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Supreme Court affirms CA’s 2006 ruling upholding PAL retrenchment program

THE SUPREME COURT en banc voted 7-2 to favor Philippine Airlines (PAL) in its 20-year dispute with the Flight Attendants and Stewards Association of the Philippines (FASAP) over the flag carrier’s retrenchment program.

In a 55-page resolution penned by Associate Justice Lucas P. Bersamin, the SC affirmed an Aug. 23, 2006 Court of Appeals (CA) ruling that upheld the airline’s retrenchment program in 1998.

The High Court also denied the motion for reconsideration filed by the FASAP in 2012, and set aside the resolutions in 2008 and 2009 issued by SC divisions, which favored FASAP and directed the flag carrier to reinstate the laid-off employees.

The Supreme Court en banc said PAL implemented a valid retrenchment program, after establishing it had incurred serious financial losses.

“After having been placed under corporate rehabilitation and its rehabilitation plan having been approved by the SEC on June 23, 2008, PAL’s dire financial predicament could not be doubted,” it said.

The court said it used fair and reasonable criteria in selecting the employees to be retrenched, as provided for under the collective bargaining agreement.

“We hold that for as long as PAL followed a rational criteria defined or set by the CBA and existing laws and jurisprudence in determining who should be included in the retrenchment program, it sufficiently met the standards of fairness and reason in its implementation of its retrenchment program,” the decision read.

The SC also ruled that the release and quitclaim signed by the affected PAL employees had satisfied the basic contents of valid and effective quitclaims and waivers.

“A quitclaim is invalid or contrary to public policy only: (1) where there is clear proof that the waiver was wrangled from an unsuspecting or gullible person; or (2) where the terms of settlement are unconscionable on their face. Based on these standards, we uphold the release and quitclaims signed by the retrenched employees herein,” it said.

To recall, FASAP claimed the airline illegally dismissed around 5,000 employees, of which 1,400 were cabin crew personnel in 1998.

PAL, for its part, argued the retrenchment program was necessary to ensure the airline’s survival following financial difficulties in the aftermath of the 1997 Asian crisis.

Seven justices concurred, including Mr. Bersamin, Diosdado M. Peralta, Estela M. Perlas-Bernabe, Samuel R. Martires, Noel Gimenez Tijam, Alfredo S. Caguioa, and Alexander G. Gesmundo.

Only justices Marvic F. Leonen and Andres B. Reyes, Jr. dissented.

In his dissenting opinion, Mr. Leonen said: “This (was) an extraordinary case… Like in the Book of Revelation, it involves a miraculous resurrection of the dead; in this case, a dead case.”

Five justices inhibited themselves from the case, namely Antonio T. Carpio, Presbitero J. Velasco, Jr., Teresita J. Leonardo-De Castro, Mariano C. Del Castillo and Francis H. Jardeleza.

Chief Justice Maria Lourdes P.A. Sereno, who is on indefinite leave, was unable to take part. — DAME

New Clark City: How project is challenging conventional urban planning

CLARK, PHILIPPINES — He may never set foot in New Clark City, but taxi driver Edgard Labitag hopes the Philippines’ first green, disaster-resilient, high-tech metropolis will ease the pressure on Manila — meaning fewer hours stuck in traffic and more time with his children.

On a sweltering Sunday afternoon, the 42-year-old at the wheel bemoaned another shift spent inching along the infamously congested streets of the capital city of 13 million people.

“Crowding, pollution and traffic — this is what people say about Manila,” he said, gesturing at the gridlock.

“But luckily the government has a plan… and (President Rodrigo) Duterte is the right man to see it through.”

That plan is New Clark, a 9,450-hectare city that government officials say will be bigger than New York’s Manhattan by the time it is completed in 25 to 30 years — with an expected population of more than 1.2 million.

The aim is to build a city equipped to deal with climate shocks in one of the world’s most cyclone-affected regions, and to promote healthy, eco-friendly and sustainable living by putting nature at the heart of development, urban experts say.

