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Crisha Mae Tajaros wins first gold for Leyte, ignites EVRAA 2026 campaign

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LEYTE’S FIRST GOLD. Crisha Mae Tajaros (right), gold medalist in the Secondary Girls 3,000-meter run, shares a celebratory moment with DepEd Eastern Visayas Regional Director Al Ronilo Firmo (left) after giving Leyte Division its first medal at the 2026 EVRAA Meet in Baybay City on March 2. (EVRAA FACEBOOK)
LEYTE’S FIRST GOLD. Crisha Mae Tajaros (right), gold medalist in the Secondary Girls 3,000-meter run, shares a celebratory moment with DepEd Eastern Visayas Regional Director Al Ronilo Firmo (left) after giving Leyte Division its first medal at the 2026 EVRAA Meet in Baybay City on March 2.
(EVRAA FACEBOOK)

BAYBAY CITY — Leyte Division opened its medal hunt in style at the 2026 Eastern Visayas Regional Athletic Association (EVRAA) Meet as Crisha Mae Tajaros captured the first gold for the province in the Secondary Girls 3,000-meter run on Monday, March 2.
The victory, achieved at the New Binaybayon Sports Complex, gave Leyte’s 838-strong delegation an early boost in its bid for overall championship.

“Crisha Mae’s triumph is a shining example of what our athletes can achieve through hard work and determination. This win marks the start of a remarkable journey for her and the Leyte Division team,” said Department of Education (DepEd) Leyte Division Superintendent Mariza Magan.

Tajaros has built an impressive track record, winning gold at the 2025 Palarong Pambansa in Ilocos Norte and recently securing a silver medal in the 3,000-meter run at the 14th ASEAN Schools Games in Brunei, the Philippines’ first podium finish at the tournament.
“Crisha Mae has set the bar high for our young athletes, and we expect great things from her and the rest of the Leyte Division team,” Magan added.

The DepEd Eastern Visayas Regional Office, which organizes the annual competition, hailed Tajaros’ performance as “a moment of pride, a triumph of endurance, and a victory for Leyte.”

“Crisha Mae dominated the track, proving that champions are built through discipline, resilience, and heart. Every stride reflected months of preparation, sacrifice, and an unbreakable spirit to bring honor to Leyte,” the regional office said.

The office further noted that the victory “sets the tone for EVRAA 2026—strong, focused, and fearless,” emphasizing that the win symbolizes what young athletes can achieve when passion meets perseverance.

The weeklong EVRAA Meet, Eastern Visayas’ largest inter-school sports tournament, has drawn over 10,000 participants, including student-athletes, coaches, trainers, and officials from 13 schools divisions.

The competition also serves as a qualifier to select the region’s representatives for the upcoming Palarong Pambansa in Agusan del Sur.

(RONALD O. REYES)

Gov. Evardone orders upgrades for Eastern Samar’s shelter for abused women, children

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BALAY DARANGPAN. Eastern Samar Governor Ralph Vincent Evardone issued an order to repair the `Balay Darangpan’, a province-run temporary shelter for neglected and abused women and chindren and ensure safer and more humane living conditions for its residents. (EASTERN SAMAR PROVINCIAL INFORMATION OFFICE)
BALAY DARANGPAN. Eastern Samar Governor Ralph Vincent Evardone issued an order to repair the `Balay Darangpan’, a province-run temporary shelter for neglected and abused women and chindren and ensure safer and more humane living conditions for its residents.
(EASTERN SAMAR PROVINCIAL INFORMATION OFFICE)

TACLOBAN CITY — Eastern Samar Governor Ralph Vincent Evardone has ordered an assessment and renovation of ‘Balay Darangpan’, a province-run temporary shelter for neglected and abused women and children in Eastern Samar, to ensure safer and more humane living conditions for its residents.

Balay Darangpan, established in 2001, operates under the Provincial Social Welfare and Development Office (PSWDO) and serves as a temporary refuge for vulnerable women and children from various towns across the province.

The facility provides protection, basic needs, and psychosocial support to residents who have experienced abuse, neglect, and other forms of hardship.

During his inspection, Evardone was joined by representatives from the PSWDO and the Provincial Engineering Office, including department head Engr. Sixto Limbauan.

