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Sarangani graduates 36 scholars »

Alabel, Sarangani (29 May) — The provincial government’s scholarship program posted 36 graduates this year with six cum laude graduates and one with honors.

This is the biggest batch yet since the program started five years ago.

Capitol officials see the continuous grant of scholarship privilege to poor but deserving students thru the Paaral Para Sa Sarangan (PPSS) as an investment for the province’s human capital.

The scholarship program started with 20 scholars in school year 2002-2003 with a budget appropriation of P100,000. Up to this school year, PPSS has grown to 183 scholars with budget needs of almost P3 million a year.

PPSS’ now has 79 total graduates both in baccalaureate and technical courses.

PPSS program convenor Vicente Camacho III said the program was initiated purposely to provide financial support to underprivileged students who want to pursue higher education.

“The widening gap between poor but deserving Filipinos every year hinders opportunity for them to have affordable education,” Camacho said.

With the program, he said, requirements for high literacy rate in this province would be addressed and eventually would “create a lot of potentials here.”

Meantime, he said the total number of students who have availed of the collegiate educational assistance is below the desired number to be addressed. But Camacho said there have been good results already in the impact of the program.

“We cannot compete with the actual number of students who need to be assisted but we can always provide impact even a little to the over-all goal of educational development of the province,” Camacho said.

Governor Migs Dominguez said the scholar-graduates this year discredit the notion that poverty is a hindrance towards quality education and success.

“We have just proven to ourselves that nothing is impossible,” he told the scholars. He added that more people would be inspired by the graduates.

Sarangani government, he said, is “a government that cares for its people.”

Provincial administrator Fredo Basino challenged the graduates to help the local government address poverty incidence in Sarangani, the 4th poorest province in the country according to the 2004 poverty estimates of National Statistical Coordination Board.

“We expect you to rally behind us in combating poverty and become soldiers for development,” Basino said.

PPSS started in 2002 from a very simple concept based on experiential learning process.

“We did not come up with a highly categorized concept for its mechanism. We learn from what we are doing and we are able to improve the mechanics, system and the application of the program as we went on,” Camacho explained.

Starting next year, Camacho said PPSS would start engaging into resource accessing to tap other organizations and foundations offering scholarships.

Camacho pointed out that the number of applicants and financial requirement per student is increasing yearly and program funds are limited.

Camacho is also planning to initiate an alumni homecoming for the graduates within the year for him to keep track on their career development.

“Others have migrated from Sarangani while others have landed into local employment both in government and private institutions. But I don’t see a jobless scholar,” Camacho noted. (Sarangani IO/BCP/PIA 12)


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10 Japan-funded classrooms open in Sarangani »

Malapatan, Sarangani (29 May) — Completion of the Japanese government’s grant of a 10-classroom building timely responds to Malapatan National High School’s (MNHS) need to replace old classrooms ruined by flashfloods.

The two-storey MNHS building was inaugurated in a new site to provide better learning environment for the students this school year.

“When I saw the old building that the school has been using despite being declared unsafe, I can imagine the difficulties the students and teachers had to go through,” Shinichi Kakui, First Secretary of the Economic Section of the Embassy of Japan, said during the inauguration ceremony Wednesday (May 28).

“I then understand why you have to use the school’s kiosks and stage as alternative classrooms to accommodate the growing number of enrollees yearly,” Kakui said.

“With the new building at hand, MNHS can now accept more enrollees and provide better learning environment for the students,”

The project has a total cost of P8.5 million. P4.4 million came from Japan’s Grant Assistance for Grassroots Human Security Projects (GGP) and the rest are counterpart funding from Sarangani provincial government and the local government of Malapatan.

“As such more students from Muslim, Blaan indigenous group and Christian communities in the impoverished barangays of Malapatan can now be accommodated,” the Japanese official said.

“I hope that this project will contribute to the strengthening of friendship and deepening of understanding between our two people,” Kakui said.

For his part, Governor Migs Dominguez said “we always struggle for development.”

“We have to make investments in education and our human capital,” Dominguez added.

Mayor Aida Singcoy reported that MNHS’s annex high schools in far-flung villages of Kihan and Kinam also need similar infrastructure.