Reflecting a rising trend from Japan and India to the United States, New Clark seeks to challenge conventional urban planning by uniting government, developers, business and the public — and proving that green and resilient cities can be cost-effective.

“The objective is not simply to build a disaster-resilient city, but rather a successful, innovative and economically competitive city that is also disaster-resilient,” said Benjamin Preston, a researcher at RAND Corp., a global think tank.

New Clark is still in its infancy, but officials say Duterte is fast-tracking the project as the Philippines, one of Asia’s fastest-growing economies in 2017, seeks to boost spending on infrastructure to create jobs and attract more foreign firms.

Yet even as the government races to build New Clark and tackle Manila’s booming population, density and congestion, it must plan the new city with care and avoid past mistakes, says the state-run Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA).

“We need to strike a balance between fast-paced development that maximizes value for the private sector, and protecting open spaces and making the city walkable, green and resilient,” said Vince Dizon, president of the BCDA, which oversees the project.

“Traditional development cannot overwhelm or overpower the area,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “For New Clark City, here lies the challenge.”

GREEN AGENDA
Situated about 100 kilometers north of Manila in Tarlac province near Clark International Airport, one of the country’s busiest hubs, New Clark will be home to several government departments, an agro-industrial park and a huge sports complex.

Yet despite the range of planned infrastructure, only a third of the $14-billion city’s land will be developed, with two-thirds reserved for green spaces and agriculture, the government said.

Houston in Texas and nearby Singapore have provided inspiration on how to plan the city in an integrated manner where water management and green spaces are linked closely to all urban systems, according to Dutch architect Matthijs Bouw.

By focusing on nature and allowing plenty of open space along rivers, for example, New Clark can benefit beyond protecting itself from floods, said Bouw, who has worked on the master plan for the city with the government.

“Putting green areas on the agenda not only helps with water storage and drainage, but creates community spaces and guides street design in a way that benefits pedestrians and bikes… so social resilience also gets strengthened,” Bouw said.

Yet the rapid pace of development and large number of actors working on different structures and systems means some aspects could “fall through the cracks resilience-wise,” he warned.

MAKING THE CASE
Another challenge in designing and developing such a city is changing the mind-sets of officials used to traditional planning approaches, who may be wary of going green, urban experts say.

“How do you do this in a regional context in Asia where there is massive and widespread corruption, and where elected representatives change in the short term?” asked Harini Nagendra, an author and academic based in southern India.

The answer: convince politicians and bureaucrats that making a city stronger and safer against modern-day threats will not slow down development, and will save their governments money in the long run, said Oesha Thakoerdin of the Asian Development Bank (ADB), which is backing the New Clark project.

Economists at RAND are seeking to demonstrate the social, environmental and economic gains from building resilience and are developing a business case to prove that green urban planning is not only an option for wealthy economies.

“Increasingly we are seeing middle-income countries realize that planning and investing in green areas in cities is critical for their development — and cost-competitive,” Thakoerdin said.

INFRASTRUCTURE GAP
Urban experts say New Clark City could not only set a shining example for Southeast Asia in terms of balancing rapid economic development with social and environmental policies, but may also mark a turning point closer to home.

“(It) has the potential to take pressure off Manila so that Manila can also invest in building a more resilient future,” said Lauren Sorkin, director for Asia Pacific with 100 Resilient Cities, a network backed by The Rockefeller Foundation.

Manila is one of the world’s densest cities, with 14,500 people per square kilometer, almost triple London’s level, UN data shows. Congestion could cost the capital $155 million a day in lost productivity by 2030, a Japanese government study found.

Cities across the Philippines generate more than 70% of gross domestic product, while the percentage of urban dwellers is set to rise by 2050 to 65% — representing 102 million people — up from 45% today, the World Bank said.

While New Clark has been hailed for its vision, experts warn the push for resilience in Asia may be sacrificed in the rush to invest the $1.7 trillion per year through 2030 the ADB estimates is required to keep up with the region’s infrastructure demand.