The team evaluated the structural condition of the building and identified areas requiring repair and upgrading to enhance safety, comfort, and overall functionality.

Currently, the center houses nine children under the supervision of four house parents who work on a rotating schedule to ensure round-the-clock care and guidance.

The governor emphasized the importance of maintaining a secure and child-friendly environment, noting that many of the residents have endured traumatic experiences at a young age. He said the provincial government must ensure that the shelter provides not only protection but also a nurturing space that supports healing and recovery.

Provincial officials said the planned renovations will focus on improving living quarters, strengthening structural integrity, and upgrading essential facilities. The initiative aims to enable Balay Darangpan to continue functioning not just as a temporary shelter, but as a safe haven where residents can rebuild their lives with dignity and hope.

(ROEL T. AMAZONA)

Injured sparrow hawk rescued, released in Ormoc; public urged to protect wildlife

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RESCUED. An injured sparrow hawk was successfully treated and returned to the wild after being rescued in Ormoc City on February 12, 2026. (PHOTO COURTESY)
RESCUED. An injured sparrow hawk was successfully treated and returned to the wild after being rescued in Ormoc City on February 12, 2026.
(PHOTO COURTESY)

TACLOBAN CITY — An injured sparrow hawk was successfully treated and returned to the wild after a coordinated rescue and rehabilitation effort by local authorities in Ormoc City on February 12, 2026.

The bird was turned over by a concerned resident to the City Environment and Natural Resources Office (City ENRO) after it was found injured and in need of assistance. To ensure its safety and prevent further harm, the hawk was temporarily secured while awaiting proper assessment.

Upon turnover, the bird was examined by veterinarians from the City Veterinary Office. The medical team found minor injuries and immediately administered appropriate medication along with multivitamins to aid its recovery. Following veterinary advice, the hawk was placed under close observation for two days to monitor its condition and response to treatment.

After showing clear signs of improvement and regaining strength, the sparrow hawk was released back into its natural habitat.

City officials said the successful rescue highlights the importance of swift reporting and inter-agency coordination in protecting local wildlife. Authorities emphasized that wild birds and other native species are protected under Republic Act No. 9147, also known as the Wildlife Resources Conservation and Protection Act, which prohibits the hunting, possession, and harm of wildlife without proper authorization.

Residents are encouraged to report injured, distressed, or displaced wildlife to the City ENRO or the Bureau of Fire Protection to ensure proper rescue and handling procedures.
Local officials said community vigilance plays a crucial role in preserving biodiversity and maintaining ecological balance in urban and rural areas alike.

(ROEL T. AMAZONA)

Paralyzing revenge

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Iran’s move to close the Strait of Hormuz and attack oil tankers is a reckless escalation that endangers the global economy. It’s, accordingly, to take revenge against the US-Israeli strikes that had eliminated Iran’s senior leadership. But retaliation that weaponizes a critical sea lane cannot be justified under any claim of grievance and must be firmly opposed.

Tehran frames its actions as payback for the joint strikes, which it says targeted top leaders amid unrest. Whatever the competing narratives around those strikes and Iran’s internal repression, closing an international passage used by the world for energy transit crosses a clear line. Maritime chokepoints are not bargaining chips; turning them into battlefields invites wider conflict and harms states far removed from the original dispute.

The immediate consequence is a squeeze on oil supply. Roughly a fifth of globally traded oil moves through the Strait, and even a brief disruption jolts the markets. Tanker attacks drive insurance costs sky-high, reroute shipping, and pull barrels off the market, pushing prices upward at a pace that diplomacy cannot match. Energy shocks ripple into transport, food, and manufacturing, turning geopolitical brinkmanship into daily hardship.

The damage falls hardest on poorer importing nations, including the Philippines. Higher fuel prices raise electricity rates, inflate the cost of basic goods, and strain public transport and fisheries. Governments with limited fiscal space face a cruel choice between subsidies they cannot sustain and price pass-throughs that punish households least able to absorb them. None of these advances human rights in Iran or security in the region.

The answer is not more escalation but decisive international action. Shipping through Hormuz must be protected under international law, tanker attacks must be condemned without equivocation, and pressure must be applied—through sanctions enforcement and multilateral diplomacy—to reopen the waterway. Energy consumers should accelerate diversification and emergency stock releases to blunt the shock, while all parties step back from actions that turn global lifelines into weapons.

