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Catbalogan City boosts marine conservation with sea turtle, giant clam release

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MARINE CONSERVATION. The city government of Catbalogan has intensified its campaign to rehabilitate its marine ecosystems with the release of sea turtles and transplantation of giant clams in Barangay Buluan. (Photo: SSU)
MARINE CONSERVATION. The city government of Catbalogan has intensified its campaign to rehabilitate its marine ecosystems with the release of sea turtles and transplantation of giant clams in Barangay Buluan. (Photo: SSU)

TACLOBAN CITY — The Catbalogan city government has stepped up efforts to restore marine ecosystems with the release of sea turtles and transplantation of giant clams in Barangay Buluan.

Led by the City Agriculture Office and the City Environment and Natural Resources Office (ENRO), the activity brought together government agencies, academic institutions, civic groups, and local communities in a collaborative conservation effort.

Partners included Samar State University, the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR), the Provincial Fishery Office, the Philippine Coast Guard, PNP Maritime Group, local barangay councils, CFARMC and FARMC representatives from seven Sierra Islands barangays, the Rotary Club of Catbalogan, and the People’s Initiative for Learning and Community Development (PILCD).

During the ceremony, officials highlighted the ecological importance of sea turtles and giant clams in maintaining biodiversity and supporting sustainable fisheries. A ceremonial sea turtle release was followed by giant clam transplantation in designated reef areas, alongside the installation of an MPA reef billboard to remind residents of their role in marine protection.

City authorities said the initiative underscores the value of strong partnerships in advancing community-based marine conservation and sustaining fisheries for future generations.

(ROEL T. AMAZONA)

NFWC marks 105th year with national arts tilt on Filipina empowerment

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TACLOBAN CITY — The National Federation of Women’s Clubs of the Philippines (NFWC) has launched a nationwide arts contest as part of its 105th founding anniversary and the celebration of National Arts Month.

Dubbed “From Suffrage to Strength: 105 Years of Filipina Power,” the competition pays tribute to the historic 1937 plebiscite that granted Filipino women the right to vote, a milestone in the country’s struggle for gender equality.

The contest is open to students, artists, and writers nationwide. Participants are invited to express, through art and literature, the evolving role of Filipinas in leadership, civic engagement, and nation-building. Categories include literary arts, visual arts, poster making, and mixed media.

NFWC president Linda Gonzalez said the initiative aims to honor the courage of women who fought for equal rights while encouraging young Filipinos to appreciate women’s history and contributions to society.

Winners will be announced on March 8, 2026, in time for the celebration of International Women’s Day.

(LIZBETH ANN A. ABELLA)

1M blue swimming crab larvae release to revive coastal livelihoods

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CRABS STOCKING. As part of its bid to boost its crab industry, the provincial government of Southern Leyte has released one million blue swimming crab larvae into the waters of Hinundayan and Liloan. The initiative is being led by the Fisheries Section of the Provincial Agriculture Office(PAO) and forms part of a broader marine restoration strategy of the provincial government of Southern Leyte. (PAO-SOUTHERN LEYTE)
CRABS STOCKING. As part of its bid to boost its crab industry, the provincial government of Southern Leyte has released one million blue swimming crab larvae into the waters of Hinundayan and Liloan. The initiative is being led by the Fisheries Section of the Provincial Agriculture Office(PAO) and forms part of a broader marine restoration strategy of the provincial government of Southern Leyte. (PAO-SOUTHERN LEYTE)

TACLOBAN CITY– The provincial government of Southern Leyte has released one million blue swimming crab larvae into the waters of two coastal towns as part of an intensified effort to restore declining crab stocks and secure the livelihood of thousands of fisherfolk.
Under the “Rehabilitation of Southern Leyte Blue Swimming Crab Industry through Stock Enhancement” program, the province dispersed around 600,000 blue swimming crab (BSC) larvae in the zoea stage in Barangay Sabang, Hinundayan, on February 19, followed by another 400,000 larvae in Barangay Tabugon, Liloan, on February 20.

The initiative is being led by the Fisheries Section of the Provincial Agriculture Office and forms part of a broader marine restoration strategy of the provincial overnment of Southern Leyte.

The latest dispersal builds on earlier releases of about 5.4 million larvae in the towns of San Juan, Saint Bernard, Silago, and Hinunangan, expanding the program’s coverage across key fishing grounds in the province.

The blue swimming crab, locally known as “lambay” and scientifically identified as Portunus pelagicus, is among the most commercially valuable marine species in Southern Leyte.
It supports small-scale fishers and supplies both local markets and seafood processors. However, overfishing, habitat degradation, and environmental pressures have contributed to fluctuating and, in some areas, declining catches in recent years.

Through stock enhancement — a process of breeding and releasing larvae into natural waters — the provincial government aims to replenish crab populations, stabilize harvests, and ensure long-term sustainability of the industry.

Officials described the program as both an environmental intervention and an economic investment, emphasizing that rebuilding crab stocks directly translates to improved income opportunities for coastal communities.

Provincial authorities said monitoring activities will continue to assess survival rates and long-term impact, as the local government strengthens partnerships with fisherfolk and coastal barangays to protect and manage marine resources.

(JOEY A. GABIETA)

Ormoc sets up OFW help desk to aid 7,500 migrant workers

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TACLOBAN CITY — The city government of Ormoc City has established a dedicated help desk for overseas Filipino workers (OFWs), seeking to provide faster assistance and stronger protection for thousands of Ormocanons working abroad.

The Sangguniang Panlungsod recently approved Ordinance No. 211 creating an OFW Help Desk under the city’s Public Employment Service Office (PESO). The facility will serve as a one-stop center offering welfare assistance, legal referrals, and coordination for repatriation and reintegration services.