“We’re facing a huge infrastructure gap… and a rapidly growing urban population,” Sorkin said.

“It’s going to be enormously difficult to make up deficits, and plan for and meet emerging needs at the same time.” — Thomson Reuters Foundation

Investment fund acquires 5% stake in Phinma Energy

PHINMA ENERGY Corp. told the stock exchange on Monday that a Cayman Islands-based investment fund had acquired a 5.005% stake in the company.

The investment fund, Motus Fund Ltd., purchased 244,723,560 shares of the power producer and supplier.

Motus, which has the power to dispose and to vote for the stake, acquired the shares during five transactions this month — March 1, 9, 12, 19 and 20 — at the price of P1.53 each.

Shares in Phinma Energy, formerly Trans-Asia Oil and Energy Development Corp., added one centavo or 0.67% to close at P1.51 apiece on Monday.

The transactions were done days after parent Phinma Corp. told the stock exchange about its plan to buy back up to 10% of the holding firm’s issued and outstanding shares until Dec. 31, 2019 through the trading facilities of the Philippine Stock Exchange.

Also on Monday, Phinma Corp. released its information statement in which it described the subsidiary as looking forward to “greater participation in the retail electricity market using its existing portfolio of generating plants.”

“The company remains poised to develop additional conventional and renewable energy projects as market and regulatory conditions merit, as it pursues its vision to be the preferred electricity supplier of choice, serving the energy supply requirements of its customers as its contribution toward nation building and making lives better,” it said.

The parent company said Phinma Energy “will enter into the downstream oil industry, initially catering to the fuel requirement of its own diesel plants,” through subsidiary One Subic Oil Distribution Corp.

It added Phinma Petroleum and Geothermal, Inc. is ready to resume operations “once conditions permit.”

“Moving forward, Phinma Energy recognizes the need to diversify its generating portfolio, particularly in light of an oversupply in baseload coal plants foreseen over the next several years,” it said.

Phinma Energy is studying projects that will diversity its generation portfolio to include gas and hydropower. Three projects under study are combined cycle gas turbine (CCGT) plants, including the 383-megawatt (MW) Sta. Ana CCGT power plant in Port Irene, Sta. Ana, Cagayan; the 383-MW Sual CCGT floating power plant in Brgy. Baquioen, Sual, Pangasinan; and the 138-MW Argao floating CCGT power plant in Brgy. Bulasa, Argao, Cebu.

A fourth project under study is the 21.6-MW Ilog hydroelectric power plant in Mabinay, Negros Oriental.

“The projects, all in the pre-development stage, have been cleared by the DoE (Department of Energy) for conduct of grid impact studies, and further development shall proceed as merited by market conditions,” the firm said. — Victor V. Saulon

BPI SRO plan ‘credit positive’

MOODY’S INVESTORS Service said the P50-billion stock rights offering (SRO) to be conducted by the Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI) is credit positive as this will bolster the lender’s capital buffers.

“Based on our estimates, the rights issuance would add about 380 basis points to the bank’s common equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio of 11.8% as of December 2017,” Moody’s said in its credit outlook published March 22.

This improvement, the debt watcher said, would bring BPI’s CET1 ratio well above the capital of other Philippine banks, as well as the 10% minimum requirement of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas.

Moody’s said the rights issue will support BPI’s credit growth while strengthening its capital buffers against risks, adding that the capital raising activity will be efficient to support credit growth of about 20% over the next three years ending 2020.

“Thereafter, the bank’s CET1 ratio will decline to 12%-13% as the growth of risk-weighted assets outpaces the growth of retained earnings,” the credit rater said, adding that this may leave the bank in need of new capital because its internal capital generation capacity lags its credit growth.

On March 16, BPI said in a disclosure that it obtained approval of the Philippine Stock Exchange to conduct an SRO that would raise up to P50 billion, which will fund the lender’s business expansion.

The pricing for the issue will be announced today, while the offering will be conducted from April 26 to 25.

