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Cold storage inspections authorized to control ASF

THE Department of Agriculture (DA) has instructed quarantine officers to inspect non-accredited cold storage warehouses and container vans to prevent the entry of African Swine Fever (ASF)-infected pork products.

“All Veterinary Quarantine Officer and Inspectors are hereby authorized to inspect all NMIS (National Meat Inspection Service) non-accredited private cold storage warehouses and container vans or any items that are possible carriers of the African Swine Fever virus at the ports of entry (1st border) and cold storage warehouses (2nd border),” the DA said in Memorandum Order No. 3, series of 2020.

The measure supports the National Zoning Plan authorized by Administrative Order No. 12, series of 2019, which sets guidelines for the movement of pork and pork products across the country, and Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Order No. 2019-183, which also authorizes designated officers from the NMIS and the Bureau of Animal Industry (BAI) to inspect all imported pork and pork products.

This order is in effect until Dec. 4, 2020, unless the FDA revokes the order earlier.

In October, branded and unbranded pork products were confiscated at Calapan Port in Oriental Mindoro, which tested positive for ASF. It was later confirmed that branded processed pork products were made by Pampanga-based Mekeni Food Corp.

Two cargo containers from China were also apprehended in the Port of Manila in the same month. These were declared to be containing tomato paste and vermicelli, but were later discovered to be containing meat products like dimsum, dumplings, and minced vegetables with meat.

The government has banned the entry of pork and pork products from countries suffering from ASF outbreaks, like China, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cambodia, Hungary, Laos, Moldova, Poland, South Africa, and Indonesia.

The BAI estimates the number of culled pigs at 147,334 as of Dec. 15, of which 18% or 26,077 head were confirmed to be infected by the virus. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang

WESM key to viability of new RE projects in Mindanao

By Carmelito Q. Francisco, Correspondent

DAVAO CITY — The attractiveness and viability of renewal energy (RE) investments in Mindanao depends in part on the operations of the wholesale electricity spot market (WESM), a Mindanao Development Authority (MinDA) official said.

MinDA Deputy Executive Director Romeo M. Montenegro, who also heads the technical working group of the Mindanao Power Monitoring Committee, said the WESM will serve as a key platform for selling green energy output, which enjoys priority status under the Renewable Energy Act of 2008.

“Cheaper RE is first scheduled for dispatch,” he explained.

The Independent Market Operator of the Philippines announced last year that WESM, which has been in place in Luzon and Visayas, is planned for opening in Mindanao on Jan. 26.

However, Mr. Montenegro said this “will continue to be a moving target because issues like the price cap have yet to be addressed.”

The Energy Regulatory Commission is in charge of setting the price cap.

As the WESM remains pending, Mr. Montenegro said the investment landscape will not be too favorable for RE projects given the current supply surplus and existing contracts signed by distribution utilities, particularly the electric cooperatives, with fossil-fuel plants.

“So who will buy (the RE output)?” Mr. Montenegro said.

Nonetheless, the MinDA official said the agency continues to push for RE projects with the expectation that WESM will soon be operational.

“It is important that we are able to balance the (energy) mix to preserve the environment,” Mr. Montenegro told BusinessWorld.

Mindanao currently has a daily surplus of about 1,000 megawatts, with the energy mix at 70-30 in favor of fossil fuel-powered plants.

The National Grid Corp. of the Philippines’ Mindanao-Visayas Interconnection Project is also expected to be completed this year, which will allow Mindanao power suppliers to participate in a nationwide WESM.

Mr. Montenegro also noted that demand in the southern islands is projected to continue increasing with economic growth.

“At the rate that Mindanao is growing, and at the rate of 7-8% annual demand increase for power in Mindanao, we’re looking at that excess… but that excess will not last long,” he said.

“As early as now, companies should start considering building new power plants to address the impending need.”

Ecozones’ contingency plans geared for heavier Taal ashfall

ECONOMIC ZONES are evaluating their disaster preparations in the event of further activity from Taal volcano, with the industry association considering the likeliest scenario to be more ashfall.

Philippine Ecozones Association (PHILEA) President Francisco S. Zaldarriaga said in a mobile phone message Tuesday that the association “can expect merely heavier ash fall and if at all — small projectiles to reach our parks.”

