Monday, July 13, 2015

61-year old mother finally gets high school diploma

On 12 July 2015, 57 learners graduated from the Alternative Learning System (ALS) at the Department of Education (DepEd) Division office, Ligao City. One of them is the 61-year old mother of five and a resident of Barangay Ranao-Ranao, Lilia L. Nepomuceno. 
61-year old Lilia L. Nepomuceno finally receives her high school diploma with her husband.
A mother’s dream

“Narito ang isang ina na minsang naghangad ng sariling diploma, [Here is a mother who once dreamed of having her own diploma]” said Nepomuceno during the graduation ceremony. Nepomuceno have always dreamed of having her own high school diploma but due to poverty she was forced to leave her second year in high school and work as house help in Metro Manila. In 2007, Nepomuceno heard about the ALS program but felt hesitant to join the program. Then finally on January 2014, she joined ALS.

Despite her and her husband’s lack of resources to finish secondary level education, they were able to give their children full support to finish school. Their five children have successfully reached tertiary level education with bachelor’s degree in civil engineering, mechanical engineering, nursing, commerce, and education. Seeing her children achieve and settled with good education, Nepomuceno decided to finally reach her lifelong dream of achieving a high school diploma through the ALS program.
57 graduates received their diploma on 12 July 2015 for finishing the Alternative Learning System (ALS) program and passing the Accreditation and Equivalency (A & E) Examination on 14 December 2015. With them are Ligao Women’s Club President and former Ligao City Mayor Linda P. Gonzalez (6th from left), Ligao City Mayor Patricia Gonzalez-Alsua (7th from left), Assistant Schools Div. Superintendent Ma. Luisa P. Samaniego (center), city councilors, schools division supervisors, faculties, and local officials.Photo courtesy of City Government of Ligao

Nepomuceno, like her fellow graduates of ALS, passed the Accreditation and Equivalency (A&E) Examination held last 14 December 2014. They all received a certificate signed by the highest official of DepEd, Secretary Armin Luistro.

When asked about her plans after graduation, Nepomuceno said that she might help in the barangay as her way of giving back to the community.

Age does not matter
Fe J. Pradia (left) graduated from ALS with flying colors.
Aside from Nepomuceno, Fe J. Pradia a 54-year old resident of Ranao-Ranao, Ligao City also found a turning point of her life when she met Lorna Besin, a Literacy Volunteer in East District.

Pradia is a native of Leyte. Like Nepomuceno, she did not finish high school due to lack of resources. She also took a job as house help to make ends meet. In 1994, she settled down with her husband in Ligao City.

When Besin went to her house to talk about the ALS program, Pradia was hesitant to join the program because she was conscious about her age. Besin told her, “walang matanda o bata dito [age does not matter here].”

Pradia did not only finish the program with good standing but with flying colors. She was awarded with Best in Math and Science, and Best in Sustainable Use of Resources/Productivity.

Pradia plans to take vocational course in culinary to improve her skills which she can use to improve their food vending business.

Towards “Zero Out-of-School Adults”

ALS has changed the lives of many out-of-school youths and adults. Like Nepomuceno and Pradia, many were deprived with formal education due to lack of resources. However, poverty did not hinder them to realize and achieve their goals no matter how old they are.

As Ligao City Mayor Patricia Gonzalez-Alsua said in her speech, poverty should not hinder people in learning. Those who are born from poor families should not die in poverty, and that poverty should not be for lifetime. Every person holds his own fortune.

The 57 graduates were only among the hundreds of people who reaped the benefits of ALS. Most of the ALS graduates pursued a college degree and became professionals.

ALS is a program of DepEd that gives the marginalized people an opportunity to gain knowledge and skills by bringing education closer to their homes. It aims to target the “zero out-of-school adults” to which the graduation ceremony theme, “Walang kabataang Pilipinong maiiwan [No Filipino youth will be left behind]” was anchored.

Former Ligao City Mayor Linda P. Gonzalez also urged the graduates to spread the word, to inform other out-of-school youths and adults about the beauty of ALS.

