April 15, 2024

Pondo Sa Sipag Puhunan sa Tiyaga 2009

Filed under: Entrepreneurship & Livelihood — Joshua Sarmiento @ 3:48 pm

The Nacionalista Party (NP) together with its partners, Villar SIPAG, Sipag at Tiyaga
Foundation, and Vista Land selected 60 promising entrepreneurs out of thousands that responded
to the 2009 search of “Pondo sa Sipag, Puhunan sa Tiyaga” in awarding ceremonies held at the NBC
tent at The Fort, Global City in Taguig.

The award aims to promote entrepreneurship as a way of combating poverty.

The 2009 national winners receiving a capital grant of Php100,000 each were Rufo dela Cruz of
Calasiao, Pangasinan (Bella’s Puto Calasiao) and Elisa Tomas of Quirino (Melizabeth Food Products).

The other awardees were given P20,000 each to boost there available capital.

The northern and central Luzon awardees were:
Carlo Balneg (Abra)
Dominador Codio (Benguet)
Sr. Gabriela Dargiwan (Kalinga)
Valentino Vicerra (Apayao)
Angelina Tagay (Ilocos Norte)
Elisa Abaya (Ilocos Sur)
Romy Urbano (La Union)
Armando Macatuggal (Quirino)
Marvin Mapote (Isabela)
Perlita Tiburcio (Nueva Vizcaya)
Lucila Eugenio (Nueva Ecija)
Conchita Hernandez (Aurora)
Rodolfo Molina (Tarlac)
Pamela Santos (Bataan)
Remedios Udad (Pampanga)
Prisco del Moro (Bulacan)

The winners from Southern Luzon were:
Ramelito Barte (Quezon)
Liza Perez (Laguna)
Josephine Tacasa (Oriental Mindoro)
Francisco Aranda (Sorsogon)
Gregorio Basallote (Camarines Sur)
Andres Canada (Camarines Norte)
Asah Conde (Masbate)
Imelda Dado Moratillo (Albay)
Floro Teano (Catanduanes)

The lone awardee from the National Capital Region was Susana Santiago of Valenzuela City.

Winners from Visayas region were:
Meraluna Pascadero (Negros Oriental)
Marybeth and Gabriel Sanoria (Cebu)
Amy Alico (Southern Leyte)
Joel Marquez (Leyte)
Lorna Celespara (Northern Samar)
Delita Montes (Eastern Samar)

The awardees from Mindanao were:
Eric Philip Macaso (Zamboanga City)
Edgardo Tagalogon (Zamboanga Sibugay)
Jubella Acera (Camiguin)
Lilia Caga-anan (Misamis Oriental)
Dionesia dela Pena (Misamis Occidental)
Ofelia Gamao (Bukidnon)
Rufina Anunciado (Davao del Norte)
Reynaldo Deodor (Davao City)
Florita Duag (Compostella Valley)
Fe Sarabillo (Davao del Sur)
Camilo Falcis (South Cotabato)
Margarita Abaquita (Agusan del Norte)
Jonathan Abayon (Agusan del Sur)
Romeo Amahan (Surigao del Norte)
Henry Capangpangan (Dinagat Island)
Leah Labordo (Surigao del Sur)

A select group of winners were named under the overseas Filipino worker (OFW) category:
Gemma Victoria (La Union)
Elisa Tomas (Quirino)
Trinidad and Mario Yabes (Nueva Ecija)
Romero Escio (Camarines Norte)
Gregorio Palermo (Iloilo)
Rosario Bation (Misamis Occidental)
Rokaiya Kasan (South Cotabato)
Zenaida Acaso (Basilan)
Julia Buteng (Benguet)
Leornardo Beniga (Agusan del Norte)
Nimfa Sagaral (Surigao del Norte)

As Sipag at Tiyaga Foundation Chairman and Nacionalista Party President, Senator Manny Villar
extols, “The awardees exemplify the collective spirit of the Filipinos in overcoming their limitations,
handicaps, and personal tragedies. In the process of transforming themselves, they create positive
ripple effects on their local communities, quietly and mostly without fanfare.”

