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MWSS expects to complete Quezon consultations next month for Kaliwa Dam

METROPOLITAN Waterworks and Sewerage System (MWSS) expects to complete next month the required assemblies with indigenous communities of Quezon province, ahead of the other requirements for the construction of Kaliwa Dam.

In a statement Sunday, the agency said it was about to complete through the National Commission of Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) the community assemblies that form part of the Free Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) process for six clusters of IP communities in Quezon.

“Another FPIC process will be held for Rizal Province,” it said, referring to the compliance measure under Republic Act No. 8173 or the Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Acts.

On Aug. 23, MWSS and the Department of Environment and Natural Resources’ (DENR) Environment Management Bureau (EMB) jointly held the first of a series of public hearings to evaluate the water agency’s mitigating measures to address possible disturbances in the affected communities of the Kaliwa Dam project.

The dam will be the new water source of MWSS’ two water concessionaires for Metro Manila — Manila Water Co., Inc. for the east zone and Maynilad Water Services, Inc. for the west zone. The two will equally share the water from the dam, which will bridge the Philippine capital’s supply deficit and reduce its dependence on Angat Dam.

The public hearing is in line with MWSS’ application for Kaliwa Dam’s environmental compliance certificate (ECC), the document that will pave the way for construction as it will affirm that the project will not cause a significant negative impact on the environment.

MWSS said the earlier hearings were “considered a success because the concerns of the main stakeholders, namely the indigenous peoples, farmers, pro-environment NGOs (nongovernment organizations), affected residents, have been heard and addressed particularly the project’s impacts on community health, welfare and the environment.”

It said a number of environmental public consultations have been held in the previous years but it was only on Friday that a joint consultation was conducted with DENR.

It said the hearing was “generally peaceful” but was marred by a walk-out allegedly by a group of Dumagat tribe members, who questioned the nine-day notice before the hearing. It said the group of mostly young boys dressed in local costume was accompanied by various NGOs opposing the construction of the dam.

MWSS said a notice of public hearing had been published thrice between Aug. 8 and 16. It said despite the presentation of proof of publication, the group did not return to the venue of the public hearing.

The next hearing will be on Aug. 27 at the Ynares covered courts on Magsaysay Ave. in Teresa, Rizal. Another hearing will be held on Aug. 28 in Infanta, Quezon, and Sept. 2 in Tanay, Rizal.

“MWSS will submit an assessment report on the results of the public hearings and the DENR-EMB will then decide of MWSS’ application,” the agency said. — Victor V. Saulon

US union seeking joint action with PHL’s BPO workers

A US UNION called for improved workers’ rights and benefits in the Philippine Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) sector, saying that keeping Philippine compensation low affects work conditions of their US counterparts.

Officials from the Communication Workers of America (CWA) traveled to the Philippines to discuss measures with Philippine authorities to address BPO workers’ concerns. CWA, which counts among its members about 700,000 workers from various industries across North America , said that working conditions in the Philippines became a concern after it was contacted by the BPO Industry Employees Network (BIEN), the local labor union for BPO workers.

“The workers in the Philippines don’t make as much money as workers in the US and the employers can use that to try to drive down wages of workers in the United States. We wanted to get involved here so we can help drive up the wages in the Philippines,” said CWA Vice-President Brenda Roberts.

CWA National Director of Legislation, Politics and International Affairs Shane Larson said that in many cases, BPO workers in the Philippines have the same employers as the members of CWA.

“We are in a global economy. When the corporations can work cross-border on a global scale… We have to work globally as well, as workers. It’s so important for us to build the bonds of solidarity together… because it’s the same employer we have in a lot of cases,” he said.

CWA Assistant Director for Research Nell Geiser called for the elimination of Labor Code loopholes created by Philippine BPOs’ location inside economic zones.

“We believe that BPOs should not be a self regulating industry. Call centers are not self-regulating in the US. They should be under the law just like any other industry is. Our employers and companies depend on these BPOs here to make their profits so they should be law-abiding,” she said.

The Information Technology and Business Process Association of the Philippines (IBPAP) said in May that the sector earned around $24.8 billion in 2018, up between 4% and 5%, but below the industry target of 9% as set out in its medium-term plan.

The Bureau of Local Employment (BLE) has said in its annual JobsFit report that the industry will generate 1.8 million jobs in the next three years.

