020421 - Northern California Edition

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We’ve got you covered from Hollywood to Broadway...and Online!

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA

Volume 20 - No. 5 • 14 Pages

T H E F I L I P I N O A M E R I CA N C O M MU N I T Y N E WS PA P E R

Volume 18 - No. 17 • 2 Sections – 16 Pages

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F E BR U A RY 5 - 1 1 , 2 0 2 1

Also published in LOS ANGELES, ORANGE COUNTY/INLAND EMPIRE, SAN DIEGO, LAS VEGAS, NEW YORK/NEW JERSEY

Biden signs executive order eliminating DATELINE USA Super Bowl, Lunar Trump-era barriers to legal immigration New Year could spark FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA

COVID surge, warns CA health official

THE upcoming Lunar New Year and Super Bowl Sunday are both potential COVID super-spreader events, warned Dr. Mark Ghaly, secretary of California’s Health and Human Services department. The state experienced a COVID surge after Thanksgiving last year, pushing hospitals and intensive care units to the brink after people gathered in groups to celebrate the occasion.

by KLARIZE

MEDENILLA AJPress

UNITED States President Joe Biden signed a trio of executive orders on Tuesday, Feb. 2 that aim to undo former President Donald Trump’s hard-line immigration policies, including addressing family separation at the U.S.-Mexico border, reforming the asylum pro-

gram and reviewing the “barriers” that the Trump administration placed around legal immigration. “We are going to work to undo the moral and national shame of the previous administration that literally, not figuratively, ripped children from the arms of families,” Biden said on Tuesday as he signed the orders in the Oval Office. Historically, legal immigration in the U.S. has been

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Report: Filipinos remain the most active internet, social media users globally

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by AJPRESS

‘She wouldn’t leave her kids’: Search continues for Fil-Am mom of 3 missing in Chula Vista, CA A FILIPINA American mother of three in Chula Vista, California has been missing for almost a month, but her family is not giving up hope that she will be found. May “Maya” Millete, 39, was last seen by family at her home in the San Miguel Ranch area on January 7 and was reported missing two days later. That Saturday, the family was planning a trip to Big Bear Mountain Resort for her daughter’s 11th birthday, but Millete was never heard from. u PAGE A3

characterized by extreme backlogs of cases in immigration courts, painstaking and rigorous qualification tests (like the controversial “public charge” rule enforced by the Trump administration) and a general tediousness and slowness. For many naturalized immigrants, it takes decades from the time of application to becoming citizens.

GOOD NEWS. National Task Force (NTF) Against COVID-19 Chief Implementer, Secretary Carlito Galvez Jr. (right), shares developments on the country’s vaccination program during the visit of the Coordinated Operations to Defeat Epidemic (CODE) Team, headed by the task force and the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID), in Caloocan City on Tuesday, February 2. Galvez said at least 5.6 million doses of vaccines produced by pharmaceutical firms Pfizer-BioNTech and AstraZeneca, Inc. are set to arrive in the country within the first quarter of this year. PNA photo by Robert Oswald P. Alfiler

FOR the sixth consecutive year, the Philippines is hailed as the global leader in time spent using social media according to a new report. Filipinos spend an average of 4 hours and 15 minutes each day on social media, according to the latest Digital 2021 report released on Tuesday, January 27 by Hootsuite and We Are Social. This is 22 minutes higher than the country’s Digital 2020 average of 3 hours and 53 minutes. The global average for social media usage this year is 2 hours and 25 minutes. The Philippines was followed by Colombia with an average of 3 hours and 45 minutes spent on social media. Japan, meanwhile, took the last spot in the list with an average of only 51 minutes spent on social media. The Philippines also emerged at the top in daily time spent using the internet with 10 hours and 56 minutes, longer than last year’s 9 hours and 45 minutes. This is followed by Brazil with an average of 10 hours and

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Maria Ressa, press groups nominated for Nobel Peace Prize by RITCHEL

MENDIOLA

AJPress

RAPPLER co-founder and chief executive officer Maria Ressa has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for 2021 by Norwegian labor leader and parliamentary representative Jonas Gahr Støre. “Filipino Maria Ressa heads Rappler, a website for investigative and investigative journalism. Prior to founding Rappler in 2012, she worked for CNN in Asia, where she specifically reports on terrorist networks,” said Støre on the Norwegian news May “Maya” Millete (2nd from left) with her husband Larry site Journalisten.no. (2nd from right) and their three children ages 11, 9 and 4. | He noted that Ressa has been harassed, Photo courtesy of Millete family persecuted, and arrested numerous times

due to her critical coverage of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s administration. “Ressa has for years lived with death threats and harassment on social media. She is thus both a symbol and a representative of thousands of journalists around the world,” Støre said. “The nomination fulfills key aspects of what is emphasized as peace-promoting in Alfred Nobel’s will. A free and independent press can inform about and help to limit and stop a development that leads to armed conflict and war,” he added. Støre also nominated Reporters Without Borders and Committee to Protect Journalists for the Nobel Peace Prize.

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Rappler co-founder and CEO Maria Ressa is known for being a critic of the current Duterte administration. PNA photo

PH congressman files resolution congratulating Stakeholders begin rebuilding Fil-Am’s appointment to US Dept. of Interior PH tourism industry in 2021 by MOMAR

G. VISAYA

AJPress

PHILIPPINE Rep. Christopher de Venecia (4th District, Pangasinan) has filed a resolution congratulating Camille Calimlim Touton for her appointment as Deputy Commissioner of the United States Department of Interior’s Bureau of Reclamation. Touton’s appointment is historic as she became the first Filipino American to serve in the agency’s leadership role. According to the resolution, Touton’s parents, Carl and Marlene Bangsal Calimlim, are from

Foreign visitors drop to 84% in 2020 due to travel restrictions

Barangay Tebeng in Dagupan City, Pangasinan. “I congratulate President Joe Biden and Interior Secretary-designate Deb Haaland on their excellent choice, their appointment of Camille Touton as the Deputy Commissioner of the Bureau of Reclamation,” announced Rep. Grace Napolitano in a statement. The Bureau of Reclamation is a water management agency under the United States Department of the Interior, which oversees dams, canals, and hydroelectric plants across the Western United States. It is the largest wholesaler

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by MOMAR

G. VISAYA

AJPress

Camille Calimlim Touton

PHILIPPINE tourism stakeholders believe that this year is crucial in rebuilding the country’s tourism industry battered by the global pandemic that hit in 2020. “I believe 2021 is a major transition year for all of us,” Tourism Promotions Board Chief Operating Officer Anthonette Velasco Allones said at the Kapihan sa New York

online dialogue with the Fil Am Press Club of New York on Thursday, Jan. 27. Revenue lost from international tourism in 2020 was P400 billion, Department of Tourism and TPB officials estimate, with the number of foreign visitors that visited the Philippines falling to almost 84% due to travel restrictions. DOT Undersecretary Roberto Alabado III said that 8.2 million foreign tourists visited

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Guyam Island, Siargao Photo from Instagram/@madamjoycing


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