Kinam and Kihan are among interior barangays of Malapatan where residents have to walk for long distances or ride a horse to bring their products to the town site. For the youth, attending school in MNHS downtown everyday by foot is impossible.

Among the province’s seven municipalities, Malapatan has mostly received externally-assisted projects such as from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and from the national government’s Kapit-Bisig Laban sa Kahirapan-Comprehensive and Integrated Delivery of Social Services (KALAHI-CIDSS) through road constructions and school buildings.

“For the children of Sarangani, we need more and more classrooms,” Schools Division Superintendent Deborah Adrales said. (PIA-SarGen/SIO)

© Copyright 2007 Mindanao.com | Filed Under News |
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Sarangani on diabetes alert »

Alabel, Sarangani (29 May) — Medics and Capitol officials have launched a diabetes alert in Sarangani due to the growing cases of the “silent disease” in the country every year.

Representatives from Multicare Pharmaceuticals, Philippine Association of Medical Technologists and from Sarangani Provincial Health Office performed a free blood sugar screening for Capitol employees and residents Monday (May 19).

The screening coincided with the launching of the Diabetes Alert Program, a value added service of Multicare Pharmaceuticals to make people aware that “diabetes is a very serious disease,” said Edwin Butiong, Multicare district manager.

“Right now our thrust is to have the people informed about diabetes,” Butiong stressed.

Dr. Anthony Canda of General Santos City Doctors Hospital described diabetes as a “serious, costly and silent disease” and warned that people should be careful with their daily food intake and do regular exercise.

“We do not tell you not to eat but to have dietary modification like low sugar and low fat meals,” Canda said.

He said in the Philippines, cases of diabetes have been increasing yearly.

While in the United States, Canda said, diabetes is the 6th leading cause of deaths.

When a person reaches 45 years old, Canda said they should subject themselves to a test especially that Asians are prone to this disease.

The diabetes program in Sarangani is the fourth that Multicare has conducted in Mindanao. It was first launched in Tagum, Davao Del Norte then in Compostela Valley Province and North Cotabato.

Later on, Butiong said his firm will bring the program down to the seven municipalities of Sarangani like what they are doing in the first three provinces.

Butiong said their team in South Mindanao is the pilot district in the Philippines but after their management saw the need to elevate the program to the national level, they will initiate the campaign starting this year to districts of Multicare in Cagayan de Oro and anywhere in the country. (Sarangani IO/BCP/PIA 12)

© Copyright 2007 Mindanao.com | Filed Under News |
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Saranggani transmission tower bombed »

A transmission tower of the Southern Philippines Power Corp. in Saranggani province was bombed Tuesday night.

Senior Superintendent Danilo Peralta, Sarangani police director, said unidentified men set the bomb off at the tower at 11:45 p.m.

The transmission tower relays electricity to General Santos City, Saranggani province and some areas in South Cotabato.

Police have yet to determine what type of explosive was used in the bombing. The police said they are still identifying the bombers. Dexter Ganibe, ABS-CBN General Santos City

ABS-CBN News

© Copyright 2007 Mindanao.com | Filed Under News |
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LGU to provide health, burial aids to veterans »

ALABEL, Sarangani — To acknowledge their heroic contribution in defending the country against the Japanese invaders during World War II, the Provincial Government will provide surviving veterans health and burial benefits.

“They are too old already and they need extra help and attention,” Governor Miguel Rene A.Dominguez said.

Dominguez said the province would allocate fund to provide 125 surviving veterans in Sarangani hospitalization and burial assistance “to make them feel the efforts of the government.”

He said the Provincial Government will shoulder 70 percent of the veteran’s hospitalization bill from accredited hospital and provide P2,000 burial assistance.

The plan was the result of the exploratory talks on May 22 with the sons and daughters of veterans in Sarangani headed by Norma Gusto, president of Philippine Veterans Association Sons and Daughters-Maitum Chapter.

Gusto said the plan is a big help to their parents considering the long period it takes to process claims for benefits from the National Government.  By Gandhi C. Kinjiyo

Sun.Star General Santos

© Copyright 2007 Mindanao.com | Filed Under News |
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