To inspire more people to make their own stories “success stories”, a brief life chronicle of the awardees
are featured in the book Stories (2009 Awardees).*

 (Click here) 2008 Awardees

*[To request for a free copy of the book, please write your request to the Villar SIPAG with your
complete name, mailing address, telephone number, and email address.]

Comments (0)

Caravan Kaalaman

Filed under: Entrepreneurship & Livelihood — Joshua Sarmiento @ 3:47 pm

The Manpower on Wheels (MOW) first rolled out in 1993 as a mobile laboratory training school providing free employable skills training to help uplift the lives of the poor and the needy residents of Las Piñas and Muntinlupa. MOW is a joint project of the Villar SIPAG and the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA).

In 2001, MOW went nationwide as the Sipag at Tiyaga Caravan Kaalaman.


Caravan Kaalaman is a livelihood seminar program of the Villar SIPAG. seeking to provide housewives and out of school youth nationwide skills training the skills necessary help them become micro entrepreneurs and generate income for their families. Since 2001, the Caravan has been to all provinces and regions in the country and has equipped many Filipinos with worthwhile skills.

The courses offered include: meat processing native kakanin-making, candle making, fruit juice processing and preservation, fish processing, coconut processing, condiments making, pickled products processing, sasso chicken growing, herbal medicine processing and Soya products processing among others.

On special request, training in water hyacinth (“waterlily”) basket and slippers making is also offered.

This program believes that the best way to help the poor fight poverty is by providing them the skills and access to resources and materials to start their own business. Transforming idle human resource into productive entrepreneurs is a clear path towards achieving economic independence.

Comments (0)

Kalusugan Caravan

Filed under: Health & Social Services — Joshua Sarmiento @ 3:45 pm

Mission Statement
To provide health and social services to people who need it the most, at the time they most need it.

Our Values
We care about people.

We teamwork and partner with our staff, volunteers, institutions and the rest of the population to
bring about help and assistance.

We uphold the dignity of our beneficiaries and give them due respect.


Kalusugan Caravan


The Kalusugan Caravan (Health Caravan) pools together volunteer doctors and health workers in health missions conducted nationwide. Benefitting the needy sectors, the caravan provides blood pressure monitoring, treatment of minor illnesses, pap smear for women, and dental check-up.

Comments (0)

Feed the Children Program

Filed under: Health & Social Services — Joshua Sarmiento @ 3:44 pm

Good nutrition contributes to the development of physical and mental potential. It also prevents acute and chronic illnesses. In developing countries such as the Philippines, however, nutritional deficiency is prevalent most significantly among children of poor families. Inadequate nutrition is a primary cause for many of the students in the country’s public schools not to fully realize their potentials.

The Villar SIPAG currently runs feeding programs in the following areas: Las Piñas; Muntinlupa; Tondo, Manila; Sasmuan, Pampanga; Iloilo; and Bataan.

Volunteers begin cooking early in the morning in order to have hundreds of bowls of hot chicken macaroni soup ready for the 9:00am recess. They resume cooking right about noon time for the 2:00pm feeding schedule. Bread and fruit juices are likewise served. The feeding schedule runs twice a week in three areas simultaneously, benefitting up to 1,200 children in each site.

Believing that it is always best to teach people how to fish and feed them for a lifetime, instead of simply giving them fish for the day, the foundation runs the feeding program to provide the immediate relief to the hunger problem of the children. Meanwhile livelihood programs are actively pursued across the country.
Comments (0)

Medical And Financial Assistance

Filed under: Health & Social Services — Joshua Sarmiento @ 3:44 pm

Medical and Dental Mission in Orani Bataan November 25, 2010

Medical Assistance


Dave Bancal
The foundation has extended financial assistance to cover surgical expenses for some seriously ill beneficiaries.