He said this assessment is based on a Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) briefing for locators and industry stakeholders organized by the Philippine Economic Zone Authority on Monday.

Mr. Zaldarriaga told reporters Monday that evacuation plans will depend on the intensity of ash fall and projectiles from the volcano.

“Apart from… cleanup, (locators are organizing) a plan for a level-5 situation. You really just have two options. One is to evacuate immediately, or two is to stay put.”

A level-5 alert denotes an ongoing explosive eruption. The current alert level for Taal is 4, signifying imminent danger of a stronger eruption.

“Evacuation, if you are allowed, seems to be the most logical. But if there are projectiles, you know those things move at 150 miles per hour,” he said.

He said PHILEA is not considering evacuating in advance.

For now, the association is sharing best practices in preparation for Phivolcs alert level 5.

“We are hoping that in spite of the level of preparedness we are programming ourselves that we will not need to implement,” Mr. Zaldarriga said in the text message.

PHILEA members closest to the volcano include Lima Technology Center and First Philippine Industrial Park, Inc., in Batangas. Both are outside the 14 kilometer high-risk zone.

Mr. Zaldarriaga said ecozones have returned to operation after the initial phreatic eruption. — Jenina P. Ibañez

DoF touts auction for sugar imports

THE Department of Finance (DoF) said it is studying an auction scheme to replace the current system of sugar imports.

“The import system has several issues that need to be addressed. The first one is the transparency of the system itself… instead of deciding on the amount and the volume and who will receive the permits baka pwede auction na lang (maybe an auction is the better system),” Finance Assistant Secretary Antonio Joselito G. Lambino II told the House Committee on Agriculture and Food, which was discussing proposals to liberalize the sugar industry Tuesday.

He said the transparency issue can be addressed via auctions because the bidding process can be open, disclosing the bidders’ identities and offers, as well as the import volumes awarded.

“The decision on how much volume will come in is (currently) made by a few people (who) are trying to outsmart the market… but if we let the market help us decide through an auction system, baka mas magiging efficient (it might be more efficient),” he said.

Sugar imports must pay a 5% tariff under the ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement (ATIGA.)

Mr. Lambino said auctions are one option that the DoF is considering, but others are geared towards achieving more transparency in import permits.

The National Economic Development Authority (NEDA) said that it will conduct a study to evaluate Thai sugar prices and the competitiveness of leading sugar-producing regions like Negros Occidental.

During the committee hearing, House Resolutions 412 and 439 were also approved, seeking to investigate the impact of sugar import liberalization on the industry and economy. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang

Local governments at the front lines of UHC implementation

FORTY-FIVE-year-old Melodina Hugo is the go-to person when family members and relatives, especially those from the remote Paquibato district, get seriously sick and need to be brought to the Southern Philippines Medical Center (SPMC) in Davao City, the biggest government-owned hospital in Mindanao.

Her know-how of the ins and outs of public health services stems from her sad experience of losing her husband, who was a security guard, in 2009.

He died of prostate cancer, which was already at a late stage when diagnosed.

“That was hard,” she said in an interview, speaking in mixed Visayan and Filipino, “Going back-and-forth to the hospital, sourcing financial assistance, but it was too late for a surgical procedure.”

As a stay-out housekeeper in the city for many years now, she enjoys work schedule flexibility, making her available for emergency situations or to keep watch of a patient overnight, or spend a whole day gathering documents and processing monetary assistance.

There are many funding sources, she says, such as the offices of local government officials and even senators, and the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office (PCSO).

But the first place she goes to is the Davao City Lingap Para sa Mahirap center — a program launched in 2001 by then mayor and now President Rodrigo R. Duterte for medical and hospitalization assistance, food supplements, and funeral services to residents, especially indigents and members of the indigenous people communities.

From a small office at city hall, the program now has its own building inside the SPMC that serves as a one-stop-shop for assistance, housing other agencies such as the PCSO and the Department of Social Welfare and Development.

The Lingap program is the model for the Malasakit Center Act, signed by Mr. Duterte in December last year, which mandates the establishment of a similar help desk in all hospitals run by the Department of Health (DoH).

It is intended to complement the Universal Health Care (UHC) law, also passed last year, that automatically makes all Filipinos members and entitled beneficiaries of the Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth).