Sad reunion

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The last time many Filipino relatives truly stand shoulder to shoulder is beside a coffin, under a white tent, with folding chairs scraping the concrete and coffee going cold. Death becomes the appointment that everyone finally honors. I find this quite sad, and quietly tragic.

I have watched this pattern repeat itself too many times to dismiss it as a coincidence. Weddings are postponed, birthdays reduced to greetings on a screen, reunions endlessly rescheduled because someone has overtime, another has a deadline, another is “too tired from work.” Then one dies, and suddenly time loosens its grip. Leave credits appear, long drives are endured, and plane tickets are bought without complaint. The dead, of course, no longer benefit from the effort.

Work is the most convenient and most accepted excuse. Filipinos are proud workers—resilient, reliable, willing to sacrifice rest for responsibility. But somewhere along the way, busyness has been mistaken for virtue, and absence has been normalized. We say “next time” with such ease that it begins to sound like a promise, even when experience tells us it rarely happens.

What makes wakes so crowded is not just grief, but guilt. Conversations begin with apologies: Ang tagal nating hindi nagkita, sayang, ngayon lang tayo nagkasama. Laughter sneaks in between prayers, stories are exchanged, food is shared, and for a moment, the family looks whole again. That brief warmth is real—but it is painfully ironic that it blooms only when someone is already gone.

There is something unsettling about how death becomes a social magnet. The deceased turns into the unwilling host of a reunion they will never witness. Candles flicker, relatives reconnect, old misunderstandings soften, and yet the one person who could have enjoyed seeing everyone together lies silent. It feels like offering flowers to someone who can no longer see color.

Filipino culture is rich in family values, but this habit exposes a contradiction. We claim closeness, yet practice distance. We praise togetherness, yet delay it indefinitely. The wake becomes proof that gathering was always possible—it simply lacked urgency until death supplied it.

I am not blind to the pressures people carry. Jobs are demanding, commutes are brutal, and survival leaves little room for sentiment. Still, if time can be carved out for mourning, it can be carved out for living as well. A shared meal, an ordinary Sunday visit, a reunion with no tragedy attached, should not feel like an extravagance.

Perhaps the quiet lesson here is simple and uncomfortable: do not wait for a coffin to summon family. Gather while voices are strong, laughter is loud, and stories can still be corrected by the people who lived them. Reunions should be gifts to the living, not condolences to the dead.

Beyond fossil fuels, the need for other energy sources

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As the United States and Israel pound the defiant Iran, the need for alternative sources of energy source becomes a thunderous voice. Every time war erupts in the Middle East, the Philippines pays the price. The US–Israel invasion of Iran will once again s raise oil prices soaring, and Leyte and Samar are left at the mercy of forces far beyond our shores.
Kay anon ga diri kita maniguro pag pamilng hin iba na source ?

Eastern Visayas already suffers from poverty rates around 30%—far higher than the national average of 18%. Now, rising fuel costs make shipping goods between islands more expensive, farmers struggle to move their harvests, and families relying on diesel generators face unbearable electricity bills. This cycle repeats every time global oil markets tremble.

History has shown us the danger of dependence: the 1973 oil crisis drove inflation above 30% in the Philippines, and the 1990 Gulf War plunged us into blackouts. Today’s conflict threatens to replay those scars. But unlike before, we now have a choice.

Leyte is blessed with geothermal energy, a resource that powers thousands of homes. Samar has untapped potential in wind and solar. The seas around us could fuel tidal power. These are not dreams—they are lifelines. Investing in renewable energy is not just about protecting the environment; it is about protecting our people from the next oil shock.

The message is simple: Eastern Visayas must break free from oil dependence. If we fail to act, every distant conflict will continue to dictate the price of rice on our tables. But if we seize our natural strengths, we can turn crisis into opportunity—and finally light our homes with power that is truly ours.

We must look for Alternative Sources of Energy and celebrate the chance . We must not sow doubt on the Electric Cars and Solar Panel that somehow ease our dependence on crudo.

Our attitude must be curious and open to the Alternative Source such as Solar, Battery Power, Wind and even Hdropower.

We must not be victims and hostages to fossil fuels power!

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