One of such beneficiaries is ten-year old Dave Bancal of Cavite. The second of three children of Danilo and Mary, Dave suffered from a congenital heart defect known as Tetralogy of Fallot, which can cause less blood flowing to the lungs, mixing of oxygen-rich (red) and oxygen-poor (blue) blood inside the heart, and low levels of oxygen in the blood. When oxygen levels are low, the baby’s skin, fingertips, or lips have a bluish tint. An infant with these symptoms is commonly called a “blue baby.”

Every infant or child with tetralogy of Fallot needs surgery, usually within the first year of life. But Dave’s family could not afford the cost of the needed surgery and Dave had to spend the first nine years of his life constantly feeling weak. His mobility was very limited, and his father had to carry him to and from school.

His condition was brought to the attention of the Villar SIPAG, which provided the finances required for the heart surgery that he badly needed. Dave underwent heart surgery at the Philippine Heart Center in April 2010 and has since been in good health.
Comments (0)

Relief Operation

Filed under: Health & Social Services — Joshua Sarmiento @ 3:43 pm

Since 1991, Villar SIPAG has played an active role in extending humanitarian services to disaster-stricken areas in the Philippines. When a calamity hits an area, the foundation conducts a quick assessment of the immediate needs of the affected populace. Ensuring the safety and providing immediate relief are the primary considerations for providing assistance.

The various types of help extended include rescue operations, setting up of soup kitchens, medical assistance, and the distribution of food, drinking water, and blankets.


The hand-woven blankets that are given to calamity victims are produced under the Las Piñas Handloom Blanket Weaving Social Enterprise.

Comments (0)

Religious Grants

Filed under: Church Building & Financial Assistance to Religious Organizations — Joshua Sarmiento @ 3:42 pm

Religious Grants Villar SIPAG extends grants to religious organizations across the country to support their various projects that promote the over-all wellbeing of their members. These grants are generally utilized for the construction, repair or renovation of places of worship; and other religious activities such as educational missions, ministers’ assemblies, and ordinations.

Some of the projects of the foundation are run in partnership with churches and religious organizations, like the feeding program and medical missions.

Comments (0)

Church Construction

Filed under: Church Building & Financial Assistance to Religious Organizations — Joshua Sarmiento @ 3:41 pm

“He is the one who gave these gifts to the church: the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, and the pastors and teachers. Their responsibility is to equip God’s people to do his work and build up the church.” Ephesians 4:11-12



Vision
Villar SIPAG will trail-blaze providing structure and soul to outreach programs that benefit the members of religious organizations and institutions.

Mission

As part of its partnering efforts with churches and religious organizations, Villar SIPAG will be working with Vista Land in constructing places of worship in the latter’s home communities across the Philippines.

The following are among those that have been initially earmarked for early completion:

Santuario de San Ezekiel Moreno will rise in Pulanglupa, Las Piñas City, in honor of the Spanish Agustinian priest who served as parish priest of Las Piñas from 1876 to 1879. The 700-seater church will feature a column-free edifice with a grand adoration chapel.

Santuario Madonna del Divino Amore, inspired by its namesake in Italy, will be a 1,000-seater at Evia in Alabang.

Crosswinds in Tagaytay will be the home of a Swiss-inspired church that will rise at the community’s highest point, Deux Pointe.
There will be churches in other parts of Luzon, namely: Camella Provence in Malolos, Bulacan; Maia Alta in Antipolo, Rizal; Tierra Nevada in General Trias, Cavite; and Plantacion Meridienne in Lipa, Batangas.

Other European architecture-inspired churches will likewise rise in Vista Land communities in the Visayas particularly at the Azienda in Cebu and at Savannah in Iloilo; and at the Gran Europa in Cagayan de Oro in Mindanao.