BIEN Vice-President Sara Prestoza said she also hopes the partnership will open doors for BPO workers to enjoy more rights, such as the right to organize, which is not allowed under many industry contracts.

“About 1.3 million employees are not covered by labor laws… BPO workers don’t realize they have the right to organize. What they know is that when they enter the BPO industry and check the contract, it will say they are not allowed to form any union,” she said. — Gillian M. Cortez

Mindanao coffee industry gearing up for expanded production

THE Mindanao coffee industry is set to expand production through the Rural Agro-Industrial Partnership for Inclusive Development and Growth (RAPID Growth), a project that aims to boost agriculture-based processing and businesses to be more innovative, productive, and competitive.

“This is a market-driven approach. It also focuses on a value-chain approach from production down to the market, so at the end of the day, syempre yung (of course) farmers, yung (the) processors would not produce if wala silang (they do not have) market. We will make sure na yung mga (that their) products ay talagang magakaroon ng (would have) market,” Lucky Siegfred M. Balleque, provincial director of the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) Compostela Valley, said in an interview.

The P2.3-billion project is funded by the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), which aims to help people in the countryside, empowering them to increase their food security, improve nutrition, and increase their incomes by allowing them to be in charge of their development. This program also extends to other crops like the cacao industry and it covers Regions VIII, IX, X, XI, and XII.

The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported that in the first quarter, production of dried coffee berries was 17,160 metric tons (MT), down 6.9% year-on-year. The top producing region was South Cotabato, Cotabato City, Cotabato Province, Sultan Kudarat, Sarangani and General Santos City (Soccsksargen) with 5,430 MT or 31.7% of the total, followed by Davao Region with 14%, and Northern Mindanao with 12.5%.

Mr. Balleque said that stakeholders will be coming up with a strategic investment plan, which will evaluate various components of the program like grants, loans, training and infrastructure projects. The strategic plan for coffee is set for review on Aug. 27.

GOOD PROGRAMS, BAD MONITORING
A coffee farmer for 25 years, Domingo P. Videña said that the government’s programs need better monitoring to properly disseminate good agricultural practices.

Sa obserbasyon ko hindi sapat iyon hangga’t wala ‘yung monitoring sa farm. Iyon ang talagang makapagbibigay ng education dahil ang ibang farmers uma-attatend ng seminars pero pag labas ng seminar room, tanungin mo wala namang alam” (My observation is that programs are not enough unless someone monitors the farms. This is what will spread know-how because farmers attend seminars but if you ask them what they have learned, they will say nothing), he said.

He added that unless the program deploys knowledgeable farm technicians, inputs distributed farmers will be wasted.

Hangga’t hindi nagagawa iyon, ang masayang-masaya diyan ay ‘yung mga insekto na s’yang sumisira ng quality ng produkto natin” (Until this is done, the only ones that will be happy are the insects which destroy our products), he said. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang

LANDBANK turns over P54.86-M worth of farm equipment

LAND BANK of the Philippines (LANDBANK) said it turned over P54.86-million worth of farm equipment to farmers in Bohol.

The turnover took place during the Farmers’ Caravan event in Pilar, Bohol. A total of 142 farmers, agrarian reform beneficiaries (ARB), and members of irrigators’ associations and cooperatives attended the program.

The equipment included 41 four-wheel drive (4WD) tractors, 7 Kubota Rice Combine Harvesters and 10 Kubota Rice transplanters, which were given to beneficiaries under LANDBANK’s Agricultural Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (ACEF) program and the Agri-Mechanization Financing Program.

The event was held in partnership with the Department of Agriculture (DA), Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR), National Irrigation Administration (NIA), as well as the Agricultural Training Institute (ATI), National Food Authority (NFA), and the Philippine Crop Insurance Corp. (PCIC).

The state-owned bank also offered three lending programs, namely ACEF, Sikat Saka Program and the Accessible Funds for Delivery to ARBs (AFFORD-ARB) Program to the farmers.

“As of June 30, 2019, the combined loans extended to the agriculture sector and the Bank’s other mandated sectors reached P219.63 billion, which is 27.45% of LANDBANK’s total loans to all sectors of P799.64 billion,” LANDBANK said in a statement.

