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Light at last: Remote Alangalang sitios get power amid storm threat

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FINALLY, ELECTRICITY. Residents of Barangay Langit in Alangalang, Leyte can now enjoy electricity after years of waiting as officials of the Leyte III Electric Cooperative (Leyeco III) formally switch on the power supply. The energization was made possible under the government’s Sitio Electrification Program (SEP). (PHOTO COURTESY)
FINALLY, ELECTRICITY. Residents of Barangay Langit in Alangalang, Leyte can now enjoy electricity after years of waiting as officials of the Leyte III Electric Cooperative (Leyeco III) formally switch on the power supply. The energization was made possible under the government’s Sitio Electrification Program (SEP). (PHOTO COURTESY)

TACLOBAN CITY — Even as Tropical Storm ‘Ada’ loomed over Eastern Visayas, residents of two long-unlit sitios in Barangay Langit, Alangalang, Leyte, finally saw their long-held hope come true with the energization of their community under the government’s Sitio Electrification Program (SEP).

On Friday, January 16, officials and personnel of the Leyte III Electric Cooperative (Leyeco III) arrived in Sitio Ilawud and Sitio Kapudlusan to formally switch on the electrification project, bringing electricity to households that had relied on kerosene lamps for years.
Residents welcomed the development as life-changing. “This is a big help for pregnant mothers, children who are studying, the sick—this is a huge blessing for everyone,” said Dennis Suminig.

Suminig and his family have lived in the community since 2014 after relocating from Lanao in Mindanao to escape armed conflict. Since then, he had repeatedly sought assistance from barangay and municipal officials to push for the electrification of their sitio.

“Now, the light is no longer just along the road—it is already inside our homes,” he said.
The SEP is a national government initiative implemented through the National Electrification Administration (NEA) to achieve total rural electrification. The program provides subsidies for extending power lines and connecting households in remote and previously unserved sitios through partnerships with electric cooperatives.

Funding for the project comes from the national budget and covers the free or subsidized installation of power poles and distribution lines.

Leyeco III board president Isagani Artoza told residents that the arrival of electricity would bring lasting change to their lives, particularly to children’s education, as they would no longer have to rely on lamps for studying at night.

Before the Alangalang project, Leyeco III also energized 16 households in Sitio Manhuraw, Jaro town, as part of its continuing rural electrification efforts in Leyte.

(ROEL T. AMAZONA)

Ormoc City, PSA seals deal to bring civil registry services closer to the public

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TACLOBAN CITY — Accessing birth, marriage, and death records will soon be faster and more convenient for Ormocanons as the city government and the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) formally partnered to establish an LGU-operated Civil Registry System (CRS) outlet in Ormoc City.

The local government unit of Ormoc and the PSA signed a memorandum of agreement (MOA) on Friday, January 16, paving the way for the opening of the CRS outlet that will cater not only to city residents but also to people from nearby cities and municipalities.
Once operational, the CRS outlet is expected to significantly reduce processing time and improve access to vital documents, easing the burden on residents who previously had to travel farther or wait longer for civil registry services.

The LGU committed to operate and maintain the facility, providing the required office space, equipment, and personnel to ensure uninterrupted and responsive service delivery.
In his message, acting Mayor Ari Larrazabal said Ormoc has long functioned as a service hub for surrounding areas, making the establishment of the CRS outlet a natural step in strengthening people-centered governance. “This service stands on integrity. Trust in government is built not through words, but through consistency,” he said.

PSA Regional Statistics Service Office VIII Director Wilma Perante described the agreement as a long-awaited milestone that deepens cooperation between the PSA and the city government in delivering efficient and accessible public services.

The MOA signing was also attended by PSA National Statistician and Civil Registrar General Undersecretary Claire Dennis Mapa, Assistant National Statistician and Officer-in-Charge Deputy National Statistician Kristine Joy Briones, City Civil Registrar Marinette Solibaga, members of the Sangguniang Panlungsod, and barangay officials.

(ROEL T. AMAZONA)

PRO-8 honors four city police stations for excellence in governance

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RECOGNITION. Regional Director B/Gen. Jason Capoy (center) leads the awarding ceremony at the PRO-8 Multi-Purpose Hall in Palo, Leyte, honoring four city police stations — Tacloban City PS-3 and Ormoc City PS-4, PS-5, and PS-6 — for achieving Proficient Status under the Performance Governance System (PGS) on January 15, 2026. Also in photo are PRO-8 officials, city police directors, and members of the Regional Advisory Group for Police Transformation and Development 8 (RAGPTD-8).(PRO-8)

TACLOBAN CITY — Under the leadership of Regional Director B/Gen. Jason Capoy, Police Regional Office 8 (PRO-8) recently recognized four city police stations for achieving Proficient Status under the Performance Governance System (PGS) during a ceremony held at the PRO-8 Multi-Purpose Hall, Camp Sec. Ruperto K. Kangleon in Palo, Leyte, on January 15, 2026.