Implementation of the UHC starts this year, but will not yet be nationwide.

Coverage will initially be in five out of 145 cities (Valenzuela, Parañaque, Dagupan, Baguio, and Cagayan de Oro) and 28 out of 81 provinces (Benguet, Isabela, Nueva Vizcaya, Quirino, Bataan, Tarlac, Batangas, Quezon, Oriental Mindoro, Masbate, Sorsogon, Aklan, Antique, Guimaras, Iloilo, Cebu province, Biliran, Leyte, Samar, Zamboanga del Norte, Misamis Oriental, Compostela Valley, Davao del Norte, Sarangani, South Cotobato, Agusan del Sur, Agusan del Norte, and Maguindanao).

Department of Health Davao Region Director Anabelle P. Yumang said the UHC implementation involves the “managerial integration of province-wide and city-wide systems” within the first three years, and “financial integration” within the next three.

“Because the LGUs (local government units) still need more funds to ensure proper installation and implementation of the integrated health system, to ensure health systems at the local level are more focused, strategically-planned,” she told BusinessWorld.

She said with UHC, the LGU programs can take care of medical costs that are not covered under the PhilHealth system.

PhilHealth’s National Health Insurance Program for UHC guarantees the following: immediate eligibility, no co-payment in basic or ward accommodation, co-payment/co-insurance for amenities in public hospitals, no reduction in current PhilHealth packages, and additional benefits for direct contributors.

Ms. Yumang also said that UHC is not just about access to medical services but making all Filipinos “health literate” in terms of lifestyle, avoiding risks, and knowing that they do not have to suffer the added burden of “financial hardship” in times of sickness.

OUTBREAK
The weaknesses in the health care system become even more pronounced during epidemics, such as in the dengue outbreak last year.

Among the areas with the highest number of cases was the Western Visayas Region, particularly Iloilo province, which has a population of about 2.4 million in 42 towns, Passi as the lone component city, and Iloilo City as an independent city.

Mayor Francis A. Amboy of Maasin, categorized as a 3rd class municipality and one of the most affected towns, recalled the local government’s struggle to respond to the increasing dengue patients at the rural health unit (RHU), which has limited facilities, supplies, and manpower.

“Our RHU cannot accommodate the surge of patients… We also lacked funds to finance the laboratory and monitoring of the patients,” Mr. Amboy told BusinessWorld.

Maasin, home to about 40,000 people, has no hospital. Four died during the dengue outbreak.

One of the response measures taken by Maasin and other towns was setting up temporary medical facilities such as a hydration area in basketball courts and other covered public buildings.

The regional DoH office also sought an arrangement with private hospitals — equally overflowing with patients — to accommodate the more critical ones endorsed by the government hospitals and health units.

Health Secretary Francisco T. Duque III, during his visit to Iloilo at the height of the outbreak in August, said the dengue epidemic is a kind of test on how well local systems can execute UHC.

“UHC is always in the context of the network of service delivery from the barangay health centers to rural health units to city health centers, community, district levels, provincial hospitals linking to your medical center, and all the way to your apex. How well you are doing in the lower delivery of units will be an indicator of how burdensome it will be for your mid and upstream delivery units,” Mr. Duque said.

With this year’s UHC rollout that includes Iloilo, DoH-Western Visayas Assistant Regional Director Dr. Julia Z. Villanueva said households will now be assigned a “primary health care provider,” which would be the front-line unit.

“The primary health care provider (such as RHUs) will navigate the patients or the residents to their needed health care, whether on secondary or tertiary hospitals,” she told BusinessWorld.

With a structured referral system, Ms. Villanueva said, the crowding at hospitals and other facilities like what happened during the dengue epidemic will likely be prevented.

“The outbreak created a panic and people with suspected dengue symptoms rushed to the hospitals and clinics to get tested, and those who tested positive demanded to be admitted in the hospitals when, in fact, they can just be treated in the hydration unit. This kind of referral system will be corrected with the UHC because instead of going directly to hospitals, they will have to be assessed first by their primary care provider,” she said.

“All the municipalities will become a member of a provincial health care network or health system,” she added.

Ms. Villanueva said one of the challenges the department foresees at the local level is the cooperation of leaders.

“There may be indifferences, and mayors might not cooperate with the creation of the network,” she said.

