BusinessWeek Mindanao (May 25-26, 2022)

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BusinessWeek M I N DA N A O CREDIBLE

Volume XII, No. 147

Market Indicators AS OF 6:00 PM MAY 23, 2022 (MONDAY)

FOREX US$1 = P52.23

PHISIX 6,746.33

X X Briefly

0.22

86.28

cents

points

Labor force participation

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New geothermal power added to Mindanao grid www.businessweekmindanao.com

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NORTHERN Mindanao has registered the highest labor force participation rate (LFPR) in the country, accounting for 69.8 percent in 2021. The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) data released Friday said Region 10’s LFPR last year translated to 2.410 million individuals who were 15 years old and over and were employed or ended unemployed by the end of the year. Central Luzon (Region 3) registered the lowest LFPR at 59 percent.

Workers aid BUTUAN City – At least 42,077 workers displaced by super typhoon ‘Odette’ and the pandemic were already given emergency employment assistance in Northeastern Mindanao (The Caraga Region) by the government, a report said on Thursday (May 19). A total of 22,070 workers in Surigao del Norte and Siargao Island and another 1,189 workers in the Province of Dinagat Islands were given financial assistance amounting to close to P138 million under Department of Labor and EmploymentTulong Panghanapbuhay sa Ating Disadvantaged/ Displaced Workers or TUPAD. “This humanitarian effort is a continuing program of the government,” DOLE-13 Regional Director Atty. Joffrey M. Suyao said.

Night differential GOVERNMENT agencies have the funds for their employees’ night differential pay but if they lack financing this will be sourced from the national budget, an official of the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) said. DBM Organization, Position Classification, and Compensation Bureau Director Gerald Janda, during the Public Briefing aired over PTV4 on Thursday, said government agencies need to get the funds for this expense from their Personal Services budget. “Kung may kakulangan ay maghahanap po ng pondo sa GAA (General Appropriations Act) (If there is deficiency then we will look for funding from the GAA),” he said.

POWER STRUGGLE. Linemen struggle to stretch a cable they are laying out in Iligan City on Monday, 23 May 2022.

Things looking up for Marawi 5 yrs after siege

mindanews photo by bobby timonera

N a d d e d 3.6-megawatt (MW) of electricity will soon be onstream in the Mindanao grid following the approval by the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) on the application of Energy Development Corp. (EDC) to develop a pointto-point power transmission line that will connect its geothermal power plant near Mount Apo to the Mindanao grid. However, the regulator d e n i e d t h e c o mp a ny ’s application to operate and maintain the transmission line, a function which it gave to privately-owned National Grid Corp. of the Philippines (NGCP). In arriving at its decision, POWER/PAGE 11

By DIVINA SUSON, Correspondent

MARAWI City -- For a 38-year-old mother of nine, life five years after the siege here is way better than before they were displaced because of the five-month battle between the government and ISIS-linked extremists. Anisah Bariga, her husband, and their children aged between 17 to 5 months old occupy one of the 109 permanent housing units in Hadiya Village in Barangay Dulay West. They transferred here in February last year, a shelter she calls "our own", vacating the house of a kind relative some four kilometers away from Dulay West. When they fled during the siege, they first stayed for six months in a school that

served as evacuation center in Saguiaran, Lanao del Sur. "It was very difficult living in an evacuation center with six little children so right after the (declaration) of Marawi liberation, we asked our relative if we can stay in their house. They let us stay there while waiting for the opportunity to be given permanent housing," Bariga said. The Unite d Nat ions Human S ett lements Programme (UN-Habitat) constructed 1,000 permanent shelters for displaced families who could no longer go back to their areas in the most affected area (MAA). The agency spent some $10 million donated by the SIEGE/PAGE 11

Transporting chicken in rural Mindanao.

mindanews file photo by bobby timonera

Davao bans poultry products from areas hit by bird flu By ANTONIO L. COLINA IV, MindaNews

DAVAO City -- The city government has prohibited the entry of poultry products from Luzon and other areas with reported cases of the highly pathogenic avian influenza (H5N1) or bird flu to protect the local industry. Dr. Cerelyn Pinili, head of the City Veterinary Office, said during an interview over Davao City Disaster Radio (DCDR 87.5) on Friday that the city remains bird flu-free and that local authorities are doing all they can the infection from spreading in commercial and backyard poultry farms.

Mayor Sara Duterte’s Executive Order 19 dated May 13 but only released on Thursday implements a temporary ban on the entry of all live domestic and captured wild birds, and their products and by-products, including day-old chicks, eggs, semen, manure, and fathers, from mainland and island provinces of Luzon, and other areas with reported cases of bird flu. Pinili clarified that the temporary ban does not include entry of poultry products from unrestricted regions, or areas with no

cases of bird flu, provided that they comply with a list of stringent requirements under the executive order. To allow entry of poultry from other regions with no cases of bird flu, Section 2 requires, among others, veterinary health certificate issued by a veterinarian and concurred by LGU/DARFO veterinarian, negative laboratory test result for bird flu, New Castle DiseaseFree Certification, shipping permit, livestock handler’s license, and registration of transport from the Bureau of Animal Industry. She said day-old chicks POULTRY/PAGE 11

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