Aside from BPI, Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co. and Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. have also announced plans to conduct SROs expected to raise fresh capital worth P60 billion and P15 billion, respectively.

Last year, BPI booked a net income of P22.42 billion, up by 1.7% from the same period in 2016.

Shares in the Ayala-led bank closed at P109.30 apiece on Monday, up two centavos or 0.18%. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

Celebrating Easter Sunday (03/27/18)

Café Society’s Easter treats

EASTER-THEMED chocolate confections are available at City of Dreams’ Café Society until April 1. These include bunnies in pink and white, brown, and assorted pastel colors; brown bunnies and chicken designs with a chocolate-coated rice crispies base; as well as Mr. and Mrs. Smiley egg varieties in various sizes, to name a few. Freshly baked Easter egg bread, Easter ensaymada, hot cross buns and signature pastries are also available. For details, call 800-8080, e-mail guestservices@cod-manila.com, or visit www.cityofdreamsmanila.com.

Easter Sunday brunch

HOTEL JEN Manila will hold an Easter Sunday Brunch on April 1 at the Latitude Restaurant. The brunch’s highlights include a salad bar, fresh seafood station, international hot dishes; a live pasta cooking station; and roast prime rib of beef or Cebu lechon at the carving station. And since it’s Easter, Latitude has a dedicated station for children serving waffles, mini burgers, fried chicken, along with the ice cream cart, a chocolate fountain, and a donut and churros wall. Guests dining during the Easter Sunday Brunch can also enjoy a clown show, face painting, balloon twisting, egg decorating, and an Easter egg hunt. Tickets are priced at P1,400 net per person, inclusive of Sunday Brunch, access to the pool, Easter activities, complimentary parking and valet services, and unlimited Wi-Fi access. Kids aged four to 11 are entitled to a 50% discount, while kids aged three and below are free when accompanied by at least one paying adult. For inquiries and reservations, call 795-8888 or 0917-806-2017.

Sofitel’s Island Easter

THE Sofitel Philippine Plaza Manila will hold this year’s Summer Island Adventure Easter Egg Hunt on April 1, 9 a.m. to noon, at the Grand Plaza Ballroom. Guests who come in their best luau ensemble have a chance to win special prizes. Tickets are P1,150 net per person. Meanwhile, Spiral’s 21 dining ateliers are offering Easter specific dishes including sweet treats like bunny lollipops and Easter eggs from La Patisserie. Aside from colorful animations and children’s activities, the Easter Bunny is scheduled to make a special appearance. There will also be a live musical performance by Marga Joson. The Easter brunch is set at P4,500 net inclusive of free-flowing champagne while dinner is set at P3,800 net inclusive of a glass of sparkling wine or iced tea. For inquiries and reservations, call 832-6988 or e-mail H6308-FB12@sofitel.com.

The Manhattan luxury-home market screams: I’m overpriced!

LUXURY homes in Manhattan are selling at the biggest discounts on record as owners grow tired of waiting for buyers to match their price.

Homes priced at $4 million or more that went into contract in the first 12 weeks of the year had their asking prices cut by an average of 10%, the most in data going back to 2012, according to Olshan Realty, Inc. Final sale prices, which won’t be known until the deals close, will probably reflect even greater reductions, said Donna Olshan, president of the brokerage that compiled the report.

“Most things at $4 million and above are selling 15% to 20% below the original ask,” Olshan said. “It’s a data point that screams: The market is overpriced!”

Owners who prevail in selling their homes are conceding that Manhattan’s luxury market is brimming with choices, and that even well-heeled buyers are sensitive to price. Shoppers with cash are no longer bidding up properties to record levels, and sellers who recognize the new reality are the likeliest to succeed, Olshan said.

This year, 4,600 newly developed apartments are expected to be listed for sale, with almost half of them priced at $2,400 a square foot or more, according to brokerage Corcoran Sunshine Marketing Group. That’s on top of the 3,323 new units that reached the market last year, as well as older properties listed for resale.