Mr. Amboy, whose two daughters were among the dengue patients, said he will definitely be supporting the UHC.

“We are very willing to cooperate. All the residents should have access to health care. They should be provided with the needed health services,” he said.

As of mid-December, the dengue outbreak alert in Western Visayas was still ongoing.

The region recorded 51,233 dengue cases with 219 deaths as of Oct. 14.

Ms. Hugo, for all her experience in the workings of the Philippine public health care system, has never heard of UHC.

When told about it during the interview, her reaction was a mixture of awe and skepticism.

“There is such a program? Can they do that? Won’t SPMC go bankrupt?” she asked.

At the same time, she said the improvements she has seen over the years at SPMC in terms of facilities and service — as well as the recent establishment of a Botika ng Bayan (government pharmacy dispensing free medicines) in her remote hometown of Paquibato — makes her cautiously optimistic that a comprehensive health care system could eventually be a reality.

Pasensya lang (We just need patience),” she said, the one main virtue she has learned from getting public medical services.— Marifi S. Jara, Maya M. Padillo and Emme Rose S. Santiagudo

Consumer financial protection bill filed in House

A LEGISLATOR has filed a bill seeking to provide a regulatory framework for consumer financial protection and to institutionalize the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ (BSP) Financial Consumer Protection Department.

Rep. Jose Maria Clemente S. Salceda of Albay, who is also the Chairman of the House Committee on Ways and Means, filed House Bill 5976 Tuesday, which if passed will be known as the Comprehensive Consumer Financial Protection Act.

The bill retains the basic framework included in House Bill 9054 filed during the 17th Congress which could give financial regulators the abilities of rulemaking, surveillance and inspection, market monitoring, and enforcement powers relative to consumer protection.

House Bill 9054 was passed in the House of Representatives during the 17th Congress but was not ultimately enacted into law.

In addition to the framework, the bill also seeks to create the Financial Stability Oversight Coordinating Council (FSOCC) “which shall be a body for coordination among the regulators to address all potential threats to the financial system and provide a broader, inter-agency venue for financial stability.”

“The FSOCC will also expand the reach of our prudential laws to ensure that our regulatory structures are not limited by the lack of jurisdiction of the Monetary Board. The FSOCC will also empower the Monetary Board to regulate firms which the Council deems to be significant enough to impact the country’s financial stability” Mr. Salceda said in the bill’s explanatory note.

The measure also seeks the institutionalization and expansion of the Financial Consumer Protection Department to enforce “fair and truthful lending” and mandate the coverage of non-depository institutions.

Meanwhile, to protect investor rights and boost investor confidence, the bill also seeks to create the Office of the Investor Advocate which will be under the Security and Exchange Commission.

Mr. Salceda said that the bill complements other fiscal, economic and financial reforms, particularly the Corporate Income Tax and Incentives Rationalization Act (CITIRA), the Passive Income and Financial Intermediaries Tax Act (PIFITA), the Virtual Banking Act, and the amendments to the Public Services Act (PSA), the Foreign Investments Act (FIA), and the Retail Trade Liberalization Act (RTLA).

CITIRA aims to gradually cut the corporate income tax rate to 20% from the current 30%, was approved on third and final reading at the House of Representatives on Sept. 13. It is also one of the four packages of the Comprehensive Tax Reform Program (CTRP).

PIFITA is also one of the packages under the CTRP which was passed by the House on third reading in September.

The measure aims to decrease the tax rates on interest income from savings and short-term deposits to 15% from the current 20%. Tax rates on interest income from foreign currency deposits and long-term deposits will also be lowered to 15%.

Mr. Salceda filed the Virtual Banking Act on Jan. 6 which seeks to provide a regulatory framework for virtual banks.

FIA was passed by the House in September, while the PSA and RTLA are still pending at plenary level.

“With the increase in investments (especially retail investments) that these reforms will trigger, this representation sees the need for a financial services regulatory framework that not only deals with current gaps for current problems, but also proactively anticipates future issues in the financial sector” Mr. Salceda said. — Genshen L. Espedido

Taal remains swollen and may erupt again — Phivolcs

TAAL Volcano remained swollen with gas and magma, a sign that it could erupt again, state seismologists said on Tuesday.

