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German law to benefit OFWs

THE EMBASSY of Germany in Manila said on Wednesday that Filipinos looking to work in Germany will find it easier to migrate after its new Skilled Migration Act took effect last November.

“Germany is welcoming skilled workers with open arms and full support,” German Embassy’s Economic Counsellor David Klebs said in a statement on the newly enacted law that lowers salary thresholds and expanded eligibility for foreign applicants like overseas Filipino workers (OFWs).

“This law creates even better incentives for Filipino skilled workers to consider working in Germany,” he added as he explained how the measure streamlines the employment process for migrant workers and allows information technology specialists to secure European Union Blue Cards on professional experience alone.

The embassy said it has been working closely with the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority, the Commission on Higher Education, and the Department of Migrant Workers. 

“The Skilled Migration Act signifies a progressive step in the bilateral relationship (with the Philippines), promoting collaboration, fair immigration and mutual benefit for both countries,” embassy said.

Meanwhile, President Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. vowed that his administration would continue to craft programs and services catered to migrant workers.

“There are many projects lined up, and even our current programs will be improved,” he said in his speech in Filipino during the OFWs Family Day in Pasay City.

Mr. Marcos noted that the DMW is planning on launching the One Repatriation Command Center’s 24/7 hotline which will assist OFWs who need repatriation or reintegration services. — John Victor D. Ordoñez

Davao Light ready for El Niño

JEROME CMG-UNSPLASH

DAVAO CITY — An official of the Davao Light and Power Co. said on Wednesday that they have contingency plans put in place, like balancing the use of renewable and non-renewable energy, as dry spells associated with El Niño loom until next year.

“We are hoping that we will never reach the time when we will have to do rotational brownouts,” said Fermin Edillon, head of the Davao Light Reputation Enhancement Department, at a yearend media briefing.

Mr. Edillon said they cannot totally rely on renewable energy alone because if there is an El Niño, their suppliers who are using hydropower will also be affected. The Department of Science and Technology forecasts potential dry spells and drought in April or May next year due to El Niño.

Meanwhile, Davao Light has lowered its power rate from P9.12 to P8.74 per kilowatt-hour in December, down from November.

Mr. Edillon attributed the decrease to reductions in power supply pricing from the Philippine Wholesale Energy Spot Market and the global market.

For households with an average monthly electricity consumption of 200 kWh, a reduction of P76.34 will be experienced. The lowered rate applies to bills received from Dec. 12, 2023 to Jan. 10, 2024.

Despite the decrease, customers are urged to monitor energy usage, emphasizing the fluctuating nature of rates. — Maya M. Padillo

House to probe DepEd dues

PHILIPPINE STAR/MICHAEL VARCAS

THE HOUSE of Representatives will probe the Department of Education (DepEd) after it failed to remit a total of P5.55 billion in premium contributions and loan amortizations deducted from salaries of teachers and non-teaching personnel, Roman T. Romulo, who heads the House basic education and culture panel, told BusinessWorld in a Viber Message.

Mr. Romulo said the House committee will invite to a hearing the involved agencies including DepEd, Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth), and Home Development Mutual Fund (HDMF, commonly known as the Pag-IBIG Fund) to clarify the issues on unremitted amounts.

“We will target the 2nd work week of January 2024 to give time to send invitations to the concerned agencies,” he said when asked when hearings will start. 

Mr. Romulo said the committee will take action or propose solutions based on the explanations and clarifications to be obtained from its probe.

In its 2022 annual report, the Commission on Audit (CoA) flagged the education department for failing to remit taxes, insurance contributions, and loan payments totaling P5.55 billion, P4.47 billion of which were Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) contributions. Teachers and other DepEd staff might face penalties, reduced benefits, and unwarranted interests, said CoA.

In a statement last week, DepEd said it is “aggressively looking into various ways to address the subject of unremitted premium and contributions,” citing that the issue has been recurring due to “system incompatibility and timing differences”

The department said CoA is “well-aware of the steps being taken to resolve this matter, which is why in the same Consolidated Annual Audit Report, CoA rendered an Unqualified/Unmodified Opinion in favor of DepEd — a first in the Department’s history.”