The local government, non-government organizations, and other government agencies are partnering to develop and implement programs for the marginalized and underserved communities. In the previous months, Ligao City held graduation ceremonies for the first batch of dressmakers who passed and received a National Certificate II in Dressmaking, and for the 100 farmers who finished a season-long training in organic vegetable production. Congressman Fernando V. Gonzalez is also making a major contribution to improve the learning experience of out-of-school adults. He has donated laptops and projectors to help the learners experience e-learning.
Written by Lala Peñafiel 

Monday, July 6, 2015

LOOK: Photos of recently completed classrooms of Ligao Community College campus

The Ligao Community College (LCC) is now occupying a new campus at Guilid, Ligao City with newly completed 26 classrooms. With an allocated fund of only 23 million pesos, the state-of-the-art facility is complete with air-conditioned rooms, ceiling fans, laboratories, rest rooms, and a separate building for the Administration. Each classroom has a capacity of 45 students.
The Ligao Community College campus is now complete with 46 classrooms. Photo courtesy of City Government of Ligao
Previously, LCC holds its night classes at Ligao National High School. With its new facilities, LCC students now occupies the new LCC grounds.

Photo courtesy of City Government of Ligao

Photo courtesy of City Government of Ligao

Photo courtesy of City Government of Ligao
Photo courtesy of City Government of Ligao

Photo courtesy of City Government of Ligao
The establishment of the LCC campus is anchored in the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) Memorandum Order No. 32 which includes guidelines on the establishment of local colleges.

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Ligao City holds 3-day workshop on Forest Land Use Planning

Congressman Fernando V. Gonzalez talks before the participants of the 3-day workshop on forest land use planning.
The City Government of Ligao in partnership with the Department of Environment and Natural Resources, 3rd Congressional District of Albay, and Deutsche Geselschaft fur Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH, is currently holding a three-day workshop on Forest Land Use Planning on 1 July 2015 and will continue through 3 July 2015. Officials from different barangays and the local government were among the stakeholders in the workshop.

The government conducts forest land use planning to properly allocate and manage forest and forestlands (FFL) as natural resources. Likewise, the planning aims to balance the production activities and protection of forest and conservation of biodiversity. The Forest Land Use Plan (FLUP), an expected output from the workshop, shall be integrated in the LGU’s Comprehensive Land Use Plans (CLUP) [1].

OIC-CENR Officer Marlon S. Francia of DENR Regional Office V said that the goal of forest land use planning is to preserve the forest and biodiversity, and attain a sustainable economic growth despite the increase in human population, land conversion, and globalization.

Ligao City Mayor Patricia Gonzalez-Alsua seeks the cooperation of the stakeholders to actively participate throughout the three-day workshop as this will ease the flow of planning and production of the mandated FLUP.

[1] FMB Technical Bulletin No. 2 Forest Land Use Planning. Forest Management Bureau, Department of Environment and Natural Resources, FMB Building, Visayas Avenue, Quezon City, Philippines. April 2014
Written by Lala Peñafiel 

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

100 farmers graduate from 1st Season-long Training on Organic Vegetable Production


The graduates of the 1st season-long training on Organic Vegetable Production with Congressman Fernando V. Gonzalez (center), Ligao City Mayor Patricia Gonzalez-Alsua (fourth from right), DSWD Regional Project Coordinator Gina B. Millete (fourth from left), and members of the Sangguniang Panlungsod. Photo courtesy of City Government of Ligao
100 farmers from Ligao City were recognized for finishing the 1st season-long training on organic vegetable production on 1 July 2015. The training is a collaborative program of the City Government of Ligao, Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), and Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) under the Bottom-Up Budgeting Program and Sustainable Livelihood Program of DSWD.

The farmers were trained how to practice organic farming using modern technologies. With Engr. Dexter Mendoza as Focal Person on Organic Agriculture, the farmers were also trained to practice vegetable farming without the use of pesticides. Farmers will continue to practice what they have learned as they visit different learning sites in Ligao, according to Engr. Mendoza.