“There is a seeming weakening of the activities but it doesn’t mean the danger is over,” Ma. Antonia V. Bornas, chief science research specialist at the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs), said at a briefing.

Taal Volcano in Batangas province forced thousands of residents to flee after it emitted a thick ash column on Jan. 12. The ashfall covered cities near the capital, forcing financial markets to suspend trading and the Manila airport to close.

More than 68,000 families in Batangas, Quezon, Laguna and Cavite were affected by the volcano’s eruption, according to the local disaster agency.

Almost 40,000 families were taking temporary shelter in 497 evacuation centers while 22,217 families were being served outside the centers, it said in a 6 a.m. report.

The second-highest alert level remained hoisted over Taal, meaning “hazardous explosive eruption is possible within hours to days,” Phivolcs said in an 8 a.m. bulletin.

Phivolcs recorded “weak steam emission” from the volcano, producing ash plumes that went as high as 600 meters.

Volcanic earthquakes have become more infrequent, Ms. Bornas said, adding that there are still magma movements underground.

Phivolcs has recorded 718 volcanic earthquakes since Jan. 12, 176 of which were felt at Intensities 1 to 5.

“We have ground deformation parameters that the volcano is still inflated and is still inflating,” Ms. Bornas said. “The magma is already there and the volcano can easily erupt.”

These earthquakes signified “continuous magmatic intrusion beneath the Taal edifice” that could lead to further eruptions, the agency said.

Also yesterday, Albay Rep. Jose Maria Clemente S. Salceda filed a bill seeking to create a Taal Commission that will serve as the primary agency for Taal’s rehabilitation.

Meanwhile, Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian filed a resolution seeking to extend calamity loans or impose a one-year moratorium on loan payments of workers affected by Taal’s eruption.

Under Senate Resolution 289 members of the Government Service Insurance System, Social Security System and Home Development Mutual Fund will be allowed to defer payments for a year.

It will “greatly alleviate the suffering brought about by the Taal volcano eruption and will help them out during their times of need,” he said.

Mr. Gatchalian also proposed that affected businesses be allowed to delay payments of real property taxes and business permit renewal fees. — Genshen L. Espedido and Charmaine A. Tadalan

Boy in Cebu tests positive for coronavirus

A CHINESE boy traveling to Cebu City in central Philippines tested positive for coronavirus, days after Japan and Thailand confirmed their first case of infection from a new strain that originated in Wuhan, China, the Philippine Health department said on Tuesday.

The five-year-old boy from Wuhan was found to have symptoms of fever, throat infection and cough and had been hospitalized, Health Secretary Francisco H. Duque III said at a briefing.

The virus, in the same family as the deadly severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS), has killed at least six patients and sickened dozens in China.

The boy tested positive for coronavirus but was negative for SARS and MERS, the Health department said.

Samples from the patient were sent to Australia for further testing to determine the strain of coronavirus he was infected with.

World Health Organization (WHO) Philippines Country Representative Rabinda Abeyasinghe said they were working with authorities in China,, where majority of the more than 200 cases occurred, to monitor the new virus strain.

While coronavirus cases are normally transmitted from animals to humans, the new strain was said to have been transmitted between humans.

“This is a premature situation and we still need to understand better the mode of transmission and what needs to be done physically to manage it,” Mr. Abeyasinghe said at the same briefing.

Health authorities advised the public to observe proper hygiene and cough etiquette, including covering the mouth when one coughs or sneezes.

The Philippines is working with airport authorities to monitor cases involving arriving tourists, Health officials said. — Gillian M. Cortez

News website says ban undermines free press

AN ONLINE news website critical of the Duterte administration said the Executive branch should not be allowed to “undermine the rights of the free press” after it was barred from covering events attended by President Rodrigo R. Duterte.

In a pleading submitted to the Supreme Court, Rappler said the Constitution guarantees that the press “will remain free and independent of the government.”

“It has rights guaranteed by the Constitution that the Executive branch cannot take away,” it added.

The news website said Malacañang’s coverage ban had diluted the rights of the free press. “Doing so violates the Constitution’s promise of independence,” it added.

The Solicitor General earlier said the coverage ban had nothing to do with free press and the presidential palace could rightly impose accreditation requirements.

The government lawyer also said media accreditation is pursuant to two executive orders and the by-laws of the Malacañang Press Corps.