LANDBANK said its Bohol Lending Center as of the end of June had allocated 63.61%, or P2.6 billion of its loan portfolio of P4.09 billion to agriculture-related accounts. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang

Senate seeks to impose more hurdles on farmland conversion process

A MEASURE adding regulatory hurdles to the conversion of irrigated and irrigable agricultural land to residential, industrial and commercial zoning has been filed in the Senate.

Senator Francis N. Pangilinan, with Senate Bill No. 256, or the proposed “Agricultural Land Conversion Ban Act,” said he was seeking to preserve farmland to ensure food security.

Mr. Pangilinan said some 100,000 hectares worth of agricultural land has been converted between 1988, when Republic Act (RA) 6657, or the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law, was implemented, and 2016.

He cited data from the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) showing that 80.6% of approved land conversions were in Luzon; 7.8% in the Visayas, and 11.6 in Mindanao.

“We need farmers to feed the country. Farmers need farmland to feed the country,” he said in a statement Sunday.

The bill amends RA 7160, or Local Government Code, by requiring applicants to obtain certifications from the Department of Agriculture (DA), DAR, Department of Environment and Natural Resources and local government units.

“This additional requirement before the grant of a conversion permit is to ensure the suitability of the conversion of an agriculture lot. This is timely due to the unbridled land conversion, legal or otherwise,” Mr. Pangilinan said.

The certification from the DA should include a finding that the land has ceased to be economically feasible for agricultural purposes.

The DAR, for its part, will certify that the land is not due for distribution or programmed for distribution to agrarian reform beneficiaries; while the DENR will indicate if the proposed reclassification is ecologically sound.

At present, the Law only provides that agricultural land be reclassified by the LGUs through an ordinance, or by the President, upon recommendation of the National Economic and Development Authority.

The new measure will also penalize violations with fines ranging from P150,000 to P300,000; and imprisonment of not less than six years.

For already-completed buildings or infrastructure, the property is liable to b confiscated for public use or auction. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Innovate Iloilo movement plans October summit for start-ups, investors

INNOVATE ILOILO, which hopes to make Iloilo City an innovation hub by 2030, is organizing its first conference which will feature a business-matching activity for start-ups and investors.

“Through this, we can create awareness… and at the same time to connect the innovators and the start-ups to the business community. We will showcase them and connect to the future investors,” Rayjand T. Gellamucho, manager of the West Visayas State University-Green Technology Business Incubator and curator of Global Shapers Community Iloilo, said in an interview.

Global Shapers Community is among the backers of Innovate Iloilo, together with the Department of Science and Technology (DoST), academic institutions, local government units (LGUs), and business groups.

Innovate Iloilo was formally launched Aug. 13 along with a website (www.innovateiloilo.com) and social media pages.

Mr. Gellamucho said the end goal is not just to put Iloilo on the map as an innovation hub but to share ideas on how start-ups can address problems in dealing with systems and institutions.

“What we really want is to influence government agencies, policy makers and the academic institutions to support the fourth industrial revolution and to educate them. Subong hindi lang (So not just) hardware but we need to venture into the internet of things, artificial intelligence and machine learning,” he said.

He said that LGUs can become “smart” institutions by adopting technologies to improve governance and public service delivery.

Iloilo Business Club (IBC) Executive Director Lea E. Lara said the movement is also a good venue for promoting small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs)

“It is a good platform for the SMEs to come up with good products and services. We have seen already local products like turmeric and oils but what we are really hoping is to come up with products and services that are uniquely Ilonggo and can compete in the market,” she said.

Mr. Gellamucho said aside from the The Iloilo Innovation Expo and NICP (National ICT Confederation of the Philippines) Summit on Oct. 21-25, several other activities are also being planned while the Innovate Iloilo road map is finalized.

“Government agencies, both the city and the province, the academic institutions, will have their activities in line with making Iloilo an innovation hub by 2030. Like DoST and Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), they are doing their own initiatives to support the ecosystem of start-ups here in Iloilo,” he said.

DTI–Bureau of Trade and Industrial Policy Research Director Maria Lourdes A. Yaptinchay said during the launch that innovation has become a “prime mover of socioeconomic growth.”

“It can propel the development of Iloilo in terms of economy governance and delivery of services.” — Emme Rose S. Santiagudo

Redefining corporate rules

(First of two parts)

For nearly 40 years, Batas Pambansa 68 or the old Corporation Code governed the way corporations operate in the Philippines. While the Code has been interpreted by jurisprudence and has been complemented by the Securities Regulations Code (SRC), the Revised Code of Corporate Governance, and the Foreign Investments Act, among others, it has taken nearly four decades to overhaul its provisions.