A total of 230 luxury units went into contract this year through March 18, a 17% decline from the same period in 2017, according to Olshan. Before finding takers, those homes spent an average of 466 days on the market, the longest stretch for the beginning of a year in data going back to 2012.

One property in Olshan’s tally is a seven-bedroom townhouse on East 65th Street that was put up for sale in October at $18 million, according to listings website StreetEasy. The seller reduced the price twice since then, eventually asking $14 million for the 10,253-square-foot home. It went into contract on March 14.

This week’s biggest deal was for a 6,360-square-foot apartment at 1 Central Park West, also known as Trump International, Olshan said. The apartment was listed for sale in May 2016 for $40 million and, over time, had its price lowered to $27.5 million before finding a buyer, according to StreetEasy.

More sellers need to follow their lead, Olshan said.

“The biggest problem right now is just straight-up overpricing,” she said. “People are still being delusional about their real estate.” — Bloomberg

How PSEi member stocks performed — March 26, 2018

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Monday, March 26, 2018.

Philippines’ overall consumer outlook index

FILIPINO CONSUMERS turned less upbeat as the year opened due to expectations that prices of goods would keep rising, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reported on Monday. Read the full story.
Consumer Outlook

ConCom proposes to expand environmental rights

By Camille A. Aguinaldo

THE Consultative Committee (ConCom) tasked to review the 1987 Constitution plans to expand the coverage of environmental rights in the new draft Charter’s bill of rights, with the inclusion of a strengthened writ of kalikasan.

“By doing so, this will be putting at par this right to a healthy environment with the civil and political rights of the people. Meaning to say, this right to a healthy environment will be equally demandable against the state and its agencies,” ConCom chairman and former chief justice Reynato S. Puno said during a press briefing at the Philippine International Convention Center (PICC) in Pasay City.

The ConCom’s proposed coverage includes:

• Right to clean air and clean water

• Right to a healthy environment and ecology

• Right to the preservation of ecosystems

• Right to be protected from activities that destroy the environment

• Right to sustainable development

• Right to compensation for damage to environment

• Recourse to courts for immediate protection

• Stronger writ of kalikasan in the bill of rights so that it may not be subject to withdrawal or revision by the Congress or the Supreme Court.

Under the present Constitution, environmental rights have been enshrined briefly in Article 2, Section 16 which states that: “The State shall protect and advance the right of the people to a balanced and healthful ecology in accord with the rhythm and harmony of nature.”

With the inclusion of the writ of kalikasan in the draft Constitution, Mr. Puno hoped the legal remedy would be reviewed by the Supreme Court (SC) and by Congress so it would be strengthened.

“By including this in the bill of rights, the right will be demandable against the State,” he said.

The writ of kalikasan is a legal remedy filed at the SC which provides for the protection of the constitutional right to a healthy environment. It was promulgated in 2010 back when Mr. Puno was then chief magistrate.

The SC has issued the writ against government and corporation projects, including the oil pipeline of the Lopez-owned First Philippine Industrial Corp. (FPIC) under a condominium in Makati City in 2010 and the P14-billion reclamation project in Manila Bay in 2012.

Mr. Puno said the expanded environmental rights in the new Constitution would have a self- executing provision under its bill of rights. The provision would be formulated by the ConCom subcommittee on rights, obligations, social justice before it would be voted upon by the en banc in mid-April.

Asked about the exploration of natural resources, Mr. Puno said the matter would be separately discussed by the ConCom’s subcommittee on economic reforms.

DUTERTE CAN’T EXTEND TERM
On political matters of the draft Charter, Mr. Puno said President Rodrigo R. Duterte would no longer be allowed to extend his term once the new Constitution is implemented.

“There is no holdover provision. By that time, we have shifted to (a) federal form of government…The term limits under the 1987 Constitution would still be binding,” he said.

He assured that the transition period for adopting a federal form of government would not go beyond 2022 when Mr. Duterte’s term ends.

