already left milestones of his leadership with big-tickets project he interceded like the (Pangasinan Link Expressway (PLEX)– a Php 34 billion partnership project with the conglomerate’s San Miguel Beer Corporation (SMC). A major linchpin to the province’s economy according to San Miguel Corporation President Ramon Ang when he graced the groundbreaking of SMC funded super highway in Laoac, Pangasinan in May 20, 2024.

Guico’s brain childs’ Pangasinan Polytechnic College (PPC), a landmark project serving as Guico’s Administration’s gift to poor but deserving Pangasinenses who want to have their diplomas gratis; Pangasinan Salt Center, ensuring steady eco-friendly production of high-quality salt to position the province as a leader in sustainable resource management; the major transformation of the Capitol Complex through the construction of the P100 million Reflective Pool and Interactive Fountain; Banaan Museum, the first provincial museum conceptualized and built under his administration, featuring works of local artists, adding to the collosal province’s inimitable beauty, colorful history, and proud heritage; and many more.

Jay-Z, one of the world’s most famous artists who won 24 Grammy Awards, has a line in his song ‘Reminder’ that says “Men lie, women lie, numbers don’t,” meaning numbers don’t lie—and this quote from the famous rapper accurately epitomizes the Provincial Government of Pangasinan’s remarkable increase in revenue collections under the Guv’s high-quality and effective leadership. Based on the latest data released by the Provincial Treasury Office, from January to May 17 of the current year, actual collections/province share amounted to P109,277,784.40 million, a 463.01% increase compared to the recorded P19,409,728.85 million collected from January to May 17 of 2023 in Tax on sand, gravel, and other quarry products. Just a five months feat from the Man in Binalonan!.

“Show me the money, eh!” as one trite American phrase is quipped.

The preponderances of the monies are just above as what I cited.

With an estimated income of 120,000,000.00 for the year 2024, the collection has reached a staggering 91.06%.

According to Acting Provincial Treasurer Cristy C. Ubando, the total collection of local taxes reached P299,072,077.10. In other words, 94% of the estimated projected income of P317,350,000.00 has been collected.

Included in local taxes are Professional Tax, Amusement Tax, Franchise Tax, Real Property Transfer Tax, Real Property Tax-Basic, Tax on Sand Gravel and other Quarry Products, Tax on Delivery Trucks and Vans, Fines and Penalties-Property Tax, Fines and Penalties-Taxes on Goods and Services. The total Service and Business Income collected amounted to P282,121,930.16.

This signifies that 68% of the estimated income for the year 2024, which is expected to reach P417, 270,000.00, has already been collected.

Service Income covers Permit Fees, Clearances & Certification Fees, and Inspection Fees, while Business Income includes Hospital Fees, Waterworks System Fees, Rent Income, Income from Hotels/Dormitories, and Interest Income. In addition to the aforementioned, the report also includes Total National Taxes at P2,313,326,699.32 (Actual Collection), Total Non-Tax Revenue at P300,272,484.15 (Actual Collection) from Grants and Donations in Cash, and Miscellaneous Income. In sunl, the total revenue (General Fund) has reached P2,912,671,260.57. The percentage of collection is at 50.83% based on the estimated income of 5,729,765,891.00.

After you my dear readers finished browsing the chutzpahs of the Guv,, we can proudly trumpet to all and sundry by including the vaunted hashtags:”#PangasinanAngGaling! and #GuicoAngaling!”