In a video message sent on Viber, Teachers’ Dignity Coalition national chairperson Benjo Basas said his group is looking forward to the investigations of the House committee, emphasizing that teachers might not get the benefits that were deducted from their salaries.

“We are looking forward to the plan of the House to investigate and hold accountable those who should be accountable,” he said in Filipino. “This problem greatly affects our status as government employees because we are unable to obtain the benefits that should be rightfully allocated to us.”

Mr. Basas said the non-remittance issue worries teachers whose salaries are being deducted religiously and timely for premium contributions and amortization loans. “Unfortunately, those payments to agencies are not being remitted.” — Jomel R. Paguian

Farmers get P209-M support

PHILIPPINE STAR/MICHAEL VARCAS

THE PHILIPPINE Center for Postharvest Development and Mechanization (PhilMech) said it has distributed about P209 million worth of agricultural machineries to farmers’ cooperatives and associations (FCAs) in the provinces of Camarines Sur, Zamboanga del Sur, and Davao del Sur.

For Camarines Sur, the PhilMech distributed about P19 million worth of combine harvesters to farmers in an event marking the agency’s final turnover for the area in 2023.

Another 52 units of farm equipment worth a total of P47 million were handed out to Davao del Sur FCAs. There were 19 floating tillers, 10 hand tractors, seven combine harvesters, six four-wheel-drive tractors, four mobile rice mills, and two units each of walk-behind and riding-type transplanters, and rice threshers.

Meanwhile, PhilMech also distributed over 100 various agricultural equipment that cover the stages of production and postharvest, benefitting more than 70 FCAs and local government units. The estimated worth of the equipment is P149.5 million. — Adrian H. Halili

La Trinidad pushes receipt rules

LA TRINIDAD, Benguet — Seeking to protect farmers, local legislators of this capital town are set on mandating the issuance of receipts in all transactions between vegetable traders and farmers.

Already passed on third and final reading before the Sangguniang Bayan (Municipal Council), the proposed ordinance would require all buyers and purchasers to issue delivery receipts and other documentary proof of their transaction with farmers.

Councilor Bartolome Baldas, Jr., the main proponent of the measure, wanted to address many incidents in which buyers and purchasers disappear without completely paying the farmers.

Under the measure, receipts will bear the names of the buyer and purchasers, their contact numbers and addresses, the produce they got and their corresponding prices to facilitate claims of payments, debts or even loans.

The La Trinidad Vegetable Trading Post and other markets support the move for the protection of farmers from scammers. — Artemio A. Dumlao

Security tightened vs terrorists

UNSPLASH

COTABATO CITY — As Christmas Day draws nearer, authorities are tightly securing Christian worship sites near Pagalungan, Maguindanao where the Dawlah Islamiya attacked and plundered a barangay more than a week ago apparently to avenge their losing 12 members in clashes with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).

Mayors in Cotabato and Gov. Emmylou T. Mendoza, units of the Police Regional Office 12, and the Army’s 602nd Infantry Brigade are coordinating their security deployments at Christian worship sites to ensure a peaceful holiday season.

To prevent potential incidents, security forces are also monitoring the surroundings of mosques, recognizing the terrorists’ tendency to create scenarios to sow discord between Muslims and Christians. Several towns in Cotabato are in close proximity to Pagalungan, where encounters between Dawlah Islamiya and pursuing MILF members displaced around 2,000 Moro families.

Dawlah Islamiya, known for venting anger on innocent people following clashes, faces coordinated efforts from the police, Army, MILF, and leaders of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF). Major Gen. Alex S. Rillera, commander of the 6th Infantry Division, highlighted the importance of local government support in Cotabato province, emphasizing collaboration with the MNLF and MILF to guard against potential Dawlah Islamiya incursions during the Yuletide Holidays. — John Felix M. Unson

RTC orders transfer of convict-witnesses in De Lima case

PHILIPPINE STAR/ GEREMY PINTOLO

THE MUNTINLUPA Regional Trial Court (RTC) ordered the transfer of custody of the seven convicts who recanted their testimonies against former Senator Leila M. de Lima in her drug trafficking cases, citing safety and security concerns.