The former chief justice added that it would be “almost impossible” to hold the plebiscite for the new Constitution in October, as previously floated by some lawmakers.

“Congress would still have to convene as a constituent assembly and right now the Senate has not convened to join the…House in a constituent assembly. Assuming the Senate agrees, then that will just be the start of their deliberations and I suppose that would take some time,” Mr. Puno said.

IRR released on law providing subsidy for tertiary education

By Minde Nyl R. dela Cruz

THE Commission on Higher Education (CHEd) on Monday formally launched the implementing rules and regulations (IRR) for Republic Act 10931 or the Universal Access to Quality Tertiary Education Act, seven months after its signing into law in August 2017.

The landmark legislation grants free tuition fees for qualified Filipino undergraduates enrolled in state universities and colleges (SUCs), local universities and colleges (LUCs) as well as learners registered under technical-vocational institutions.

Miscellaneous fees, including library fees, computer fees, school ID fees, athletic fees, admission fees, development fees, guidance fees, handbook fees, entrance fees, registration fees, medical/dental fees, and cultural fees are subsidized by the government under the law.

Students who are enrolled in private universities may avail themselves of tertiary education subsidy (TES) and those whose parents are beneficiaries of the conditional cash transfer and included in the Listahanan of the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) will be given priority.

CHEd Officer-in-Charge (OIC) J. Prospero E. De Vera III said the commission is working with the Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) and Social Security System (SSS) to come up with clearer parameters on “workable” student loans.

Mr. De Vera also said he is in talks with the House of Representatives and the Senate to work on how the miscellaneous fees paid by students during the second semester after the effectivity of the law in August 2017 can be refunded.

Senate President Pro-Tempore Ralph G. Recto, one of the proponents of the legislation, said that as the education is paid for by taxpayers, it is imperative to use the funds, amounting to P40 billion, to provide “quality” education.

“Ang pinakamahalaga dito ay ’yung side ng quality (The most important thing here is on the side of the quality). We should not be using taxpayers’ money for lousy education,” Mr. Recto said.

Mr. De Vera, for his part, also pointed out: “The law explicitly provides that the beneficiaries should be students of good standing, meaning, they passed the admission and retention requirements of the universities. So this is not a license to accept everyone to universities and colleges.”

“If you are kicked out, for example, in your state university or LUC, then you stop receiving government subsidy [because you] did not comply with the retention requirements of the universities,” he added.

Ineligible to benefit from the free higher education law are students who have obtained a bachelor’s degree; failed the admission and retention requirements; failed to complete their degree within a year after the period prescribed in their program; and voluntarily opted out of the provision.

PSA survey: One in four women experienced spousal violence

By Charmaine A. Tadalan

ONE IN FOUR WOMEN who have ever been married has experienced physical, sexual, or emotional violence by their husbands and partners, according to the preliminary findings of the country’s latest demographic survey.

The results of the 2017 National Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS) by the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) showed 26.4% of women aged 15-49 have experienced spousal violence. Ever-married women, according to the PSA, are women who are currently married or formerly married women (separated, divorced, or widowed) who are living with their husbands or partners.

In particular, 20.4% of the respondents had suffered from emotional violence; 13.5% from physical violence; and 5.2% from sexual violence by their current or most recent husbands or partners. Spousal violence, according to the PSA, is defined as violence “perpetrated by partners in a marital union.”

“Since spousal or intimate partner violence is the most common form of violence for women aged 15-49, the 2017 NDHS collected detailed information on the different types of violence experienced,” the PSA report read.

In the survey, currently married women were asked about violence inflicted by their current partners while those who are formerly married were asked about violence inflicted by their most recent partners.

By marital status, 53.4% of women who are divorced, separated, or widowed have reported violence from their most recent partners as against the 24.4% of women who are currently married or those living together with their partners. The PSA also noted that the percentage of women who have experienced violence in physical, sexual, and/or emotional form from their partners “declines slightly” with the women’s age.

For instance, women aged 15-24 recorded the highest percentage of spousal violence at 28.9% while those aged 40-49 have a reported figure of 25.7%.