The event, which featured Ronald Madera as guest of honor and speaker, highlighted the awarding of plaques, Eagle Awards, and certificates to the Tacloban City Police Office – Police Station 3 (TCPO-PS3) and Ormoc City Police Office’s PS 4, PS 5, and PS 6, all recognized for their exemplary performance and governance.

Certificates of appreciation were also presented to members of the Regional Advisory Group for Police Transformation and Development 8 (RAGPTD-8) for their support in promoting police reform and development.

Joining Capoy were Deputy Regional Director for Administration Col. Froilan Navarroza, Chief of Regional Staff Col. Matthe Aseo, Regional Pastoral Officer Major Rey Ibañez, city police directors, chiefs of police, members of RAGPTD-8, and personnel from PRO-8. The ceremony celebrated the stations’ commitment to transparency, accountability, and effective police service in the region.

This recognition reinforces PRO-8’s ongoing efforts to strengthen institutional governance and uphold professional excellence across Leyte and neighboring provinces.

(LIZBETH ANN A. ABELLA)

A welcome drive

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Reports that DPWH Secretary Vince Dizon is riding along the Maharlika Highway from Quezon to Bicol, then to Samar, and onward to Mindanao deserve public commendation. If true, he should be seeing the real and painful condition of the highway, especially its most neglected and abused segments. It is a welcome move, but only if it leads to decisive action rather than staged publicity.

The Samar portion of the Maharlika Highway has long been a national embarrassment. Motorists and commuters endure broken pavements, uneven surfaces, recurring potholes, and stretches that seem permanently under repair yet never improved. Travel that should take hours drags on endlessly, damaging vehicles, risking lives, and exhausting ordinary people who rely on this road for work, trade, and basic mobility. A firsthand ride through Samar should leave no room for excuses, sanitized reports, or technical justifications that downplay the daily suffering on the ground.

For decades, rehabilitation funds for this highway have been allocated and reallocated, yet the road remains largely in poor condition. The pattern is familiar: short repairs, substandard materials, quick resurfacing that collapses after a few months, followed by another budget request. This cycle has fueled persistent suspicions that public funds meant for lasting infrastructure have been siphoned off by corrupt figures protected by silence and routine. The Samar highway stands as a physical record of failed oversight and tolerated wrongdoing.

If the secretary truly travels this route, he should also see the deeper problem beyond cracked asphalt. He should recognize how poor road conditions strangle local economies, delay emergency response times, raise transport costs, and isolate communities already burdened by poverty and disasters. The Maharlika Highway is not a decorative project; it is a lifeline. When it is allowed to decay, the state effectively abandons the people who depend on it.

There needs to be a firm, transparent, and uncompromising action. Independent audits of past and ongoing projects, strict accountability for contractors and officials, public disclosure of project details, and the use of durable standards instead of cosmetic repairs must become non-negotiable. The cycle of corruption and neglect of the Maharlika Highway in Samar must be broken so it can finally serve its purpose as a road for progress rather than a monument to plunder.

Potted wisdom

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I stood in a wet market recently, staring at a small bundle of chili and a few sprigs of spring onions priced as if they were luxury items. That moment made the message painfully clear: relying entirely on the market for everyday food has become a quiet but costly mistake. Growing vegetables and spices at home is no longer a hobby; it is a practical response to a stubborn reality.

The prices of basic kitchen staples have been climbing with little mercy. Tomatoes, onions, garlic, ginger, chili—items that once felt ordinary now demand careful budgeting and second thoughts. Each visit to the market feels like a test of patience and restraint, where one must choose what to leave behind. This is not about indulgence or lifestyle trends; it is about survival at the household level, where every peso now carries more weight than before.

Planting at home changes the relationship between food and money. A pot of chili by the window or a cluster of pechay in recycled containers quietly cuts daily expenses without fanfare. No plastic bags, no sudden price hikes, no panic buying. When something is needed, it is simply picked, washed, and used. The savings may seem small at first, but they accumulate steadily, the way quiet habits often do.