In a four-page order dated Dec. 13, shared to the media on Wednesday by Ms. De Lima’s team, Muntinlupa Presiding Judge Gener M. Gito ordered the transfer of the seven convicts from the Sablayan Prison and Penal Farm in Occidental Mindoro to the National Bilibid Prisons.

“[T]he prosecution posited that this is congruent with the appeal of accused Leila M. de Lima to transfer some PDL (persons deprived of liberty) witnesses for their safety and security,” the order read.

The seven inmates were German L. Agojo, Tomas D. Doniña, Jaime V. Patcho, Wu Tuan Yuan (alias “Peter Co”), Engelberto Durano, Jerry R. Pepino, and Hans Anton Tan. Apart from them, four convicts who are in “similarly and in a comparable position” were also transferred from Sablayan Prison to NBP, naming Herbert R. Colangco, Noel G. Martinez, Nonilo A. Arile, and Joel D. Capones.

In a manifestation, Ms. De Lima asked the court to order their transfer to the city jail in Muntinlupa last month.

In a three-page handwritten letter to Mr. Gito dated Nov. 17, the seven convicts urged the court to void their statements because they were coerced.

“We no longer desire to live our lives with the knowledge that we allowed ourselves to become pawns of instruments of injustice,” according to a copy of the letter provided by Ms. De Lima’s camp. “It will be our way of expressing our sincerest apologies to Senator de Lima and her family.” — Jomel R. Paguian

Trump cannot run for president, state court rules

REUTERS

WASHINGTON — Former President Donald Trump is disqualified from serving as US president and cannot appear on the primary ballot in Colorado because of his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol by his supporters, the state’s top court ruled Tuesday.

The historic 4-3 ruling by the Colorado Supreme Court, likely to be taken up by the US Supreme Court, makes Mr. Trump the first presidential candidate deemed ineligible for the White House under a rarely used constitutional provision that bars officials who have engaged in “insurrection or rebellion” from holding office.

The ruling applies only to Colorado’s March 5 Republican primary but it could affect Mr. Trump’s status in the state for the Nov. 5 general election. Nonpartisan US election forecasters view Colorado as safely Democratic, meaning that President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. will likely carry the state regardless of Mr. Trump’s fate there.

Mr. Trump vowed to appeal the ruling to the US Supreme Court, and the Colorado court said it would delay the effect of its decision until at least Jan. 4, 2024, to allow for an appeal.

The ruling sets the stage for the Supreme Court, whose 6-3 conservative majority includes three Trump appointees, to consider whether Mr. Trump is eligible to serve another term as president.

The lawsuit is viewed as a test case for a wider effort to disqualify Mr. Trump from state ballots under section 3 of the 14th Amendment, which was enacted after the US Civil War to keep supporters of the confederacy from serving in the government.

The Colorado court concluded that the US Constitution bars Mr. Trump, the frontrunner for the Republican nomination in 2024, from appearing on the ballot because of his role instigating violence at the Capitol as lawmakers met to certify the results of the 2020 election. The court’s majority acknowledged the decision was “uncharted territory.”

“We do not reach these conclusions lightly,” the majority justices wrote. “We are mindful of the magnitude and weight of the questions now before us. We are likewise mindful of our solemn duty to apply the law, without fear or favor, and without being swayed by public reaction to the decisions that the law mandates we reach.”

Mr. Trump’s campaign called the court decision “undemocratic.”

“The Colorado Supreme Court issued a completely flawed decision tonight and we will swiftly file an appeal to the United States Supreme Court,” a spokesperson from the Trump campaign said.

The decision reverses a ruling by a lower court judge who found Mr. Trump engaged in insurrection by inciting his supporters to violence, but concluded that, as president, Mr. Trump was not an “officer of the United States” who could be disqualified under the amendment.

The Biden campaign declined to comment.