In a recent study by the World Bank on the ease of doing business across 190 countries, the Philippines ranked 124th, lagging way behind its Southeast Asian neighbors like Malaysia (15th), Thailand (27th), and Vietnam (69th). In the 2019 World Competitiveness Report of the Swiss-based International Institute for Management Development (IMD), the Philippines ranked 46th out of 63 economies. While it improved its standing from 50th in 2018, the Philippines still ranked 13th out of 14 countries in the Asia Pacific Region alone, beating only Mongolia.

Republic Act (RA) 112321 or the Revised Corporation Code of the Philippines (RCC), signed into law by President Rodrigo R. Duterte on Feb. 20, has redefined the corporate rules to promote ease of doing business, foster flexibility, and take full advantage of technological innovation.

This article will discuss the key provisions, which are either new or are amendments to the old Corporation Code, making RA 112321 relevant, timely and more in step with the changing global business landscape.

RELAXING THE MINIMUM NUMBER OF INCORPORATORS, RESIDENCY RULES
In the past, one of the main concerns of foreign investors in establishing a local subsidiary was the difficulty in complying with incorporator-related requirements under the old Corporation Code. Prior to the RCC, the minimum requirements for incorporation included the participation of at least five incorporators, all of whom are natural persons. These requirements appeared simple, but often proved difficult for a foreign investor who did not have the ready support of another incorporator, let alone four others.

Another concern was the need for majority of these incorporators, along with the directors, to be residents of the Philippines. In SEC-OGC Opinion No. 04-18 dated March 19, 2018, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) said the residency requirement, particularly for directors, is mainly for the protection of stockholders “against inactivity of the board where no quorum can be mustered due to repeated absence of a director who resides abroad.” Legislators, however, recognized that with advances in technology, foreign investors and multinational companies can continue to conduct their business in the Philippines even if they are not physically present all the time.

Aside from natural persons, a partnership, association, corporation, trust or estate are now allowed in the RCC to act an as incorporator, subject to the compliance with certain requirements, including the approval of their respective boards or members to invest in the corporation.

INTRODUCTION OF THE ONE-PERSON CORPORATION (OPC)
With the relaxed minimum number of incorporators, it follows that the RCC allows the formation of an OPC, which is a corporation with a sole stockholder having a legal personality separate and distinct from that of such sole stockholder.

The SEC issued the guidelines for incorporation of OPCs and began accepting applications on May 6. It approved the first OPC application a day after.

OPCs are only required to submit Articles of Incorporation (AOI) but can forego the standard submission of the By-Laws.

The OPC is a welcome development, particularly for entrepreneurs without business partners but who would like to set up an entity.

Even a foreign natural person may put up an OPC, subject to the applicable capital requirements, as well as the constitutional and statutory restrictions on foreign participation in certain investment areas or activities.

As to liability, the sole stockholder in an OPC can claim limited liability, provided he is able to prove that the corporation is adequately financed. Otherwise, the stockholder becomes jointly and severally liable with the OPC for the latter’s debts and other liabilities. Moreover, if the sole stockholder serves as the corporation’s concurrent treasurer, he is required to post a bond of at least P1 million. The rule on the “piercing of the corporate veil,” which holds a corporation’s shareholders personally liable for the corporation’s actions or debt in lieu of limited liability, is applied with equal force to an OPC as with other corporations.

An ordinary stock corporation may apply for conversion to OPC when a single stockholder acquires all the stock of such a corporation, with the OPC succeeding the ordinary stock corporation in the outstanding liabilities as of the date of conversion. Conversely, the OPC may also be converted into a stock corporation after compliance with the requirements provided by law.

In next week’s article, we will continue the discussion on the changes brought by the RCC, looking closely at three other important provisions, namely the corporate term, the use of arbitration and guidelines on appointing an emergency board, and the more effective use of technology to comply with regulatory requirements.

This article is for general information only and is not a substitute for professional advice where the facts and circumstances warrant. The views and opinion expressed above are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of SGV & Co.

 

Cecille S. Visto is a Senior Tax Director of SGV & Co.