Rappler belied the government’s claim that Rappler was not engaged in the business of mass media.

“This again forgets that membership in the free press is not dependent on a license, a business or a building permit,” it said.

The high court has “recognized petitioner Rappler as a nontraditional member of the press with rights to news coverage and dissemination in two instances,” it added.

Rappler in April asked the high court to stop the palace’s coverage ban.

Mr. Duterte ordered the ban in March, accusing the website of twisting his statements.

Before this, Malacañang barred Rappler’s reporter from entering the palace. The ban was later extended to all its reporters including provincial correspondents. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

3 Chinese quarantined from Kalibo airport already cleared

THE THREE Chinese nationals quarantined after showing signs of high body temperature upon arrival at the Kalibo International Airport in Aklan have all been cleared and released. Nonetheless, Western Visayas Regional Epidemiologist Jessie Glen L. Alonsabe of the Department of Health-Center for Health Development said blood samples and swabs from the three, who arrived on different dates, have been sent to the headquarters in Manila for testing. “They were showing signs of fever as detected by the thermal scanner of the airport. It is part of the standard operating procedures,” he said. Cornelio V. Cuachon Jr., head of the Aklan Provincial Health Office, said the first quarantined passenger was a 29-year-old female who arrived Jan. 17, and discharged from hospital the next day as she no longer had a fever. “She has no fever and so we just discharged her from the hospital and we allowed her to go to Boracay,” he said. The two others, a three-year-old girl who arrived Jan. 18 and a 65-year-old male on Jan. 20, showed signs of fever and colds. The child was discharged after being diagnosed with a respiratory tract infection, while the senior male was treated as an outpatient after observations indicated that he has already recovered from fever. “They undergone thorough examination and their medical history were reviewed,” Mr. Alonsabe said as he assured the public that authorities have tightened monitoring and response measures amid the spread of the new strain of coronavirus in China. — Emme Rose S. Santiagudo

One-stop-shop proposed for ‘Creative City’ Cebu designs

TO CAPITALIZE on Cebu’s position as a UNESCO Creative City for design, a one-stop-shop showcasing products of local designers is being eyed. “We need a home to feature our designs, from furnishing, finishing, fashion, paintings, and jewelry all in one place to showcase Cebuano creativity, featuring internationally known designers,” said leasing broker for commercial spaces Eppie Acusar. Internationally acclaimed brands like those of Kenneth Cobonpue, Nature’s Legacy, award-winning fashion accessories, among others, should be featured prominently in a “designers’ home” in Cebu, she said. Cebu City officially joined the UNESCO Creative Cities International Network under the design category on Oct. 30, 2019. UNESCO Creative Cities are laboratories of ideas and innovative practices that bring a tangible contribution to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals through innovative thinking and action. — The Freeman

Hasten recovery plan to access P5B fund, Cotabato governor orders

COTABATO GOVERNOR Nancy A. Catamco has ordered local government units (LGUs) and the Provincial Rehabilitation Task Force to fast-track the completion of data on affected families and damages from the series of earthquakes last year to pave the way for the recovery program’s implementation. In a statement on Tuesday, Ms. Catamco said the validated data is necessary to access the P5 billion fund allocated by the national government for the rehabilitation of earthquake-hit areas in the regions of Davao and South Cotabato-Cotabato-Sultan Kudarat-Sarangani-General Santos City (Soccsksargen). Among the most affected areas are Makilala town in Cotabato and Matanao in Davao del Sur. “The provincial government wants to begin with the recovery and rehabilitation phase in Makilala but we have to complete and submit the correct data,” the governor said following a coordination meeting on Jna. 20 held at the office of Makilala Mayor Armando M. Quibod.

DEADLINE
“(The) National Housing Authority gave us the deadline to complete all the data needed before January 27… specifically the list and names of affected households and other damage reports, so that we can finalize our rehabilitation and recovery plan and proceed with this much delayed intervention,” she said. She also warned that “if LGUs could not complete and submit the data needed on prescribed timeline, it is impossible for them to receive any assistance from national line agencies.” Data from the national disaster management council as of January 10 show over 150,000 families composed of more than 700,000 people in the different regions have been affected by the earthquakes that struck Mindanao from October to December. — MSJ