COLORADO VOTERS
The case was brought by a group of Colorado voters, aided by the advocacy group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, who argued that Mr. Trump should be disqualified for inciting his supporters to attack the Capitol in a failed attempt to obstruct the transfer of presidential power to Mr. Biden after the 2020 election.

CREW President Noah Bookbinder said in a statement that the court’s decision is “not only historic and justified, but is necessary to protect the future of democracy in our country.”

Courts have rejected several lawsuits seeking to keep Mr. Trump off the primary ballot in other states. Minnesota’s top court rebuffed an effort to disqualify Mr. Trump from the Republican primary in that state, but did not rule on his overall eligibility to serve as president.

Some advocates had hoped the Colorado case would boost the overall disqualification effort and potentially put the issue before the US Supreme Court.

Mr. Trump’s campaign has condemned 14th Amendment challenges as an attempt to deny millions of voters their preferred choice for president.

Mr. Trump’s lawyers argued that his speech to supporters on the day of the riot was protected by his right to free speech, adding that the constitutional amendment does not apply to US presidents and that Congress would need to vote to disqualify a candidate.

Three Colorado Supreme Court justices dissented from Tuesday’s ruling.

One of the dissenting justices, Carlos Samour, said in a lengthy opinion that a lawsuit is not a fair mechanism for determining Mr. Trump’s eligibility for the ballot because it deprives him of his right to due process, noting that a jury has not convicted him of insurrection.

“Even if we are convinced that a candidate committed horrible acts in the past — dare I say, engaged in insurrection — there must be procedural due process before we can declare that individual disqualified from holding public office,” Mr. Samour said. — Reuters

WHO says the JN.1 coronavirus strain is ‘a variant of interest’

GERD ALTMANN-PIXABAY

THE World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday classified the JN.1 coronavirus strain as a “variant of interest” and said current evidence shows risk to public health was low from the strain.

At least two experts told Reuters that while the strain can evade the immune system and transmit more easily than other currently circulating variants, it has not shown any signs of more severe disease.

While there might be more cases with the variant, JN.1 doesn’t pose a greater risk, said Andrew Pekosz, a virologist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

JN.1 was previously classified a variant of interest as part of its parent lineage BA.2.86, but WHO has now classified it as a separate variant of interest.

WHO said current vaccines will continue to protect against severe disease and death from JN.1 and other circulating variants of the COVID-19 virus.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said earlier this month the subvariant JN.1 makes up about an estimated 15% to 29% of cases in the United States as of Dec. 8, according to the agency’s latest projections.

The CDC had said currently there was no evidence that JN.1 presents an increased risk to public health relative to other currently circulating variants and an updated shot could keep Americans protected against the variant.

JN.1 was first detected in the United States in September, according to the CDC.

Last week, China detected seven infections of the COVID subvariant. — Reuters

Holiday travel season peaks in Europe

BELGIAN SOLDIERS patrol along a Christmas market on Brussels’ Grand Place, Belgium, Dec. 24, 2015. — REUTERS

LONDON/MUNICH — Travel within Europe in the busy holiday season is exceeding 2022 levels, despite security warnings from authorities around Europe as consumers remain determined to enjoy holidays, prolonging the post-pandemic travel boom.

Christmas markets and popular tourist sites in cities such as Munich and Paris have been bustling lately, albeit with strong security presences, as holiday travel within the European Union and including Britain was set to climb 22% above 2022 levels, according to travel data firm ForwardKeys.

The spike has been driven by continued post-pandemic demand, executives and analysts said, with some people only traveling to see their families for Christmas this year for the first time since the pandemic.

But security warnings remain in the back of tourists’ minds. In late November, European security officials warned of a growing risk of attacks tied to the Israel-Hamas war, with the biggest threat from potential “lone wolf” assailants.

Two Islamist militant attacks in France and Belgium in October killed three people, and these two countries, Austria, Slovenia and Bosnia-Herzegovina have raised their terrorism threat alert levels. Italy has reimposed border controls with Slovenia, citing the risk of militants entering the country.

There was a slight spike in ticket cancellations over the Christmas period between Dec. 21 and 31, ForwardKeys said, from 2.4% to 3% since Nov. 24.