DoJ halts convicts’ early release amid uproar

PHILIPPINE authorities will suspend a program on the early release of convicted criminals for good conduct pending a review of the guidelines, Justice Secretary Menardo I. Guevarra said at the weekend.

This comes amid an uproar over a plan to free former Calauan Mayor Antonio L. Sanchez, a convicted rapist and murderer, for what prison officials earlier described as good conduct.

The Justice department has created a task force that will review the rules and will inform the Supreme Court about the suspension, Mr. Guevarra said in a text message.

“We expect the processing to pick up greater speed once the guidelines have been reviewed and firmed up,” he added.

Several senators, including Senator Franklin M. Drilon opposed the plan and said they would investigate it. Mr. Drilon was the Justice secretary who prosecuted Mr. Sanchez, who was sentenced in 1995 to seven life terms for the rape and murder of two University of the Philippines students in 1993.

Presidential spokesman Salvador S. Panelo on Friday said the ex-mayor was ineligible for an early release because he committed a heinous crime. The spokesman, who was the ex-mayor’s lawyer in the 1993 rape-slay case, earlier denied that he had anything to do with his planned release.

Mr. Guevarra on Thursday said the Bureau of Corrections would evaluate the qualifications of Mr. Sanchez. Last week, he said the convict along with thousands of other inmates would be released for good conduct. Their release, he added, could not be appealed.

Mr. Guevarra yesterday reiterated that under the law, those convicted of heinous crimes are ineligible.

The Supreme Court in June ruled that the law should be applied retroactively. Last Friday, the tribunal denied it ordered the early release of Mr. Sanchez as it ruled based on a judicial doctrine that laws should be applied retroactively when they favor the accused.

Meanwhile, the Commission of Human Rights (CHR) at the weekend warned against the “haphazard” application of time allowance for good conduct of inmates, noting that releasing underserving criminals “would perpetuate injustice.”

“Every case must be examined and thoroughly reviewed, and the transparency of the entire process must be assured, including due notice to victims of crimes,” CHR spokesperson Jacqueline Ann C. de Guia said in a statement.

She noted that an early release for good conduct cannot be taken back once granted.

“Equal protection of laws is surely a guaranteed right,” Ms. de Guia said. “But laws should always be reasonably applied to further justice and protect rights.” — Vann Marlo M. Villegas and Arjay L. Balinbin

Philippines orders probe of HK labor executives

THE PHILIPPINES has ordered an investigation of labor officials in Hong Kong for allegedly choosing an online system provider for overseas placement without public bidding, the Labor department said in a statement yesterday.

In an administrative order, Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III created a fact-finding team to look into allegations of impropriety in the selection of the contractor for processing, credentialing, welfare protection and data storage for worker placement.

The new contractor will replace an 11-year-old system that has provided overseas Filipino workers, employers and accredited employment agencies data and information on Philippine Overseas Labor Office programs, projects and services in real time.

Reports said the labor office in Hong Kong terminated the service agreement with EmployEasy Ltd., now Employeasy Group Ltd., the provider of the current online system, effective Dec. 30 last year.

Based on the letter of termination written by Mr. dela Torre to Employeasy, the labor attache said they would announce an opening for service providers who will improve the current online system. No biddings were held in place before they awarded the new contract to Polaris, according to DoLE.

The labor attaché reportedly signed the contract for the new system with officials of Polaris Tools Ltd. on March 7.

Mr. Bello cited the alleged haste and “seeming lack of transparency” in the solicitation of the proposal and the awarding of the contract, according to the statement.

The Philippine Overseas Labor Office is directly under the Philippine Labor secretary. It acts as the operating arm of DoLE in the administration and enforcement of its policies and programs applicable to Filipinos working overseas, according to the Foreign Affairs department website.

There are more than 30 Philippine labor offices overseas, many of which are in Asia and the Middle East.

A Philippine Overseas Labor Office is headed by a labor attaché who supervises labor corps personnel at post and manages the operations of the Filipino Workers’ Resource Center. — Gillian M. Cortez

Gov’t cites press freedom after Mindanao killing

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte’s task force on media security at the weekend said there is press freedom in the Mindanao region despite martial rule and after the killing of a broadcast journalist there in July.

“There are no complaints of media practitioners being harassed under the context of martial law,” Presidential Task Force on Media Security Executive Director Joel Sy Egco said by telephone.