There is also a certain satisfaction in knowing exactly where food comes from. Home-grown vegetables are not rushed by profit or soaked in chemicals for transport and shelf life. They grow at their own pace, responding to sunlight, water, and care. Even modest harvests feel honest. In a time when trust in food sources is often shaky, honesty matters.

Space is no longer a convincing excuse. Buckets, old basins, empty bottles, broken pails—these have all proven capable of holding soil and life. Balconies, doorsteps, rooftops, and window ledges can host kangkong, basil, mint, tomatoes, and spring onions. Gardening has quietly adapted to urban limits, proving that abundance does not always need land; sometimes it only needs intention.

Planting also restores a sense of control often lost to inflation and supply problems. Watching leaves grow where there was once bare soil counters the helplessness that rising prices bring. It teaches patience, attentiveness, and respect for effort. Failures happen, of course, but even they sharpen awareness and discipline—qualities useful far beyond the garden.

There is humor, too, in discovering that a once-forgotten pot has suddenly produced something edible. It feels like finding spare coins in an old pocket, except better, because it feeds the body and calms the mind. Neighbors notice, conversations start, cuttings are shared, and what began as a private effort slowly becomes communal. Food, after all, has always been social.

The answer does not lie in grand programs or complicated solutions. It begins quietly, with soil under the nails and seeds pressed into waiting pots. When households grow even a fraction of what they consume, dependence eases, and resilience grows. In a time of rising prices and shrinking patience, planting at home is a small, steady act of wisdom.

Entrepreneurship 2026: Riding the wave of what’s next

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Entrepreneurship in 2026 is expected to be shaped by several key trends, driven by technological advancements, changing consumer preferences, and evolving economic landscapes. Here are some of the most significant emerging trends:

AI-Powered Business Solutions

Artificial intelligence (AI) is expected to become increasingly integrated into various aspects of small business operations. AI-driven analytics for specific industries, cloud-based collaboration suites, and compliance-focused SaaS products are anticipated to gain traction. Small businesses may leverage AI for automating tasks, enhancing customer experiences, and making data-driven decisions.

Sustainability and the Circular Economy

Sustainability is no longer just a buzzword but a core business value. Entrepreneurs are increasingly focusing on sustainable practices, including adopting circular economy models, minimizing waste, and creating environmentally friendly products. Consumer demand for sustainable and ethically sourced products is driving this trend, creating opportunities for businesses that prioritize environmental and social responsibility.

E-commerce and Social Commerce

E-commerce continues to grow, and small businesses are leveraging online channels to reach customers. Social commerce, particularly through platforms like TikTok, is becoming increasingly popular, allowing brands to connect with younger audiences and drive sales directly through social media. Direct-to-consumer (DTC) models are also gaining traction, enabling businesses to build direct relationships with customers and control their brand experience.

Niche Markets and Hyper-Personalization

Entrepreneurs are finding success by targeting niche markets with specialized products and services. Hyper-personalization, tailoring products and services to individual customer needs and preferences, is also on the rise. This trend is driven by consumers’ desire for unique and customized experiences.

Remote Work and Distributed Teams

The shift towards remote work is creating opportunities for entrepreneurs to build distributed teams and access talent globally. Businesses are leveraging technology to facilitate remote collaboration and communication, reducing overhead costs and increasing flexibility.

The Longevity Economy

With an aging global population, the “longevity economy” is emerging as a significant area of opportunity. This includes developing products and services that cater to the needs of older adults, such as smart technology to improve their quality of life and wellness programs tailored to their specific needs.

Creative Financing Models

Entrepreneurs are exploring alternative financing models beyond traditional bank loans. Crowdfunding, angel investors, and venture capital are becoming increasingly popular options for startups seeking funding. Bootstrapping, where entrepreneurs self-fund their ventures, also remains a viable strategy.

Small Businesses on Large Platforms

Large online platforms like Amazon, Etsy, and Shopify continue to provide avenues for individuals to launch and scale their businesses. These platforms offer access to a vast customer base and a range of tools and services to support entrepreneurs.

Cybersecurity

With the increasing reliance on technology, cybersecurity is becoming a top priority for small businesses. Entrepreneurs are investing in cybersecurity solutions to protect their data and systems from cyber threats.
By understanding and adapting to these emerging trends, entrepreneurs can position themselves for success in the evolving business landscape of 2026.
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If you have any questions or would like to share your thoughts on the column, feel free to send an email to jca.bblueprint@gmail.com. Looking forward to connecting with you!

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