Wednesday, May 29, 2019

P74.8M Davao City Food Terminal now open




No less than Mayor Sara Duterte formally opened on Monday, May 27, the P74.8 million Davao City Food Terminal in Daliao, Toril. This is part of the 25-hectare Davao Food Complex.

“This Food Terminal is not exclusive for Davao City farmers only. It's useless if Davao City farmers will be the only ones to grow. Our growth should extend to our neighboring places,” Sara said.

The Food terminal aims to become a venue where small-scale farmers can cash in on their products without the intervention of middlemen.

PHOTO COURTESY OF DA
Sara said the biggest advantage of the Food Terminal is that farmers, including those from outside the city, will have a say on the price of their products.

She said the city has no intention of turning the Food Terminal into a revenue-generating facility because farmers can only pay minimal charges for the use of the facility. It is important for farmers to earn a bigger income, she added.

“The main goal of this food terminal is helping our small-scale farmers than making a profit,” she said.

Outgoing councilor Marissa Abella, chair of the committee on agriculture, said the Davao Food and Trade Terminal is very important as it will become a venue where farmers can sell their products to foreign and other buyers. 

She said The farmers have to form themselves into a cooperative to fully benefit from the new market which is a joint venture between the city and the Department of Agriculture (DA). The agriculture department provided the budget for its construction while the city will take charge of managing the center.

PHOTO COURTESY OF DA
Abella said it was designed to enable farmers to skip through the layers of middlemen so they can access lucrative markets for their produce and increase their sales in the process. It shall serve as the market for agricultural products of farmers in the city and is seen to benefit even the small farmers in the Davao Region.

The Terminal was conceptualized to form part of the country’s integrated supply chain being established in major food producing regions. This will enable farmers and fisherfolk to sell their products directly, earn comfortable income and at the same time make basic food affordable and accessible to the consuming public.

Under the Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) between the city and DA,  the city government is allowed to use the Daliao property initially for 15 years with the possibility of renewal. 

Davao City is the premier agricultural and trade center in Mindanao and has provided as its objective in the Comprehensive Land Use Development Plan (CLUP) the creation of a trading post much like the Davao Food and Trade Terminal.

The city’s 2013-2022 CLUP has allocated 45.65% or a total 111,387.49 hectares for Agriculture. Agricultural land comprises the biggest portion of the city’s total land area because the city relies primarily on agriculture for food, feeds and raw materials for its agriculture and other industries.

“Daliao is a strategic site for an the Food Terminal as it will capture most of the products coming from the agricultural production areas of Davao and nearby provinces and will thus provide market support to the farmers in Mindanao,” Abella said. The Center will provide marketing infrastructure support for small and medium farm size vegetables, fruits and other food crop growers in the area.

While the city will initially manage the facility, and a marketing group from the DA-Davao Region office will oversee the quality of the fresh produce being delivered in the Terminal to ensure high value, its management will eventually be turned over to the farmers.

Monday, May 6, 2019

Ronald dela Rosa: Moving up and dreaming on



Want to know the real worth of a person? Ask the people he works with. If this is true, then it would be easy to tell that despite his hard stance (no pun intended), Davao City Police Director Senior Superintendent Ronald Dela Rosa is a “fun boss” to be with who had none of the airs that usually infect a person of his stature.

He has become such a celebrity, thanks to his many conquests and accomplishments, that he would be several pesos richer if he charges a fee for every person who wants to have a photo session with him. Despite his seeming confidence when it comes to his work, he becomes shy when people show their admiration for him but beams when they call him “Vin Diesel” and not his namesake, The Rock.

As dela Rosa officially turns over today (October 25) the rein of the DCPO to Sr. Supt. Vicente Danao Jr., chief of the Regional Logistics and Research Development Division in Davao Region, he also leaves behind the many uniformed men and women who have learned to respect him from the time he started his stint as Davao Police Chief in February last year.

After almost two years in office, “Bato” (as he is fondly called by most Dabawenyos) has established a record that will be too difficult to equal. No one will argue that he has somehow grown into the hearts of every Dabawenyo who think of him as their homegrown hero.