The construction of places of worship goes hand-in-hand with the other projects of Villar SIPAG that support religious organizations.
Church Construction
Church Building AVP
Comments (0)

Creating Green Social Enterprises

Filed under: River Rehabilitation Programs & Social Enterprises in Las Piñas City — Joshua Sarmiento @ 3:36 pm

The Handloom Blanket Weaving Enterprise
Villar SIPAG provided free training for forty women. In three months’ time, seventy-five percent of the trainees dropped out . After another three months of training, each of them could finish as much as three blankets a day. The Las Piñas Handloom Weaving Center was now ready to supply the office of Senator Villar with blankets priced competitively with the China-made mats.

Producing three blankets a day meant that each weaver could earn up to Php4,300.00 (US$98.00)2 a month. The ten women weavers became models for the others in their barangay.

News spread fast and soon women from other barangays requested to be given the opportunity to learn and earn from the craft.
There are currently seventeen looms distributed in five barangays, with a production output of 800 blankets a month or a total of 10,000 blankets a year.

These blankets are sent by the Villar SIPAG to victims of disasters in the various parts of the Philippines.



The Coconut Coir and Peat Enterprise
The coconut husks intercepted by the river strainers were significant in number. The question was how to turn this garbage into an economic resource.

From the husk of the coconut, the fiber can be extracted. It has been used in the past as a rope or as a twine. However, making the rope required great difficulty in labor.

Through the Villar SIPAG, the Las Piñas Coco Coir enterprise got its first seed money to purchase all the equipment required to produce the coco nets. Through the assistance of Dr. Arboleda, the transfer of technology to the Las Piñeros became a reality.

The coco net is produced by the team work of two persons in the twining equipment and two persons in the loom.

From their backyard, each family with two people producing a net can earn Php6,000.00 (US$136.35) from their average monthly production.

These coco nets from Las Piñas are currently sold to Vista Land, a publicly listed housing development company, for their slope protection and soil erosion control requirements.

Since 2008, the Villar SIPAG has distributed fifty six (56) twining equipment and thirty four (34) weaving looms to sixty eight families. The coco coir enterprise has been able to afford to purchase all the additional twining equipment and hand loom, and even partially pay for 40% of the cost of an additional decorticating machine. The balance of 60% was provided by the Foundation as financial assistance.

Part of the income generated from the sales of the coco nets is used to pay for the blankets made by another group of women and youth engaged in the Las Piñas Handloom Weaving Centers. These blankets are, in turn, given to people who are rendered homeless by typhoon, fire, and other calamities.

From a wider perspective, the addition of the coco-coir cottage industry provides more livelihood opportunities to idle female labor, utilizes the erstwhile floating coconut shell garbage on the river, reduces overall cost of garbage collection, contributes to the fertility of the soil required by the bamboos planted at the eyelet spaces of the produced coco-net used for erosion control.

Comments (0)

Solid Waste Management City-wide Practices

Filed under: River Rehabilitation Programs & Social Enterprises in Las Piñas City,Uncategorized — Joshua Sarmiento @ 3:35 pm

“The hand of the Lord will rest on this mountain; but Moab will be trampled under him as straw is trampled down in the manure”;


Composting used to be a widespread practice. Until the early 1900 , it was estimated that 90% of the fertilizer used in the United States came from compost.

In 1913, the German company BASF (BadischeAnilin- & Soda-Fabrik) started operating the world’s first ammonia synthesis plant to produce synthetic nitrogen compounds, including fertilizers. These new chemical fertilizers were produced quicker than messy animal manure compost.

Productivity soared to levels unheard of in the past, and the farmyard compost pile quickly became a thing of the past. By 1950, it was estimated that only 1% of the fertilizer used in the United States was derived from compost.

In 1962, Rachel Carson, an American marine biologist wrote the popular book Silent Spring. In the book she pointed out that technological progress is so fundamentally at odds with natural processes that it must be curtailed. She ushered in a new public awareness that nature was vulnerable to human intervention.