“Although this number is small, this could be an impact of the terrorism warning sent throughout Europe since the start of the recent conflict in Israel,” said Juan Gomez, an analyst at ForwardKeys.

TRAVEL CONTINUES
But tourists continued to swarm popular destinations, displaying an increased trust in the security apparatus in place across European hubs.

“I feel very safe and very conscious of the state of the world. And it’s certainly something I think about every day, both conflicts in Europe, conflicts in the Middle East,” said Gwen Fitzgerald, who visited a Christmas market in Munich this week from Boston.

“But I also really am desperate for joy at the same time.”

Christmas arrivals to places such as Italy, Austria and Sweden have also grown by 25% or more year on year.

Tourists said that, with the rise in warnings in recent years and the reinforced security around Europe tied to them, there was more of a sense of calm and they felt comfortable not calling off their travel plans.

“When we are here and we stay just one day in the downtown, we see a lot of police and security, we feel safe,” said Danny Sanchez, a tourist from Villareal, Spain, visiting the Munich market. — Reuters

California approves rules for converting sewage waste to drinking water

Illustration of drinking city water flowing from a faucet into a glass. — NICOLAS GUYONNET /HANS LUCAS VIA REUTERS CONNECT

LOS ANGELES — California regulators on Tuesday cleared the way for widespread use of advanced filtration and treatment facilities designed to convert sewage waste into pure drinking water that can be pumped directly into systems feeding millions of household taps.

Proven technologies capable of recycling wastewater for human consumption, a concept once derided by critics as “toilet to tap,” have gained greater credence in recent years as water-conscious California faces worsening drought cycles from climate change.

More than a decade in the making, the regulations adopted by the State Water Resources Control Board represent a landmark in the quest to reclaim some of the hundreds of millions of gallons of waste discharge that flow out to sea unused each year, supporters say.

“Today heralds a new era of water reuse,” Patricia Sinicropi, executive director of the recycling trade group WateReuse California, said in a statement.

A number of communities have for years been blending highly purified wastewater into aquifers and reservoirs before people can drink it, a practice known in the parlance of engineers and resource managers as “indirect potable reuse.”

In the sprawling Orange County suburbs south of Los Angeles, home to Disneyland and upscale beach towns, much of the drinking supply for 2.5 million people comes from highly distilled waste that is used to recharge the groundwater basin and eventually is drawn back to the surface.

The 69-page document approved on Tuesday provides a legal and regulatory framework for “direct potable reuse,” allowing the end-product of advanced purification to be fed straight into drinking water systems, without first making a stop in some kind of environmental buffer.

The foundation of the technology, used for more than a decade in Orange County, puts pre-treated waste discharge through intense microfiltration, reverse osmosis and disinfection by ultraviolet light and hydrogen peroxide.

The new regulations mandate an additional ozone disinfectant process and biological carbon filtration. Greater pathogen removal and stricter monitoring is also required.

In some cases, the water would be routed to a conventional drinking water treatment plant before it is piped to households. In others it could go directly to the tap.

The cost is high. Investments in such facilities are expected to run at least $1 billion, limiting them to large, well-funded water supply utilities, officials said.

The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California has plans to build a $6-billion facility in the city of Carson, south of Los Angeles, that would become the nation’s largest water-recycling project.

Orange County’s Groundwater Replenishment System, currently ranked as the biggest, earlier this year increased daily production to 130 million gallons, enough to meet the needs of one million people.

LARGE CITIES READY FIRST
Darrin Polhemus, deputy director of the state board’s drinking water division, said it would likely take at least five years before the first direct potable reuse plant is operating.

Los Angeles and San Diego also have plans to develop direct potable recycling, as does the Santa Clara Valley Water District in the San Francisco Bay area.

Texas is the only US state to have previously approved direct potable recycling, with two small-scale systems that went online in 2014 to serve towns stricken by a drought-caused water emergency. Colorado also has developed relatively limited guidelines for such projects.