His comments come after the murder of a hard-hitting broadcast journalist in Kidapawan City in July and the mistaken arrest by police in Cagayan de Oro City of a Davao-based columnist in June.

Mr. Egco said the reported killings of media practitioners in Mindanao, including the murder of a radio commentator in Kidapawan, have not involved both the military and police.

The task force presented to the public on Aug. 22 two main witnesses against at least 10 members of the Kapa-Community Ministry International Inc. who were allegedly behind the killing of Mr. Dizon. One of the two witnesses is a suspect, Mr. Egco said.

On June 9, the military and police mistakenly arrested a columnist for a Davao newspaper at the Laguindingan Airport in Cagayan de Oro City.

The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) has said the arrest was “a clear twisted logic of the Duterte administration that foolishly believes in the conspiracy theory of people linking with the communist party using the same pretext and plot weaved by past administrations.”

It added that journalists working in communities “may be a future target of the threat, harassment and killings as Mindanao remains under the power of martial law.”

NUJP earlier described the situation as “alarming and the atmosphere no longer secure for journalists working in Mindanao.”

“Press freedom in the entire country is still vibrant,” Mr. Egco said. “It’s alive and kicking despite what other sectors are claiming.”

The Philippines is one of the world’s most dangerous countries for journalists, with 186 people who worked for media companies killed since 1986, according to the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines and Human Rights Watch.

Mr. Duterte has denounced journalists for their coverage of his deadly drug war that Amnesty International has called a “murderous war on drugs.”

The president has also disparaged foreign journalists for their allegedly biased reporting and said corrupt reporters could be legitimate targets of assassinations. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Quezon City gov’t gives POGOs 15 days to comply with local business requirements

Quezon City logo

AT LEAST three Philippine offshore gaming operators (POGOs) based in Eastwood City in Libis were slapped with notice of violations by the Quezon City (QC) government for lack of local requirements for business. The notices were issued late Friday during a “surprise inspection” led by QC Mayor Maria Josefina “Joy” G. Belmonte, according to a statement from her office. “Among the POGO hubs which received notice of violations were Omniworld Enterprise, Inc., Singtech Enterprise Inc. and Great Empire Gaming and Amusement Corp. for failure to present necessary clearances required to conduct business in QC such as locational clearance, sanitary permit, environmental clearance, occupational permits of its employees, among others,” it said. The companies have been given 15 days to comply with the requirements. “While we welcome the business locators in our city, we want to ensure that our rules and regulations are followed to the letter. Otherwise, you will have to face the consequences of non-compliance,” Ms. Belmonte is quoted as having told one POGOs hub owner during the inspection. In her social media page, Ms. Belmonte acknowledged Councilors Ivy Xenia L. Lagman, Eric Rey Z. Medina, and Maria Imelda A. Rillo “for bringing this issue to my attention and for joining me during the inspection.”

MinDA plans for sustainable inter-island trade after 1st Mindanao fruit fest in Baguio City

THE MINDANAO Development Authority (MinDA) is meeting with stakeholders this week to plan for a regular and sustainable shipment of fruits that grow only or at best quality in Mindanao to other parts of the country. MinDA Chair Emmanuel F. Piñol made this announcement in a social media post Sunday following the good market response at the 1st MinDA Fruit Festival in Baguio City on Aug. 25. “The MinDA will negotiate with the airline companies for a cargo allocation in their Davao-Manila, Davao-Clark or even Davao-Cebu or Davao-Iloilo routes for the shipment of products from Mindanao,” he said, adding that they will also request “for a special cargo price” as part of the airlines’ support for the development of Mindanao. The fruits eyed for air transport are the more perishable ones like rambutan, lanzones, marang, mangosteen, pineapple and papaya. Less perishable ones like pomelo, durian, and bananas could be transported via trucks, which takes about three days. Mr. Piñol said MinDA will also be meeting with leaders of fruit farmers associations to discuss the availability of supplies. At the same time, MinDA will be validating fruit production volume before pursuing “trading arrangements with other local government units in Luzon and the Visayas,” Mr. Piñol said. The fruit festival in Baguio city was undertaken in coordination with the city government led by Mayor Benjamin B. Magalong. In another post, Mr. Piñol said another round of the fruit fair will be hold on Sept. 1 as many Baguio consumers, who patiently lined up, were disappointed as supply ran out. — Carmelito Q. Francisco