The consciousness and the need to regulate industry in order to protect the environment became widely accepted.

Environmentalism was born.

In the Philippines, the environmentalism philosophy of Manny and Cynthia Villar is anchored on the need to continually seek sustainable solutions which are always linked towards other objectives such as providing more jobs to the poor, saving money of the city government, building organizations, and creating synergy with other sectors.

It is an environmentalism that transcends middle-class notions of having a healthier lifestyle and being ecologically friendly.

Household Waste Segregation

When the Congresswoman Cynthia Villar sought to produce compost on a city-wide scale, it was met with opposition.

As in many enterprises which require social mobilization, there was resistance from the people.

To encourage their participation, the Congresswoman Villar dangled the incentive of investing in the rotary composter and the building to house the composting facility if the homeowner’s association or barangay would counterpart a suitable lot of around 36 square meters.

Of the twenty-barangay leaders, five leaders readily committed themselves to the program. Seventy-five percent (75%) of the leaders did not want to join.

Unfazed by the rejection, the Congresswoman took the time out to sit down in dialogue with each and every barangay to answer all of their apprehensions and concerns.

Segregating garbage required a house to house education campaign by the different associations. Where to bring the segregated garbage became the primary responsibility of the City government.

From this segregation, the biodegradable waste would be turned into compost.


Composting Practices

Barangay Bio-digesters
To complement the regular collection efforts of the City’s garbage trucks, “bio-men” conduct a door-to-door collection of the household wet garbage.The “bio-men” are part-time workers under the barangay payroll.

The wet garbage collected would pass through a mechanical presser present in every composting facility. The wet garbage wouldbe pressed to remove the liquid content or the leachate.

The leachate then enters an enclosed container. In this container further anaerobic digestion occurs. From the bacteria, methane is produced which is the source of bio-gas.

Besides the kitchen wastes of the households, coco peat is added into the compost mix.

A composting machine is able to produce 1,000 kilos or one (1) ton of compost per month. Today, there are a total of forty seven (47) rotary composters operating in twenty nine (29) composting centers, providing livelihood to 141 families.

Presently, the total average compost output of Las Piñas is forty seven (47) tons per month. The goal is to have a total of 100 composting centers spread throughout the city by 2013.

Part of this compost is used for the re-greening and tree-planting program in Las Piñas.

Farmers from nearby provinces purchase the rest of the compost to produce organic vegetables in their provincial farms. The income derived from the sale of the compost reverts back to the barangay and the subdivision housing associations to support their environmental activities.

 Use of Vermiculture
Another type of waste in the city is garden waste such as yard trimmings, dead branches, and plants. These are collected separately and brought to the vermi composting facilities.Vermi composting is the process of using worms to process organic waste into nutrient-rich soil. The production of organic fertilizer through vermi composting is now carried out in eleven (11) centers in eleven (11) barangays, with a total monthly production of 5,500 kilos or 6.1 tons

Barangay Recycling Day
A monthly Barangay Recycling Day was initiated in August 2010 by newly-elected congressman Mark Villar. The event is like a trade fair but instead of having booths where products are sold, owners and operators of MRS or junk yards buy recyclables such as old newspapers and magazines, plastic bottles, and empty tin cans from the homeowners.

This project has further reduced the volume of garbage that the city government has to collect.

Transforming Non -biodegradables into construction materials The materials that remain after the process of waste treatment – like agricultural, urban, industrial or mining – are called residual waste. In the domestic setting, residual waste pertains to household trash that cannot be recycled, re-used, or composted.

Residual waste in Las Piñas is used in the manufacture of construction materials such as hollow blocks and pavers. The non-biodegradables and non-recyclables are collected and processed through a pulverizing machine, which produces pellets that are mixed with cement. This mixture is molded into the desired shapes of blocks and pavers.

 These City-wide practices in solid waste management have helped to simultaneously achieve multiple objectives :

Comments (0)
« Newer PostsOlder Posts »