Authored by Councilor Krizea Caessandra Mercadal, the ordinance was crafted in response to the growing number of Ormocanon OFWs, now estimated at over 7,500 as of late 2025. Despite their economic contributions, many migrant workers continue to encounter problems such as contract substitution, unpaid salaries, and other forms of abuse.

Under the measure, the local help desk will coordinate closely with the Department of Migrant Workers (DMW) to access national databases and strengthen the campaign against illegal recruitment. The initiative also mandates regular pre-employment orientation seminars and dissemination of updated lists of licensed recruitment agencies.

City officials said the creation of the OFW Help Desk ensures that migrant workers and their families have easier access to government support services at the local level, from pre-departure assistance to reintegration upon their return home.

(ROEL T. AMAZONA)

Support for the Arts

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To properly observe February as Arts Month, local government units (LGUs) must do more than simply bankroll religious celebrations and observances. They must be able to support and advocate for the development of creative and imaginative arts within their jurisdictions. This observance will be for naught if LGUs do not take the celebration seriously.

In many local government units, public funds are readily available for religious processions, fiestas, and other religious activities. These activities may be relegated to the sidelines in culture. Painting, theater, literature, music, dance, and other artistic pursuits also define the culture, concerns, and aspirations of a people. The failure of local government units to support artistic expression amounts to saying that culture is solely concerned with religious activities, relegating imagination, creativity, and innovation to the sidelines.

The National Arts Month, through the National Commission for Culture and the Arts, has mandated all government offices to promote artistic excellence and cultural awareness. However, in many local government offices, National Arts Month is simply an annual affair where a tarpaulin is put up, and a program is held during the month. This is not how an artistic community is built. This is how an artistic community is forgotten.

The economic argument is equally compelling: a city that invests in its creative industries can attract visitors, create jobs, and encourage small businesses to thrive. Art markets, film festivals, cultural fairs, and street art can attract tourists who will spend on accommodations, food, and transport. The development of a thriving arts scene can complement heritage tourism and pilgrimage tourism, providing a more diversified economic base rather than one that relies on a single event in the tourism calendar. When artists are supported by institutions, their success feeds back into the community.

LGUs, therefore, must recognize arts and culture as essential public services rather than peripheral indulgences. Budgets must reflect this, and cultural offices must be staffed by competent people mandated to develop the field beyond the religious calendar. February must not just become a benchmark for measurable progress; it must become a reality. If LGUs are serious about development, they must recognize that a community without a thriving, well-supported arts scene is one that has chosen not to develop.

Rethinking the trimester scheme

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When the Department of Education confirmed that it is studying a shift to a trimester school calendar for basic education, the reaction was immediate and divided. I find the proposal bold, even tempting—but also risky in ways that cannot be ignored.

The present system, still recovering from pandemic disruptions and repeated calendar adjustments, is hardly a picture of stability. A trimester scheme promises shorter terms, more frequent breaks, and potentially better lesson pacing. In theory, that could mean less burnout for learners who now endure long, uninterrupted stretches of classes, especially in overcrowded public schools. Three terms may allow students to regroup, breathe, and return sharper. That rhythm, if carefully designed, might help attention spans that are already strained by gadgets, heat, and the sheer density of the curriculum.

Yet I cannot dismiss what this would demand from teachers. Teaching is not just delivery of lessons; it is planning, checking, meeting parents, filling out forms, and coping with endless administrative requirements. A trimester setup compresses time. Fewer weeks per term could mean faster coverage of competencies, tighter deadlines, and a race against the calendar. Without serious streamlining of paperwork and non-teaching tasks, the burden could intensify. The promise of “more breaks” may dissolve into shorter recovery periods between equally exhausting sprints.

Parents would also feel the shift. Many families plan work schedules, vacations, and even farm cycles around the school year. A trimester calendar could interfere with long-standing routines. Tuition and miscellaneous fees in private schools might be divided differently, which can affect household cash flow. On the other hand, more frequent breaks might give families regular windows for rest or bonding, instead of waiting for one long summer that sometimes arrives when everyone is already drained. For working parents, predictability will matter more than novelty.

There is also the question of facilities. A trimester system could, in principle, make better use of classrooms by redistributing schedules and possibly easing congestion if paired with other reforms. But if the number of students per room remains high and infrastructure gaps persist, the calendar alone will not cure overcrowding. Changing the rhythm of the year does not automatically build more classrooms or hire more teachers. Reform cannot be cosmetic; it must be structural.

I see a potential academic gain in pacing. Three grading periods might allow clearer checkpoints for mastery. Students who struggle in the first term would not have to wait too long for a fresh start. Remedial programs could be embedded between terms. Countries and universities that use trimester systems often argue that learning becomes more focused because each term has a defined arc. Still, basic education is not the same as college. Younger learners need continuity and routine. Too many breaks, if poorly timed, can disrupt momentum.

Another angle deserves attention: climate and health. The Philippines regularly suspends classes due to typhoons and extreme heat. A more flexible calendar divided into three parts might allow adjustments without throwing the entire year off balance. If a disaster disrupts one term, the damage is contained. In that sense, a trimester scheme could be a practical response to the realities of geography and weather. But flexibility must be backed by clear contingency plans, not improvisation.

Ultimately, I do not reject the idea outright, nor do I embrace it blindly. A trimester system could offer relief, focus, and resilience—but only if accompanied by real investment in teachers, facilities, and curriculum review. Without those, it risks becoming another reform that looks decisive on paper yet leaves classrooms gasping. If the shift proceeds, it must be gradual, consultative, and data-driven. Education reform is not a fashion statement; it is a long covenant with children, and it deserves patience as much as courage.

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