The technology for purifying wastewater is similar to that used in desalination, the seemingly more palatable process of converting salt water to fresh.

But recycling sewage is more environmentally friendly — lowering the amount of waste dumped into rivers and oceans while avoiding harm to marine life posed by ocean intake pipes used in desal plants and the highly concentrated brine byproduct they discharge back into the sea.

Another desalination drawback is the comparatively high cost of removing salt from seawater, which contains 30 times more dissolved impurities than sewer water and thus takes far more energy to distill.

Mr. Polhemus said purified recycled water could eventually be expected to account for roughly 10% to 15% of supplies of some coastal communities in the midst of drought conditions. — Reuters

Tougher French immigration bill passes

REUTERS

PARIS — French lawmakers gave their final approval to a contested bill that toughens rules for immigrants on Tuesday, giving President Emmanuel Macron a policy victory that nonetheless exposed cracks in his centrist majority.

The bill, a compromise reached between Macron’s party and the conservative opposition, illustrates the rightward shift in politics in much of Europe, as governments try to fend off the rise of the far-right by being tougher on immigration.

“Today, strict measures are necessary,” Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said after the vote in the lower house. “It’s not by holding your nose in central Paris that you can fix the problems of the French in the rest of the country.”

The minister expressed relief that the bill passed with the votes of his centrist coalition and the conservatives, without relying on the surprise endorsement of far-right lawmakers, whose support had caused embarrassment in the presidential camp.

The French government had initially said this would be a carrot-and-stick legislation that would make it easier for migrants working in sectors that lack labor to get a residency permit, but would also make it easier to expel illegal migrants.

In order to gain support from the right, however, the government agreed to water down the residency permits measures, while delaying migrants’ access to welfare benefits — including benefits for children and housing allowances — by several years.

The French have long prided themselves on having one of the most generous welfare systems in the world, granting payments even to foreign residents, helping them pay rent or care for their children with means-tested monthly contributions of up to a few hundred euros.

The far right and, more recently, conservatives, have argued these should be reserved for French people only. The deal agreed on Tuesday would delay access to housing benefits for unemployed non-EU migrants by five years.

The compromise also introduces migration quotas, makes it harder for immigrants’ children to become French, and says that dual nationals sentenced for serious crimes against the police could lose French citizenship.

The deal, hashed out by a special committee of seven senators and seven deputies and later approved by both houses, was initially good news for Mr. Macron, who had made the migration bill a key plank of his second mandate and could otherwise have had to shelve it.

Just six months before European Parliament elections in which immigration will be key, however, it could also boost Marine Le Pen who, sensing a political opportunity, called the rejigged bill “a great ideological victory” for her far-right party.

She surprised the government by announcing her party would vote for the bill, causing immense embarrassment to the left wing of Macron’s party, who find it unpalatable to vote in unison with the far right.

VOCAL REPRESENTATIVES
One of the most vocal representatives of Mr. Macron’s left wing in parliament, Sacha Houlie, voted against the bill, his entourage told Reuters. In the end, 20 members of Mr. Macron’s Renaissance party voted against the bill, 17 abstained and 131 voted for the bill.

Speculation about some ministers threatening to resign if the vote passed had swirled in French media ahead of the vote. But none had immediately materialized after the results were announced.

The conservative Les Republicains, who have over the years hardened their discourse closer to that of the far-right, also claimed victory, saying the bill was essentially theirs.

Mr. Macron won his two presidential mandates in 2017 and 2022 when voters rallied behind him to bar Ms. Le Pen from winning and left-wing MPs said the rejigged migration bill was a betrayal of promises made to fend off far-right ideas.

The rebels in Macron’s party could further weaken his hold on parliament and potentially complicate the rest of his mandate.

Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne told parliament that the bill “will make our system more efficient because it will drastically simplify our procedures for processing asylum applications, (and) because it will make it possible to expel criminal or radicalized foreigners more quickly.”

Other governments across Europe are opting for tougher migration policies.

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said on Saturday that he would push for global reforms to the asylum system, warning the threat of growing numbers of refugees could “overwhelm” parts of Europe. — Reuters

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