Aside from the knowledge and skills as takeaways from the training, each farmer also received a starter kit which includes a woven straw hat, shovel, trowel, and bolo knife.
Farmers received a starter kit after finishing the training. Photo courtesy of City Government of Ligao
Congressman Fernando V. Gonzalez who strongly supports agricultural programs believed that the program will provide a great opportunity for farmers to recoup the high production cost by increasing the production of quality products and income with the use of modern farming technologies. He also emphasized the importance of organic farming to the health of consumers. Chemical-free vegetables are safer and healthier, and much needed by consumers.

Furthermore, Congressman Gonzalez seeks the cooperation of the farmers to continuously apply the skills they have practiced during the training to attain a more sustainable production of vegetables in the city.

Last 29 May 2015, Ligao City also held the first commencement exercises for Dressmaking, another BUB Program and SLP implementation, with 34 newly trained dressmakers. These capability-building programs, according to Ligao City Mayor Patricia Gonzalez-Alsua were implemented to help the local residents develop skills and provide them with resources to start or enhance their livelihood.
Written by Lala Peñafiel

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

PhilRice Bicol breaks ground for new laboratory and training building with lodging facilities

The ceremonial groundbreaking was lead by ASec Edilberto De Luna, Dr. Reynaldo Castro, Ligao City Mayor Patricia Gonzalez-Alsua and former Mayor Linda P. Gonzalez with representatives from Bicol University Research Center, Department of Agriculture, agriculturists, researchers, and local officials.
Expanding its facilities for rice research, the Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice) Bicol Station held a Groundbreaking Ceremony for its new laboratory and training building with lodging facilities on 9 June 2015 at Batang, Ligao City.

The ceremonial groundbreaking were lead by PhilRice OIC-Executive Director ASec Edilberto M. De Luna, Ligao City Mayor Patricia Gonzalez-Alsua, former Ligao City Mayor Linda P. Gonzalez, PhilRice Bicol Branch Manager Dr. Reynaldo Castro, and representatives from Bicol University Research Center, Department of Agriculture, local officials, and agriculturists.

The project costs P 10.9M and is expected to be completed on 27 November 2015. “This facility will not only showcase research activity but this will focus more on the production of seeds to cater to the needs of our farmers and seed growers in the region,” said ASec De Luna. The production of rice in the Philippines has significantly increased over the years due to proper use of technologies and new varieties of rice, despite limited area for agriculture, according to ASec De Luna.
The lowering of time capsule during the ceremonial groundbreaking was lead by ASec Edilberto De Luna, Ligao City Mayor Patricia Gonzalez-Alsua and former Mayor Linda P. Gonzalez with representatives from Bicol University Research Center, Department of Agriculture, agriculturists, researchers, and local officials.


The ceremony also gathered stakeholders in the agricultural sector including agriculturists, researchers, extension workers, and policymakers. ASec De Luna saw this as an opportunity to draft a rice research agenda.

Aside from research facilities, former Mayor Gonzalez also envisions the establishment of rice museum where different rice varieties and technologies developed by the institute will be displayed, and eventually become a tourist destination. This will encourage the youth and families not to leave farming.

PhilRice Bicol is also something that Congressman Fernando V. Gonzalez has dreamed of, said former Mayor Gonzalez. Because rice is next to coconut as top agricultural crop produced in Ligao, they are prioritizing agricultural programs that will enhance farming activities in the local areas. “The station represents a good part of the population, the farming sector, of the Bicol region,” said former Mayor Gonzalez.

Congressman Gonzalez and former Mayor Gonzalez were named as the Father and Mother of PhilRice Bicol due to their painstaking efforts to establish the branch in Ligao City.

Ligao has always proved to be the rightful place for the institute. ASec De Luna acknowledged the good collaboration of researchers, agriculturists, LGUs, with the strong support of the City Government of Ligao. “We are one with PhilRice with this vision,” said Ligao City Mayor Patricia Gonzalez-Alsua while stating her commitment to support the institute.


By Lala Peñafiel