Dela Rosa considers the DSWD incident, where he and his men had to stop hungry people from stealing sacks and sacks of rice from the Department of Social Welfare and Development regional office, the most dramatic. “There was pressure to stop them but I was desperate kay kabalo ko daghang mangamatay,” he said.

However, the kidnap-for-ransom incident was also the most action-filled since it involved an actual shootout which left several of the kidnappers dead. He considers the incident involving a Malaysian terrorist and his wife one of the most suspenseful considering that he had a very encounter with a ready-to-be-detonated IED or bomb.

Dela Rosa is mighty proud of reducing by almost 60% the circulation of illegal drugs in the city since he took over DCPO, thanks to Oplan Tukhang (Tuktok-Hangyo).  “Effective kayo ang personal appeal para sa mga suspected drug pushers—it worked both ways as they knew they were already identified but they are being given a chance to live provided they stop their activities,’ he said. 

While Tukhang was highly successful, dela Rosa said there are those who still opted to continue with the illegal drug trade because it is really lucrative. Another successful strategy which he is proud of is Oplan Pakgang (Pitulon ang Kabatan-onan sa Gang) or Disciplining Youths in Gangs.

Ironically, dela Rosa’s most glaring accomplishment is also the source of his frustration. “I would have wanted to accomplish a drugless society where there is zero drug use but he admits this is almost impossible,” he said. For as long barangays like 23-C exists, it will be difficult to completely eradicate the drug trade in the city. This barangay, also known as Mini Forest, is an identified depressed are with mostly transient residents who just drop off drugs and leave.

While dela Rosa’s tour of duty officially ended on October 18 and he is now officially the Chief of Staff of the Intelligence Group in Camp Crame, this promotion is only part of his dream to do a “McArthur” and say “I shall return!” He said he dreams of coming back to the city as its Regional Director.

The 51-year old dela Rosa sees himself retiring five years from now when he turns 56 so that he can come back to his hometown in Bgy. Bato, Davao del Sur where he wants to be elected as mayor. “I still think that after becoming a policeman, the next best way to serve the people is through politics,” he said.

Despite his accomplishments and challenges, he keeps himself grounded by spending time with his family especially on Sundays when they hear mass, watch a movie and eat dinner. Bonding time with his only son means watching and playing basketball. For his two daughters, nothing beats watching movies. He admits to being very strict with his daughters even if one is already working in real estate and another graduating in college.

“Maybe they do not have boyfriends yet because they want someone like me who does not smoke, drink or engage in any vice,” he said.

For someone who grew up wanting to be a policeman because “I always see marines in our barangay and liked their uniforms,” dreams do come true. For someone who took a scholarship in MSU Marawi to go to school because his father’s income as a driver and his mother’s income as a fish vendor were not enough to send him to school, completing a Philippine Military Academy education was a dream come true. 

Whether it is a lucky streak or a product of hard work and dedication to his job, life has indeed become a dream come true for dela Rosa. And maybe, fate would somehow make his dream of becoming the mayor of Sta. Cruz come true.

(NB: This article was written way back 2013 when Mr. Ronald dela Rosa was still Chief of the Davao City  Police Office. This is not in any way intended to convince people to vote or not to vote for him, but to give them a glimpse of the man)

Hugpong to junk candidates paying extortion money to NPA




Candidates found to be paying extortion money to the New People’s Army (NPA) will be outrightly junked from the Hugpong ng Pagbabago - Hugpong sa Tawong Lungsod (HNP-HTL).

The leadership of the HNP-HTL gave this stern warning in a statement sent to the media yesterday.

“The alliance will outright junk candidates who will be giving in to the demands of the NPA, a terrorist organization behind countless of horrendous crimes against the people,” the statement read.

Requiring candidates to pay in exchange for access to campaign in far-flung areas only shows the NPAs perverted views of democracy. The election ensures that people freely exercise their right to choose their leaders — and the NPA extortion scheme is an absolute travesty of the essence of the election, it added.

The HNP-HTL said paying the NPA is tantamount to bowing down to them and subscribing to their destructive ideology. 

“It is also as good as playing blind to the crimes they committed in the past, and supporting the crimes and more acts of terrorism they will commit in the future. “

“Paying to the NPA makes candidates NPA terrorists themselves,” it added.

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