An inverse relationship could also be drawn between wealth and spousal violence with those who have reported such cases to be as high in the lowest (31.6%) and second quintiles (31.8%) to as low as those in the highest quintile (18.3%).

Disaggregated by region, the PSA reported that “[w]omen’s experience with violence by a partner varies widely.”

“[O]nly 7% of ever-married women in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) report experiencing physical, sexual, or emotional violence by their last partner compared with 52% of ever-married women in Caraga,” the PSA said.

Nevertheless, the PSA noted that “[a]ll forms of violence generally decline with increasing household wealth.”

Other regions reporting high cases of spousal violence were the Zamboanga Peninsula and Bicol Region tied at 43.4%, followed by Eastern Visayas (43.2%), Central Visayas (38%), Ilocos Region (33.1%), and Western Visayas (30.6%).

Asked for comments on the figures, Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion, chief economist at the Union Bank of the Philippines, pointed to the low figures in ARMM which “may have to do with the quality of the data and how reliable was the collection.”

Guian Angelo S. Dumalagan, market economist at Land Bank of the Philippines, was of the same opinion: “I think the percentages [between Caraga and ARMM) are too far from each other, raising questions about the accuracy of the data in general.”

“There may be limitations regarding how the data is collected. If it is based on reported cases alone, then the results of the survey might be skewed downwards in some areas where women are not as vocal.” Furthermore, Mr. Dumalagan noted that the drop in violence among wealthier households is expected. “[M]oney is usually one of the major causes of quarrels between couples. Hence, an increase in wealth would mean less reason for marital disputes,” he said.

The NDHS 2017 was conducted from Aug. 14 to Oct. 27 last year and surveyed 31,000 households and 25,000 women aged 15-49. It is the eleventh of the series of the country’s demographic surveys that were undertaken since 1968.

DICT says use of TransCo fiber sets ‘precedent’ for 3rd player

COMPANIES vying to be the “third player” can consider using National Transmission Corp.’s (TransCo) fiber network to reduce costs in building network infrastructure, the acting head of the Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) said.

DICT Acting Secretary Eliseo M. Rio, Jr. said that the signing of a memorandum of understanding (MoU) between the Philippine Telegraph and Telephone Corp. (PT&T) with the state-owned TransCo for the use of its so-called “dark” or unused fiber sets a precedent which interested parties can follow.

“There’s already a precedent. The companies can talk with TransCo, as that can be cheaper rather than building infrastructure,” Mr. Rio said in a phone interview.

PT&T last week announced that it entered into an agreement with the National Transmission Corp. that would allow the telco to use the government’s national fiber optic backbone facility.

Under the MoU, PT&T and TransCo will create a technical working group (TWG) for the preparation for the eventual use of dark fiber in the country’s network of transmission lines. Dark fiber is defined as unused network infrastructure composed of cabling, switches and repeaters.

PT&T said that utilizing the dark fiber in the grid will allow them to have a true national backbone “that can rival” that of incumbents PLDT, Inc. and Globe Telecom, Inc.

Mr. Rio however clarified that the DICT will not be facilitating any talks between third player candidates and TransCo.

“We leave it up to them, whatever commercial agreement they have. It’s outside our functions,” he said.

He added that agreements are possible as so far, privately held National Grid Corp. of the Philippines (NGCP) has not expressed any opposition to the agreement between PT&T and TransCo.

TransCo and NGCP disagree over what TransCo says is the NGCP’s allowing of third parties to use government property without authority. This includes NGCP’s authorization of PLDT, Inc.’s and Globe Telecom, Inc.’s access to the power grid operator facilities.

The DICT is moving towards requiring potential entrants to offer wide coverage and fast Internet connections, rather than its previous preference for candidates with the highest committed financial investment and a net worth of P10 billion. It is set to release another draft of selection criteria.

With a move to more technical requirements, companies, particularly local telcos, which have existing infrastructure may have an advantage.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo