Thursday, March 27, 2008

Speech for Uncle II

Another speech for Uncle...

SPEECH FOR PCC MEDALLION/RECOGNITION DAY
APRIL 2, 2008
THEME: EMPOWERING STUDENT AWARDEES MARCHING ONWARDS TO THE PATH OF PRODUCTIVITY

A PLEASANT DAY TO EVERYONE!

Before I proceed, I would like to send my respects to our energetic principal ___________________, to the teaching and non-teaching personnel, the student organization officers and members, our guests and visitors, the beaming parents, the awardees, I salute you!

Recognition day is a day that is filled with mixed emotions, naaalala ko pa noon nung ako rin ay umatend din ng recognition day namin tulad niyo , hindi lang ako ang excited at may halong nerbiyos nung araw na yun, pati mga magulang ko… (A brief story about your experience during college recognition day, when, what school, etc)

Today’s theme is very much appropriate to each student and parents: EMPOWERING STUDENT AWARDEES MARCHING ONWARDS TO THE PATH OF PRODUCTIVITY. Truly, as your theme espouses, empowerment is today’s key word in life in order to succeed and to survive. Sad to say but in reality a lot of college students in our country are not yet that empowered to face life, to face the real world… As student awardees you are the cream of the crop, you must be emboldened and empowered with character mad of steel, with persistence and determination that never stops… In connection with empowering our youth, the Bicol University and other political leaders like Gov. Salceda, Vice Gov. Sael and yours truly are supporting the “Kooperatiba ng Kabataan para sa Kaunlaran,” a youth cooperative based on Bicol University Main Campus, the contact person for Third District is my nephew and once a faculty of these revered institution.

Empowerment is the key to productivity… For no one can be productive when he/she is not empowered! Empowerment starts with the right mind set and a faith anchored in God. Empowerment is standing on your own two feet and being independent… Empowerment is smiling amidst tons of problems… Empowerment is saying impossible is nothing!
Let us celebrate this achievement of yours by first thanking God… Let us not forget that! For the awardees let us celebrate this day by thanking our parents! Look into their eyes and from the bottom of your hearts say thank you and hug them! Let us celebrate this day by thanking our teachers, kahit na yung binabansagan niyong terror, pasalamatan tabi… For our teachers helped mold us into who we are now and to where we will be. Thank your classmates, your schoolmates, your gf/bf, your crushes, your janitor, si tiya sa kantin at mga tindahan sa labas, lahat ng naging parte ng yung college life! Because without them your college years will never be complete! Remember this – having an attitude of gratitude is one of the secrets to success and productivity!

But as awardees it is not only about celebrations, it is also about facing a new challenge! A new future of pursuing opportunities and productivity! We all know that generally, everybody’s dream is to go to work or start a business and be rich. Hope you have already evaluated yourself and assessed your strength, weakness, opportunity and threat. Because in reality, continuing schooling, looking for a job, starting a business is never that easy. Sa mga awardees at sa lahat ng mga students na naririto ngayong araw na ito dapat maging mature na tayo, don’t expect everything from your parents, from the government, today as college students let us help them! Before I forget palkpakan natin ang ating pro – education na Gobernador, Gobernador Joey Salceda sa pagbigay ng scholarship sa atin. Ladies and gentlemen we all know that life is not a bed of roses, but with God and a proper mind set, we will be empowered and productive!
Let me finish my speech with an excerpt from a song:
Walk on… Walk on…
With faith in your heart…
And you’ll never walk alone…
Yes, You’ll never walk alone…
To the parents and student awardees… walk on… have faith in God, in yourself, we might face hardships and difficulties but those obstacles may be looked upon as challenge and inspiration for empowerment… to walk on… to be productive… to succeed…

Thank you very much! Facing you is such a moving experience for me!
Congratulations and Mabalos!
Albay mabuhay!

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Speech for Uncle I

Another speech for my Uncle...

SPEECH FOR SAN PASCUAL, LIBON HIGHSCHOOL
MARCH 28, 2008
THEME: THE FILIPINO GRADUATES: CELEBRATING ACHIEVEMENTS, PURSUING OPPORTUNITIES

A PLEASANT DAY TO EVERYONE!

Before I proceed, I would like to send my respects to our energetic principal ___________________, to the teaching and non-teaching personnel, the PTA officers and members, the barangay council of San Pascual headed by ________________________, our guests and visitors, the beaming parents, the graduates, I salute you!

Graduation day is a day that is filled with mixed emotions, naaalala ko pa noon nung ako rin ay grumadweyt tulad niyo , hindi lang ako ang excited at may halong nerbiyos nung araw na yun, pati mga magulang ko… (A brief story about your experience during your high school graduation, when, what school, etc)

Today’s theme is very much appropriate to each graduate and parents. THE FILIPINO GRADUATES: CELEBRATING ACHIEV EMENTS, PURSUING OPPORTUNITIES. Truly, as your theme espouses, let us celebrate this achievement of yours, you have finished four grueling years of hard work as high school students, baka yung iba higit pa sa four years, pero ang importante nakapagtapos pa rin. Let us celebrate this day by first thanking God… Let us not forget that! For the graduates let us celebrate this day by thanking our parents! Look into their eyes and from the bottom of your hearts say thank you and hug them! Let us celebrate this day by thanking our teachers, kahit na yung binabansagan niyong terror, pasalamatan tabi… For our teachers helped mold us into who we are now and to where we will be. Thank your classmates, your schoolmates, your gf/bf, your crushes, your janitor, si tiya sa kantin at mga tindahan sa labas, lahat ng naging parte ng yung high school life! Because without them your secondary years will never be complete! Remember this – having an attitude of gratitude is one of the secrets to success!

But graduating from high school is not only about celebrations, it is also about facing a new challenge! A new future of pursuing opportunities! We all know that generally, everybody’s dream is to go to college, because that is where much more opportunities abound. Hope you have already taken your entrance exams and applied for a course that is your liking. But in reality others will not make it due to financial constraints. Sa mga graduates ngayong araw na ito dapat maging mature na tayo, don’t expect everything from your parents, from the government, today as graduates let us help them! For those na hindi kaya ng mga parents pag paaralin look for ways na makapag aral tayo. Meron tayong Libon Community College, na malapit lang naman kaya lesser ang operational cost, isa pa ay mayroong scholarship sa LiCom ang ating pro-education na Gobernador – Gobernador Joey Salceda! We can become working students to help our family. Ladies and gentlemen we all know that life is not a bed of roses, but with God and a proper mind set, I do believe everything will be fine!

Let me finish my speech with an excerpt from a song:
Walk on… Walk on…
With faith in your heart…
And you’ll never walk alone…
Yes, You’ll never walk alone…

To the parents and graduating class… walk on… have faith in God, in yourself, we might face hardships and difficulties but those obstacles may be looked upon as challenge and inspiration to walk on… to succeed…

Thank you very much! Facing you is such a moving experience for me!
Again… Congratulations!
Mabalos!
Albay mabuhay!

POST DISASTER REPORT

WASH Cluster

WATSAN FACILITIES
EVACUATION CENTERS (as of June 28, 2007)

13 (87%) – shelter standards (1 rm:20 persons)
13 (87%) – safe drinking water standards
(1 water point: 200 persons)
6 (40%) – latrine standards (1 toilet:20 persons)
15 (100%) – meets the garbage disposal standards

12 evacuation centers
3 transit sites (Taysan, Anislag & Travesia)

What has been done
Conducted initial rapid health assessment
Erected tent hospital in Lidao City
Established joint PHO-DOH CHD 5 command post
Provision of drugs, medicines, water tanks and tents to hospitals and RHUs
Distribution of cadaver bags and lime to local DCCs
Deployment of medical teams to devastated sites and evacuation centers
Distribution of compact food to service providers and victims
Provincial issuance LGUs re: disposal of dead persons
Coordination with provincial agencies for evacuation center needs
Disease surveillance in the evacuation centers and fast- tracked FHSIS reports
Emergency purchase of drugs, medicines and supplies (P 5.4M)
Daily health bulletins re: WATSAN
Coordination with local health workers (15 mun. and 3 cities)
Regular weekly cluster meetings
Drinking water safety monitoring and sanitation needs in evacuations centers and in the community
Nutrition assessment surveys
Vaccination activities in evacuation centers
Health infrastructure damage assessment
Hospital equipment inventory
Fumigation of evacuation centers
Supervision of latrine construction, hand pump installations and water filtration systems
Health information dissemination
Critical incident stress debriefing
Seminar workshops for health personnel on Sphere standards, health promotion, bio-sand filters
Distribution of health kits, drugs/medicines and supplies
Seminar workshops for health personnel on Sphere standards, health promotion, bio-sand filters
Distribution of health kits, drugs/medicines and supplies
Receipt of donations equipment, drugs/medicineswater tanks, bladders, filtration machines and analysis kitshealth kits, hand pumps, chamber pots
Continued implementation of regular health programs in the evacuation centers
Establishment of databases for health
Rehabilitation plans formulation for: health infrastructures and equipment and health programs : environmental sanitation, CDD, EPI, disease surveillance and nutrition
Request for assistance on information processing soft wares from NGOs

INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE
Donations/Assistance from Foreign Governments, Aid Agencies and INGOs
Canada
OXFAM
Malaysia
USAID
Spain
AusAid
Singapore
Telecoms Sans Frontier
Indonesia
World Vision
Japan
Care Philippines
China
Mercy Malaysia
Sweden
JICA
Republic of Korea
U.S.A
Medicins sans Frontieres

UN-OCHA CERF ( Central Emergency Response Fund) = $2,654,255

Components:
Health
Nutrition & WASH (Water, Sanitation and Hygiene)
Food Aid & Logistics Support
Emergency Shelter
Non-Food Items & Logistics
Emergency Family Care & Support Packages
Emergency Maternal Care
Agriculture

Water & Sanitation
OXFAM GB - latrines, water containers, bath areas and hygiene kits, test kits, water bladders
Spanish Government – water purification machine - Guinobatan
Global Medic / PMSEA / MGB – water purifiers - Daraga, Legazpi
UNICEF – declogging of septic tanks by trucks; water tanks, latrines, hand pumps, school toilets, tents, water containers, water pipes
World Vision – Sto. Domingo, Bacacay– garbage collection
Mercy Malaysia – hygiene kits
Agua Vida – water purifier – Guinobatan
Daughters of Charity – latrines – Daraga
IFRC – water containers, water pump, hygiene kits
UNFPA – hygiene & reproductive kits, health promotion, generators
WHO – medical kits, hygiene kits, health promotion, generators
TzuShi Foundation – water purification machine in Daraga
IFRC/PNRC – household toilet in selected communities
City Government of Manila – water purification machines

Medical Teams – conducted consultations
Mercy Malaysia –Malilipot, Malinao, Legazpi
Mercy Singapore –Malilipot, Legazpi
Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) - Daraga
Veterans’ Memorial Medical Center – Daraga
PAGCOR – Legazpi
Tsu-Zhi Medical – Daraga (with minor surgery)
Australian Aid International – Legazpi, Daraga
Philippine Public Safety College – Legazpi
Handicapped International – Daraga, Camalig, Guinobatan
ABS-CBN Foundation – Sto. Domingo
Association of Medical Doctors of Asia (AMDA)
Manila Doctors Hospital Med. Mission Group
Bureau of Fire Protection Medical Team – Sto. Domingo
Daughters of Charity – Daraga
Lions International – Tabaco & Legazpi Cities

Drugs and Medicines
UNICEF
Ministry of Health of Indonesia
Ministry of Health of Malaysia
Medicins sans Frontier
UNESCO - ITT
ABS-CBN Foundation
DZGB/DWGB fm
Daughters of Charity
WHO

Stress Debriefing Services
Scientology – Daraga
World Vision Dev’t Foundation – Daraga, Sto. Domingo
Ateneo de Manila/LaSalle – Daraga, Sto. Domingo
UERMMC – Guinobatan
DSWD – Legazpi City, Daraga, Camalig & Guinobatan
SAC/COPE/Coastal Core/Christian Aid

Rehabilitation of Health Infrastructure
Medicins sans Frontieres
WHO
UNFPA

Logistics
World Food Program (WFP)
International Organization for Migration (IOM)

Others
Operation Compassion (OC)
Albay Disaster Response Network (ADRN)
A Single Drop
AQ Foundation
Bicol Center for Community Development (BCCD)
Peace Corps
U.S. Navy (PELELIU)
U.S. Marine Expeditionary Forces

HEALTH REGULATION

Regulation Function
The present regulatory structure of the PHO is narrowly focused on sanitary clearances only because the health regulatory function was not devolved and has stayed with the DOH.

Clearances & Certifications
Sanitary and Site Clearances :
1. Drinking Water Site Survey and Clearances – issued before the issuance of the certificate of potability of water which is a requisites to a propose construction or repair/improvement of any water supply systems (Level I, II and III).
2. School Site Sanitary Survey and Clearances – issued before a school, whether private or public school is to be established or constructed.
3. Transport/Vehicle Sanitary Clearance – issued to all vehicle use for the transportation of any food, drinking water, wine and beverages for human consumption.
4. Other Sanitary Survey/Inspection and Clearances – such as sanitary inspection of burial ground/cemetery, sanitary inspection of crematorium, sanitary inspection of funeral establishment/morgue, sanitary survey and clearances of industrial hygiene, markets and abattoirs, public swimming and bathing places, hotels, motels, lodging/boarding houses and the likes, restaurants and other food establishments, clinics, parlors and sauna bath, and other public places.

Certificate of Drinking Water Potability – issued to certify that the water quality of any water supply system has passed the Philippine National Standard for Drinking Water as prescribed under the Code on Sanitation of the Philippines(PD 856).
Environmental Health Impact Certificate – issued to all proposed construction, repair or improvement of any projects, future programs and policies which may have a potential effects on health of the population and the distribution of these effects within the population and to help identify and consider the potential or actual health and equity impacts of a proposal on a given population and environment.

Monitoring
Public Health
ACT for Health = Albay Composite Team
DOH Program Coordinators
PIR = Program Implementation Review (PHO)

Hospitals
Internal Control Unit (PGA)
DOH Standards & Licensing
PhilHealth Accreditation Team
INTERLOCAL HEALTH ZONE, Albay, 2006

AID FOR HEALTH [Albay Integrated Developers for Health] (First District)
Tiwi
Malinao
Tabaco City
Bacacay
Malilipot
Sto. Domingo
Ziga Mem. Dist. Hosp.

CRADLEMAN Health Zone {Second District)
Camalig
Rapu-Rapu
Daraga
Legazpi City
Manito
Bicol Regional Teaching & Training Hosp.

JOLLIPPOGUI Health Zone (Third District)
Jovellar
Ligao City
Libon
Pioduran
Polangui
Oas
Guinobatan
JB Duran Mem. Dist. Hosp.

Drinking Water Quality Monitoring Committee

Municipalities/Cities with DWQMC:
Legazpi City
Rapu-Rapu
Malinao
Oas
Guinobatan
Camalig
Malilipot
Tiwi
Polangui
Bacacay
Sto. Domingo
Tabaco City
Libon


Municipalities/Cities without DWQMC:
1. Manito
2. Daraga
3. Jovellar
4. Pioduran
5. Ligao City

Diabetes Club, Albay, 2006
Municipalities/Cities with Diabetes Club

Malinao
Guinobatan
Tiwi
Oas
Malilipot
Polangui
Tabaco City
Manito
Sto. Domingo
Libon
Daraga
Bacacay
Camalig
Ligao City
Jovellar
Legazpi City

Municipalities without Diabetes Club
Pioduran
RapuRapu

Sentrong Sigla Facilities, Albay, 2006

With Accreditation
Malinao
Bacacay
Tabaco City
Sto. Domingo
Malilipot
Legazpi City
Daraga
Camalig
Guinobatan
Ligao City
Oas

Without Accreditation
Manito
Jovellar
Pioduran *
Rapu-Rapu
Libon
Polangui
Tiwi *

* on process

TB LINC

LINKING INITIATIVES and NETWORKING to CONTROL TUBERCULOSIS

TB situation
Global Rank: 9th among 22 high TB burden countries
Regional Rank: 3rd among WPR countries
TB Incidence (new smear +) = 133/100,000
Case detection rate (2005) = 73%
Cure rate (new smear +) = 81%
Success rate (new smear +) = 89%

Challenges
Wide variation in program performance across regions and provinces
Inaccessible DOTS services in some areas
Low level of participation by the private practitioners
Poor health-seeking behavior of communities
Weak local health systems

Background of TB LINC
USAID-funded
Managed by the Philippine Business for Social Progress (PBSP) with 5 consortium partners
5 years (2006-2011) $12.5 Million
Primarily, will provide technical assistance (TA)
Will be implemented in 21 provinces / cities

Project Goal
Assist the GOP attain the MDGs (reduce by half the TB prevalence and mortality) by contributing to the achievement of the following targets;
70% case detection rate
85% success rate

Project Objectives
1. Improve the policy, financing and regulatory environment
2. Improve human and systems capacity for quality DOTS implementation
3. Improve utilization of DOTS facilities and services, and influence behaviors/attitudes

Project targets
80% of LGUs increased case notification rate
80% of LGUs with success rate of at least 85%
75% of LGUs purchased Cat. 3 anti-TB drugs
70% of DOTS facilities are PhilHealth-accredited
100 PPMDs established
90% of microscopy centers providing DSSM according to national standards
90% of DOTS facilities are without drug stock-outs
Increased proportion of community adopting appropriate health-seeking behavior

Consortium Partners
CODE NGO
League of Provinces of the Philippines
Philippine Academy of Family Physicians
Philippine College of Occupational Medicine
Philippine Pediatrics Society
Chemonics International (U.S.)

Project Approaches
DOH will be the lead agency
Collaborative and coordinated multi-stakeholder involvement
Complementarity other USAID-funded project
Linkage of national, subnational, and local approaches
Sustainable interventions

Other USAID-funded projects
Health Governance (Health-Gov)
Health Policy and Development Program (HPDP)
Sustainable Health Improvement through Empowerment and Local Dev’t (SHIELD)
A2Z
Health promotion and communication (HPC)**
Private Sector Social Mobilization (PRISM)

Project Components

Component 1
Policy and Finance
Component 2
Systems Strengthening
Component 3
DOTS utilization

PROJECT COMPONENTS
Linking Initiatives and Networking to Control Tuberculosis
Strategic Objective: Desired family health sustainably achieved
ARMM: - Participating units achieving at least 85% treatment success rate for TB
National: - Participating units achieving at least 85% treatment success rate for TB

Component 1:
Policy, Financing and Regulatory
Environment for DOTS Implementation Improved
Subcomponents
1.1: Policy environment improved
1.2: Financing improved
1.3: PPMD DOTS scaled-up and sustained
1.4: Coordination and collaboration strengthened

Component 2:
Systems Capacity for Quality DOTS
Implementation
Improved
Subcomponents
2.1: Human resources and institutional capacity for TB control strengthened
2.2: TB lab network strengthened
2.3: Management and supply of quality anti-TB drugs improved
2.4: Management of MDR-TB improved (PMTM)

Component 3:
Utilization of DOTS Facilities/Services and Behavior and Attitude for TB Control and Treatment
Improved
Subcomponents
3.1: Knowledge and health behaviors improved
3.2: Community involvement in TB detection and treatment improved

Component One – Policy and Finance
1.1 Improved Policy Environment
1.2 Improved and Sustained Financing
1.3 Scaled Up and Sustained PPMDs
1.4 Strengthened Coordination and Collaboration

Goal
Improve national and local policy and financing environment to ensure quality and sustainable DOTS implementation

Key Result areas
National and local policies supportive of DOTS (includes localization of issued-policies like CUP and DOLE guidelines)
Increased financial resources for TB control (include LGU support and PhilHealth)
Financially sustainable public and private DOTS clinics
Stakeholder partnerships for TB control

Component Two – Systems Strengthening
2.1 Strengthened Human Resources and Institutional Capacity for TB Control
2.2 Strengthened TB Laboratory Network
2.3 Continued Supply of Quality Anti-TB Drugs and improved TB drug selection and use
2.4 Improved Management of MDR-TB

Goal
Ensure that health care providers, both public and private, provide quality DOTS

KRAs
All DOTS providers had been trained
200 PPMDs are established
Functional TB laboratory network
TB microscopy laboratories are providing diagnostic services according to standards
DOTS services are accessible in difficult areas
Anti-TB drugs are always available
Contributed to addressing MDR-TB

Component Three – DOTS utilization
3.1 Improved Knowledge and Health Seeking Behavior for TB
3.2 Improved Community Involvement in Improving TB Case Detection and Treatment

Goal
Improve utilization of DOTS facilities and services, and behavior and attitudes to TB control and treatment.

KRAs
Community and households adopting appropriate health-seeking behavior
Increased proportion of TB symptomatics promptly consulting DOTS center
Improved adherence to treatment
Empowered TB clients to do advocacy, communication, and social mobilization (ACSM)
More groups supporting TB control

Some key interventions
Geographic convergence of TB initiatives in supply, demand and policy environment
Strengthening local governance
Networking of DOTS providers
Inter-LGU collaboration to TB control
TB control initiatives in resource-poor areas

Engagement process
Series of CA meetings with DOH, other government agencies, developmental partners,
LGU engagement to be coordinated by HealthGov in non-ARMM areas and by SHIELD in ARMM areas
Orientation of the regional / provincial stakeholders
Coordinated planning with province / LGUs
Regional / provincial investment planning in ARMM
TA to be provided based on local needs

Challenges in ARMM
Making DOTS services available in difficult areas: geographically isolated, conflict-areas
DOTS for mobile TB patients e.g. those traveling to Malaysia or Zamboanga City
Culturally sensitive TB communication materials
LGU support to TB control in non-devolved set-up
PhilHealth accreditation of DOTS facilities in resource poor areas

How to contact TB LINC
Dr. Dolores C. Castillo
Chief of Party
TB LINC
Suite 903, 9F Ma. Natividad Bldg.
470 T.M. Kalaw Avenue corner
Cortada St., Malate, Manila 1000
02-5671434

HealthGov

Strengthening Local Governance for Health

Cooperating Agencies

RTI International
In partnership with
JHPIEGO
CEDPA
PNGOC

Where we are:
Over 500 LGUs
23 provinces
6 HIV/AIDS high risk zones
Luzon, Visayas and non-ARMM Mindanao

HIV/AIDS zones:
Clark Development Zone (Angeles, San Fernando)
Metro Manila (Pasay City, Quezon City)
Iloilo-Bacolod
Metro Cebu (Lapu-Lapu, Mandaue, Cebu City)
Zamboanga City
Davao City-General Santos

Our Goal
Together with DOH-CHD, work with LGUs, NGAs, NGOs/CSOs, help to strengthen LGUs’ commitment to and support for public health services, and capacity to provide, manage, and finance quality health services sustainably by providing assistance in:
Developing LGU capacity for continuous participatory problem solving supported by advocacy (DEMAND)
Developing TAP capacity to provide high quality, customer-oriented TA services needed by LGUs (SUPPLY)

Program Areas
Family planning
Maternal and child health
Vitamin A and Micronutrients Supplementation
Tuberculosis
HIV/AIDS
Emerging Infectious Diseases e.g. Avian influenza, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)

What are the Areas for Technical Assistance ?

F1 Reform mechanisms:
Financing (more, better and sustained financing for health)
Regulation (assured quality and affordability of health goods/services)
Service delivery (ensured access and availability of essential basic health packages)
Governance (improved health system performance)



Strengthening key LGU management systems
Improving and expanding LGU financing of key health services
Improving service provider performance
Increasing advocacy on service delivery and financing

Impact/outcomes
Better health outcomes (Improved health sustainably achieved)
Equitable health care financing
More responsive health system (public satisfaction)

Approach
Synergy with FOURmula ONE
Promoting governance for health
Market-driven framework
Strategic use of technical assistance providers (TAPs)
Partnering with DOH, POPCOM, and PhilHealth, NGOs/CSOs

Key Interventions
Strengthen key LGU management systems (IR 1.1)
Improve and expand LGU financing for key health services (IR 1.2)
Improve service provider performance (IR 1.3)
Increase advocacy for service delivery and financing (IR 1.4)
Scoping - consultation meetings
- all regions, provinces
- HIV areas, NGOs/CSOs
Visit to Governors
NGO/CSO Consultation
SDIR / CSR / Financial Mgmt Orientation
Advocacy Activities
Health Planning

USAID TA Teams’ Partnership with DOH, CHDs and LGUs
Facilitate common understanding of health and development, local governance for health, CSR and family health concerns among partners.
Assist LGUs and partners to strengthen local information system for evidence-based participatory decision making.
Assist LGUs and partners adopt HSR consumer/stakeholder participation strategies
Assist in strengthening institutional mechanisms for participatory decision-making.
Assist in developing tools for planning and systems development (local information system; M&E; procurement and logistics; financing and public finance management; quality improvement systems, etc.)
Establish clear policy links between DOH Central Office, CHDs and LGUs.

USAID Technical Assistance Program for Health

SOAG
USAID’s assistance to the Government of the Philippines is defined by a Strategic Objective Agreement (SOAG) between the two parties through DOH, signed in September 2006
SOAG aims to support the DOH’s national health program, represented by the FOURmula ONE for Health Strategy
USAID program also supports other GRPs agencies’ needs for technical assistance. These agencies include PHIC, NNC, POPCOM; DOF, DILG and DOLE

DOH’s FOURmula ONE (F1):
reform mechanisms and impact/outcomes

F1 Reform mechanisms:
Financing (more, better and sustained financing for health)
Regulation (assured quality and affordability of health goods/services)
Service delivery (ensured access and availability of essential basic health packages)
Governance (improved health system performance)

Impact/ outcomes

Better health outcomes
Equitable health care financing
More responsive health system (public satisfaction)

STRATEGIC OBJECTIVE
Improved family health sustainably achieved

INTERMEDIATE RESULT 1
LGU Provision and management of FP/MCH/TB/HIV-AIDS services strengthened

IR 1.1
Key management systems to sustain delivery improved
IR 1.2
LGU financing for key health programs improved
IR 1.3
Performance among service providers improved
IR 1.4
Advocacy for the financing and delivery of health services at the local level increased

INTERMEDIATE RESULT 2
Provision of quality services by private and commercial providers expanded

IR 2.1
Number of TB DOTS and FP service providers in the commercial sector increased
IR 2.2
Quality of commercial sector provision of TB DOTS and FP improved
IR 2.3
Sales of unsubsidized contraceptives increased
IR 2.4
Supply of affordable fortified foods increased

INTERMEDIATE RESULT 3
Greater social acceptance of family planning achieved

IR 3.1
Communications adequately portraying FP as a mainstream health intervention increased
IR 3.2
Key segments of society advocating for the use of FP increased
IR 3.3
Acceptance of FP as a part of routine service package increased

INTERMEDIATE RESULT 4
Policy environment and financing for provision of services improved
IR 4.1
Policies and financing to ensure supply of contraceptive established
IR 4.2
Appropriate legal and regulatory policies to promote provision of services established
IR 4.3
Policies to mobilize financing and resources for key services established

USAID aims to support the Philippines national health strategy, represented by FOURmula ONE

F1 Reform mechanisms:
Financing (more, better and sustained financing for health)
Regulation (assured quality and affordability of health goods/services)
Service delivery (ensured access and availability of essential basic health packages)
Governance (improved health system performance)

USAID’s strategic assistance
IR.1 LGU provision and management of FP/MCH/TB/HIV-AIDS services strengthened
IR.2 Provision of quality services in the commercial sector increased
IR.3 Greater social acceptance of family planning achieved
IR.4 Policy environment and financing for provision of services improved

Impact/outcomes
Better health outcomes (Improved family health sustainably achieved)
Equitable health care financing
More responsive health system (public satisfaction)

USAID Projects

USAID strategic assistance

IR 1. LGU provision and management of FP, MCH, TB, HIV/AIDS services strengthened
IR 2. Provision of quality services in the commercial sector increased
IR 3. Greater social acceptance of family planning achieved
IR 4. Policy environment and financing for provision of services improved

Leads to:
HealthGov, TB LINC, A2Z, ARMM-SHIELD
PRISM, TB LINC, A2Z
Health Communications Project
HPDP

FOURmula 1 FOR HEALTH

By: MA.GLENDA A. FORTUNO, M.D., MPH
Medical Specialist IV
DOH Representative for Albay

Another topic during the Albay Health Summit...

Fourmula One for Health (F1):
DOH Strategic Plan to implement health reforms (2005-2010)
Implementation framework for health sector reforms in the Philippines
Designed to implement critical health interventions as a single package backed by effective management infrastructure and financing arrangements
Engages the entire health sector to get involved in the implementation of health reforms
Invitation to join the collective race against: a. fragmentation of the health system; b. Inequity of health care; c. Impoverishing effects of ill health

General Objective:

To achieve critical reforms with speed, precision and effective coordination directed at improving the quality, efficiency, effectiveness and equity of the Philippine Health system in a manner that is felt and appreciated by Filipinos especially the poor.

Local governance in health (realizations):

There are major health problems. LGU resources are limited. Need for health interventions that are effective, efficient and equitable.
Individual interventions implemented in isolation will not work, it might even do more harm. Need to implement an integrated package of mutually supporting interventions.
Health sector is not just the public health sector but includes the private sector as well. LGU health governance includes involving the private sector.
LGUs should view NGOs/CSOs not as adversaries but as partners in health.
Health sector reform is a complex undertaking; it requires participatory decision-making for it to succeed.

The Micronutrients: Vitamin A, Iron and Zinc

MICRONUTRIENTS

“Called micronutrients because they are needed only in miniscule amounts; these substances are the “magic wands” that enable the body to produce enzymes, hormones, and other substances essential for proper growth and development. As tiny as the amounts are, however, the consequences of their absence are severe” (WHO 2006)

Vitamin A, iron and zinc are micronutrients

What is Vitamin A?
It is an essential nutrient needed by the body for normal sight, growth, reproduction, cell differentiation and immune competence

What are the Consequences of Vitamin A Deficiency Disorders?
23% higher child mortality
More severe infections
Major cause of preventable childhood blindness
Weaker immunity
Poorer growth

What are the Community Consequences of Vitamin A Deficiency Disorders?
More child deaths
More children in hospitals
Higher health care cost
Life-long burden of caring for the blind
More underweight children

How will you know that your Community has Vitamin A Deficiency Disorders?
High Rates of Child Malnutrition, Persistent Diarrhea, Respiratory Infections, Measles
Low Rates of Breatsfeeding
Low intake of Vitamin A - rich foods
Under Five Mortality Rate - (U5 MR > 50 per 1,000 live birth)

What can the Governor/Mayor and Sanggunian do?
Extend your political leadership to the Garantisadong Pambata (GP) Campaign
Ensure enough supply of Vitamin A Capsules at the health center for children with measles, severe pnuemonia, persistent diarrhea and underweight and post partum women

What is Iron?
Essential trace mineral needed for hemoglobin formation
Stored in the liver, bone marrow and spleen
Better absorbed with Vitamin C

What are the Consequences of Iron Deficiency?
Adults:
Fatigue, low work productivity, apathy

Infants:
Low birth weight, increased illness

Children:
Poor attention span, reduced memory
Lower scores on achievement tests
Poor cognitive development

Mothers
Increased illness and maternal deaths



What can the Governor/ Mayor and Sanggunian Do?
Ensure supply of iron supplements for pregnant women, lactating women, infants and children in the health center
Promote exclusive breastfeeding up to 6 months
Promote use of appropriate complementary foods
Ensure supply of deworming drugs in the health center

New Developments
Zinc supplementation decreases the episodes, reduces the duration and severity of diarrhea

Why use Reformulated Oral Rehydration Salts (ORS)?
Reformulated or improved ORS - has reduced glucose and salt (NaCl) concentrations

Shortens diarrhea episodes
Reduces the severity of diarrhea
Minimizes fluid and electrolyte losses
Prevents malnutrition
Prevents complications

A2Z

I am now posting the lectures from the Albay Health Summit where I have attended and Board Member Borja (Uncle Nonon).

A2Z
The Micronutrient Project

Background

1. Vitamin A deficiency and anemia are public health problems.
- the prevalence of VAD and anemia have been increasing in the past decade - the country’s attainment of the MDGs is seriously compromised unless the MN situation is improved

2. Pneumonia, diarrhea and measles are leading causes of child deaths. These childhood illnesses are preventable through MN.

3. The multiple causes of VAD and anemia include inadequate intake of bioavailable vit A and iron, frequent and persistent infections, poor sanitation and hygiene and poor women’s health.

4. Government addresses VAD through vit A supplementation for children 6–59 mo. and high-risk population groups.
- VAS coverage has been declining, while not all LGUs procure VACs for high-risk groups

5. There is no comprehensive National Anemia Reduction Plan, thus no package that addresses the multiple causes of the problem.

6. Deworming which addresses anemia was a component of Garantisadong Pambata in 2006 and 2007 but not in earlier years.

7. While DOH adopted iron supplementation in the control of anemia(DO#181,s2000), provision of iron supplements(along with other health services), is the LGU responsibility.

8. Zinc as an adjunct therapy for diarrhea is not yet in place in the public sector.
- Guidelines for the use of zinc with the low osmolar Oral Rehydration Solution(ORS) have been incorporated in the IMCI algorithm but not all of the health staff has received training/updates

9. While there is a Food Fortification Law (The Philippine Food Fortification Act of 2000 or Republic Act 8976), it has not been fully implemented.
- the quality and coverage of wheat flour and oil fortification are still inadequate
- rice and sugar fortification have been beset with major difficulties
- the Sangkap Pinoy Seal (SPS) Program for processed foods is mainly increasing Vitamin A intake

Overall Approach
Technical Assistance at the National Level

Support policy and program development
Policy review/revision (Micronutrient Supplementation, Food Fortification),
Formulation of National Strategic Plans (Anemia Reduction, Food Fortification) and Policies (use of zinc for diarrhea treatment),
Analysis of national nutrition data for policy
Development, of monitoring and quality control systems for the Food Fortification program)
Strengthening LGU capability to assess, plan, implement and monitor micronutrient programs
Development of management and monitoring tools
Conduct of LGU advocacy fora for support to micronutrient interventions
Communication micro-planning on micronutrient program



A2Z Secondary Objectives
• Increase in VAS coverage among high-risk (severe pneumonia, persistent diarrhea, measles and undernutrition) children
• Increase VAS among post partum women, within one month after delivery
• Increase supplementation coverage for complete iron dosage(1tablet/day for 6 mo or 180 days) among pregnant women
• Increase iron supplementation coverage among children, 6-59 months
• Increase deworming coverage among children, 12-59 months

A2Z Technical Assistance to 29 USG Assisted Areas
Health Gov: 23 Provinces

LUZON
- Albay
- Bulacan
- Cagayan
- Isabela
- Nueva Ecija
- Pangasinan
- Tarlac

VISAYAS
- Aklan
- Bohol
- Capiz
- Negros Occidental
- Oriental Negros

MINDANAO
- Agusan del Norte
- Bukidnon
- Compostela Valley
- Davao del Sur
- Misamis Occidental
- Misamis Oriental
- Sarangani
- South Cotabato
- Zamboanga del Norte
- Zamboanga del Sur
- Zamboanga Sibugay

SHIELD - 6 Provinces

ARMM
- Basilan
- Lanao del Sur
- Maguindanao
- Sharif Kabunsuan
- Sulu
- Tawi-tawi

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

SENTI SOUND TRIP

I'ts already 2am, I can't sleep... The voice of Amy of Evanescence is haunting me with her My Immortal... Axl Rose, Slash, Duff and the rest of the Guns and Roses is serenading me with November Rain...

What's wrong with me? Am I insomiac? I have watched all of my Naruto Shipuuden files and yet Mr. Sandman is not yet visiting me...

Now its My Chemical Romance's turn to lullaby me with their song Cancer...

Senti, emo, hopeless romantic, disturbed, etc, etc... Whatever you may call this feelings... It is a proof that you are alive... You have heart and your bleeding inside...

I remembered Gaara when he was still young, he was curious why he is feeling pain when he have no wounds at all...

Pain... A term I love and a term I loathe at the same time...

As I feel the music in my soul... I feel the pain... I feel alive... I am still a friggin human being... Eventhough I always thought I am Lestat! Ha ha ha ha ha me and my fantasies... Boys will boys...

Does this mean I am a masochist? Wow! Greenday with Wake Me Up When September Ends... Well, I relly don't know the categorical answer to my own queries... That's why I write... That's why I am in my journey...

My lips are beginning to feel parched... I need a drink... Ooooppppssss no more alcohol... Alcohol makes me violent lately... As if I am Wolverine or a drunk Rock Lee...

Maybe this is just a part of entering mid life... A midlife crisis I guess...

Know what?! Im such a corny freak... I'm crying at the song of Hugh Grant and Halley Bennett's Way Back into LOve... People may think I am crazy as I beat my hands with rythmn, then type, then cry, then smile... I relly love the song and the fuckin' movie!

Where's Dolores O'riordan nowadays... I miss the Cranberries... Zombie! Zombehe he he he... The voice... The message... A videoke fave of my troops during college days...

AAAAAARRRRGGGGGHHHHHHH!!!!! Perfect by Simple Plan my theme song for my Vice Mayor Father! I hate him and I love him at the same time! Fuck! Why can't he accept that I'm not what he is expecting of me? He is passing the burden of his shadow on me! I know I have frustrated him so many fucking times but that is fuckin' life! You live! You Learn! From your own mistakes! From your own Battles! Puta! Nag ibi na naman ako!

Add the song Numb by Linkin Park (another song for my father) and I will go berserk!

I need a song to calm me...The Calling is the answer... Their song Stigmatized... Yes calm me...

For the finale - - Audioslave's Be yourself... pls put me into sleep... I need to be early tomorrow... zzzzz

Sunday, March 16, 2008

ETHICS CFA EXAM SAMPLE

1. Which of the following statements about fundamental responsibilities of members who practice in multiple jurisdictions is TRUE?

A. In cases where federal law differs from CFA Institute®'s Code and Standards, federal law prevails.
B. In the absence of specific applicable laws or other regulatory requirements, the CFA Institute Code and Standards govern the member's conduct.
C. A member who trades securities in a foreign market having no applicable local laws or rules may use material nonpublic information to make investment decisions.
D. A member is required to comply only with applicable local laws, rules, and regulations even though CFA Institute's Code and Standards may impose a higher degree of responsibility.

2. An analyst subject to CFA Institute® Standards of Professional Conduct, to comply with Standard I(A) Fundamental Responsibilities, should do all the following EXCEPT:

A. learn the laws and rules governing his or her conduct.
B. seek the advice of counsel when in doubt concerning the requirements of the law.
C. implementation and/or follow internal compliance procedure designed to prevent legal violations.
D. adopt CFA Institute’s Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS®) for reporting investment results.

3. Tamara Higgins is the Compliance Officer for Hedge Funds Unlimited, a global hedge fund with offices in New York, London and Singapore. The firm has publicly acknowledged in writing that it has adopted the CFA Institute Code and Standards as its policies. Although Higgins is not currently participating in the CFA program, she will begin the program next year. For purposes of compliance, which of the following is least likely a violation of the firm's policies and the CFA Institute Code and Standards?

A. A portfolio manager at the firm accepts an undisclosed trip to Bermuda as a gift for good performance from a client.
B. An analyst at the firm working overseas uses material nonpublic information as allowed by local law to make investment decisions for discretionary client accounts.
C. A junior analyst at the firm uses a subscription to a financial publication and input from friends and colleagues to make investment recommendations for discretionary client accounts.
D. A CFA Level 3 candidate at the firm includes reference to participation in the CFA program and her status as a Level 3 candidate in her biographical background for an upcoming client presentation.

4. Which of the following violates the CFA Institute® Standards of Professional Conduct on the appropriate use of the Chartered Financial Analyst® and CFA® mark?

A. Langley has passed all three levels of the CFA program, has received his charter, and is a charterholder in good standing. He writes on his business card, "Roger Langley, Chartered Financial Analyst."
B. Langley has passed all three levels of the CFA program, has received his charter, and is a charterholder in good standing. His company writes in promotional literature, "Roger Langley is one of two CFAs in the company."
C. Langley has passed Level 2 and is registered to take the Level 3 examination. In his resume he states, "I am a Level 3 candidate in the CFA program."
D. Langley was awarded the CFA designation in 1980 but stopped paying dues in 2000. In his retirement speech in 2001, he stated, "I was awarded the CFA charter in 1980."

5. John Anderson's company is participating in an acquisition. To speed up the process, his manager gave him a report from another company's analyst, also working on the project, and told Anderson to put it on company letterhead and distribute the report by the end of the day. If Anderson, who is an CFA Institute member, complies, which of the following CFA Institute Standards of Professional Conduct will he have broken?

A. Standard IV(A.2), Research Reports.
B. Standard II(C), Prohibition against Plagiarism.
C. Standard IV(B.6), Prohibition against Misrepresentation.
D. Standard IV(B.2), Portfolio Investment Recommendations and Actions.

6. Ann Smith, CFA, calls Bill Jones, CFA, and tells him that her research shows that Biokem Company is overpriced. After their conversation, Jones arranges a conference call with all the firm’s portfolio managers and announces that his research indicates Biokem is a strong “sell”. According to CFA Institute Standards of Professional Conduct, which of the following statements is most accurate?

A. Jones did not commit plagiarism because Smith’s comments were verbal.
B. Jones has just plagiarized Smith’s research because he did not credit her as the source.
C. Because Smith told Jones, the information is now public; Jones can do whatever he wants with it.
D. Jones did not plagiarize Smith’s work because he did not actually see the research that she produced.

7. Sommerset Brokerage, a retail broker-dealer, employs several CFA charterholders and candidates participating in the CFA program and has publicly acknowledged in writing the adoption of the CFA Institute Code and Standards as the firm's policies. Doug Watson, a CFA Level 2 candidate and registered representative, was recently hired by Sommerset, but failed to notify the firm about his status as a CFA candidate and his outside employment as an instructor for securities licensing examinations. Which of the following best describes Watson's actions under the CFA Institute Code and Standards? Watson has violated:

A. Standard III Relationships and Responsibilities to the Employer, for failing to disclose additional compensation received as an instructor.
B. Standard I Fundamental Responsibilities, by failing to notify his employer within 30 days of hiring of his status as a CFA candidate and that he holds securities licenses.
C. Standard III Relationships and Responsibilities to the Employer, for failing to inform his employer of his obligations under the Code and Standards and to deliver a copy of the Code and Standards.
D. Standard III Relationships and Responsibilities to the Employer, by failing to inform his employer of his obligations under the Code and Standards and for failing to disclose additional compensation received as an instructor.

8. Anna Jacobs, Level 2 CFA candidate, recently left Wellwood Advisers, where she was a portfolio manager, for Lockwood Financial Services. Prior to leaving Wellwood, Jacobs sent a mailing to rejected clients informing them of her move to Lockwood. Jacobs serves as a financial consultant for several local businesses for which she is paid a cash retainer. Upon starting at Lockwood, Jacobs informs her supervisor that she is a CFA candidate and subject to certain rules that the supervisor can learn about from the CFA Institute website. Which of the following regarding Standard III Relationships and Responsibilities to the Employer best describes Jacobs' actions? Jacobs has:

A. violated the Standard by soliciting clients of Wellwood prior to moving to Lockwood.
B. violated the Standard by failing to disclose additional compensation received as a consultant.
C. NOT violated the Standard since she provided proper notification to clients regarding her change from Wellwood to Lockwood.
D. NOT violated the Standard since she informed her new supervisor about her participation in the CFA program and how to find out more information.

9. Which of the following statements about soft dollar standards is FALSE?

A. The investment manager must inform the client that the manager may engage in soft dollar arrangements before doing so.
B. The broker can use brokerage from another client's account to pay for research under the client-directed brokerage arrangement.
C. The investment manager cannot allocate a client's brokerage to a broker based on the amount of referrals the manager receives from the broker.
D. To use client brokerage to buy research, the manager should determine that the research meets the definition of research and that it directly benefits the client.

10. Marianne Riley, CFA, owns an investment research boutique that specializes in mining and exploration stocks. As a local investor, Riley maintains close relationships with local corporate officers, often participating in one-on-one meetings. Riley has a history of prescient investment recommendations and maintains clients throughout Canada, the U.S. and Europe. On a recent conference call with clients and prospects, Riley gives a brief description of a local silver mining company she follows, Silverado, Inc. Riley recommends a "buy" on Silverado, indicating that the stock should advance in the next three to six months based on the fact that she believes consumers are buying more silver products. Which of the following Standards most likely governs Riley's investment recommendation?

A. Standard IV(A.2) Research Reports.
B. Standard II(C) Prohibition Against Plagiarism.
C. Standard IV(B.2) Portfolio Investment Recommendations and Actions.
D. Standard V(A) Prohibition Against Use of Material Nonpublic Information.

11. Ken Toma, a CFA charterholder and leisure services analyst, has just completed an extensive review of the demand for beach vacations in Hawaii and concluded that the demand will far exceed the supply for the foreseeable future. Toma writes a research report stating, "Based on the fact that the demand for Hawaiian beach vacations will exceed the supply of rooms for the foreseeable future, I recommend the purchase of shares of the Hawaiian fund, a diversified portfolio of Hawaiian beachfront resorts." If Toma presents this report to his clients, he will have:

A. violated the CFA Institute standards because he did not distinguish between fact and opinion.
B. complied with the CFA Institute standards by completing a thorough and diligent review of the facts.
C. violated the CFA Institute standards because he made conclusions based only upon his own research.
D. violated the CFA Institute standards because he did not indicate the basic characteristics of the investment.

12. Roger Smith, CFA, has been invited to join a group of analysts in touring the riverboats of River Casino Corp. For the tour, River Casino has arranged chartered flights from casino to casino, since commercial flight schedules are inconvenient and not practical for the group's time schedule. River Casino has also arranged to pay the hotel bill for the three nights of the tour. The trip is purely business. According to CFA Institute Standards of Professional Conduct, Smith should:

A. accept the arrangements as they are.
B. accept the flight, but pay his own hotel bill.
C. offer to pay for his share of the airfare and his own hotel bill.
D. decline to accept the trip because the arrangements are inappropriate.

13. Natalie Oswald, CFA, is the investment manager of a corporate pension plan. Under Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), she owes her fiduciary duty to:

A. the plan sponsor.
B. the firm's shareholders.
C. all of the above equally.
D. the plan participants and beneficiaries.

14. Jaime Young, CFA, has constructed a portfolio for Donna Rhee that generates an income stream suitable to Rhee's needs and risk tolerances. However, Jim Weaver, Young's supervisor, believes some of the individual assets in the portfolio are inconsistent with an individual of Rhee's age. The supervisor believes Young should eliminate the questionable securities even if it requires putting Rhee into some low-yield assets. According to CFA Institute Standards of Professional Conduct, which of the following is the most appropriate response for Young to give Weaver?

A. Go along with Weaver because he is her supervisor.
B. Quit; her supervisor has no adequate basis for his request.
C. Go along with Weaver because the prudent expert rule applies to the individual components in a portfolio.
D. Explain to Weaver that prudence is based on the characteristics of the client's entire portfolio and not on the individual assets in the portfolio.

15. Dawn Shepard, CFA, is a research analyst for a regional brokerage firm. Her research has convinced her to change her recommendation on the common stock of Orlando, Inc. from "buy" to "sell." She faxed this change to all her current customers who had expressed an interest in Orlando, Inc. The next day, one of her occasional customers who had never before expressed an interest in Orlando calls and places a "buy" order for 500 shares of Orlando. According to CFA Institute Standards of Professional Conduct, Shepard, in these circumstances:

A. may accept the order because she has complied with the fair dealing standard.
B. should advise the customer of the change in recommendation before accepting the order.
C. should delay executing the order until five days have elapsed after the communication of the change in recommendation.
D. may accept the order only if the customer acknowledges in writing that she was notified of the change in the recommendation.

16. Matt Jacobs is a portfolio assistant for Cumberland Investments, a registered investment adviser. Jacobs recently completed Level 2 of the CFA examination and is currently registered for Level III. As part of his daily responsibilities in assisting the portfolio manager, Jacobs implements portfolio trades for discretionary client accounts. All of the following comply with the CFA Institute Code and Standards regarding fiduciary duty EXCEPT Jacobs:

A. includes discretionary accounts of friends and family in client allocations of new issues.
B. allocates trades to asset-based fee accounts and performance-based fee accounts on a pro-rata basis.
C. includes the Cumberland Pension Plan accounts in client trade allocations for similar investment mandates.
D. allocates trades to personal trust accounts under his discretion before client accounts, but after Cumberland proprietary accounts.

17. According to CFA Institute Standards of Professional Conduct, a member who receives confidential information through a relationship of trust must maintain the confidentiality of this information if:

A. the information is highly sensitive or illegal.
B. and only if the information is of a material and nonpublic nature.
C. the information may be construed as a conflict of interest to the member's employer.
D. the information results from, and is relevant to, the business covered by the client relationship.

18. An analyst just told an investor, "You should buy Delfonics Inc. This stock is guaranteed to give you a 100 percent risk-free return over the next six months." Which standard did the analyst violate?

A. Standard IV(B.3) Fair Dealing.
B. Standard IV(B.2b) Appropriateness and Suitability.
C. Standard IV(B.6) Prohibition against Misrepresentation.
D. Standard IV(A. 1) Reasonable Basis and Representations.

19. Chris Matlock, a CFA charterholder and an analyst for R&B Securities, is preparing a buy recommendation on King Company. According to CFA Institute Standards of Professional Conduct, which of the following is NOT a conflict of interest that he would normally disclose?

A. R&B is a market maker for King Company stock.
B. Matlock's son works at King Company.
C. Matlock has a consulting contract with King Company.
D. Matlock's wife has a family trust fund that holds a substantial block of King Company stock.

20. Alyssa Wilcox is a registered representative for Comprehensive Brokers and a CFA Level 1 candidate. Wilcox usually makes investment recommendations for clients based on a semi-annual mailing to clients that requests an update on clients' investment objectives, financial situation and investment experience. Wilcox regularly attends new issue roadshows offered by her colleagues in investment banking, who will give her shares of a new issue if the issue is purchased by at least half of her client accounts. Wilcox has personally received shares in half of the company's total new issue underwritings for the year, but will only allocate shares to large client accounts suitable for investing in new issues. Which of the following best describes Wilcox's actions under the CFA Institute Code and Standards? Wilcox has:

A. fulfilled her responsibility under the Fair Dealing standard [Standard IV(B.3)].
B. not fulfilled her responsibility under the Preservation of Confidentiality standard [Standard IV(B.5)].
C. not fulfilled her responsibility under the Disclosure of Conflicts to Clients standard [Standard IV(B.7)].
D. fulfilled her responsibility under the Portfolio Investment Recommendations and Actions standard [Standard IV(B.2)].

21. Jarrett Rogers, CFA, is a registered principal for Macrovest Broker-Dealer. Rogers is the head of the firm's investment program and recommends certain investment advisers in the program to high net worth individuals looking for separately-managed discretionary accounts. Investment advisers in the program pay Macrovest a portion of their investment management fees to participate in the program, some of which is paid to Rogers as compensation for client recommendations. When a client inquires with Rogers about criteria for including managers in the Macrovest program, Rogers indicates that managers are selected based only on historical investment performance versus a universe of comparable peer investment managers. According to the CFA Institute Code and Standards, Rogers' actions are most likely covered by:

A. Standard IV(B.8) Disclosure of Referral Fees.
B. Standard III(C) Disclosure of Conflicts to Employer.
C. Standard IV(B.6) Prohibition Against Misrepresentation.
D. Standard IV(B.2) Portfolio Investment Recommendations and Actions.

22. Anne Franklin, CFA, is an analyst for Medallion Investments covering technology stocks. Franklin frequently meets with company management and makes on-site visits to company facilities. Cynthia Lucas, chief technology officer for Level Tech, tells Franklin during a one-on-one on-site visit that overseas shipments of the company's revolutionary product are going to be delayed indefinitely due to manufacturing defects. Medallion manages discretionary accounts for Lucas and her family and Lucas frequently shares information with Franklin in appreciation for good stock picks. Subsequent to her meeting, Franklin sends a note to Medallion's investment personnel telling them to "sell the stock", as the shipment information is significant and impacts recent earnings guidance in the market. Franklin's use of the information received from Lucas:

A. violates the Code and Standards, as Franklin received information that was misappropriated and should not have been disseminated.
B. violates the Code and Standards, as Franklin received information through a breach of fiduciary duty and should not have been disseminated.
C. does not violate the Code and Standards, as Franklin was using information that was publicly disclosed and can be used to initiate trading recommendations.
D. does not violate the Code and Standards, as Franklin was adhering to her fiduciary duty to Medallion's clients by sharing the information and recommending a "sell."

23. John Farr, CFA, has accumulated several pieces of nonpublic information about Cattle Corp. of Omaha from his contacts with the company. Although none of this information is material by itself, when Farr combines it with his own analysis, it leads him to conclude that Cattle Corp. will have an unexpectedly low earnings report this year. Cattle Corp. has not announced this information and although Farr has contacted the company, they will not confirm his finding. According to CFA Institute Standards of Professional Conduct, Farr:

A. can use the information to make investment recommendations and decisions.
B. cannot legally invest, divest or make recommendations based on this information.
C. should inform the company in writing that he possesses this information, then after a reasonable time period he can trade on this information.
D. may use the information, but only if his company's compliance officer is able to verify with Cattle Corp. that the material he used was indeed nonmaterial.

24. Bill Fox, CFA, has been preparing a research report on New London Wire and Cable, one of his major investment clients. He had completed much of his analysis and had planned on having his report typed and bound today. Unfortunately, his briefcase was stolen while he ate breakfast, and he lost all his notes and working papers. The lost materials included his notes from management interviews, conversations with suppliers and competitors, dates of company visits, and his computer diskette containing much of his quantitative analysis. Fox's client needs this report tomorrow. In a panic Fox called New London's vice president of finance and was faxed a copy of the company's most recent financial projections. Fox remembered that his own analysis showed that management's estimates were too high. He did not remember the exact amount, so he revised New London's figures downward by 10 percent. Fox also incorporated, without acknowledgement, some charts and graphs on New London from a research report he had received llast week from a small regional research firm and used some information from a S&P reference work. With the help of his secretary, a copy machine, and some creative word processing, Fox got the report done in time for the evening overnight delivery pick up. Fox violated all of the following standards in CFA Institute's Standards of Professional Conduct EXCEPT:

A. Standard II(C) Prohibition against Plagiarism.
B. Standard IV(A.1d) Reasonable Basis—maintain appropriate records.
C. Standard IV(A.1a) Reasonable Basis—exercise diligence and thoroughness.
D. Standard IV(B.2) Portfolio Investment Recommendations and Actions: separating fact from opinion.

25. According to CFA Institute Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS), which of the following statements concerning the calculation of composite returns is FALSE?

A. Asset weighting within composites is required using beginning of period weights.
B. Portfolios no longer under management should be included in historical composites.
C. Model results may be presented if they conform to the portfolio's investment strategy and objectives.
D. Each composite must include all portfolios or asset classes representing a similar investment strategy or investment objective.

Please send your answers to RGBorja.LGUPolangui@gmail.com.ph on or before April 10, 2008. Thank You.

Orientation for the Chartered Financial Analyst

What is the CFA Program?
• A self-study, distance learning-based program
• Accreditation Process
• Requirements for Award of the Charter
– Sequentially pass Level I, II and III exams
– Have 3 years of relevant professional experience
– Provide professional references (Level III)
– Apply for CFA Institute Membership
– Submit professional conduct statement

Member and Candidate Growth

Components of the Program
• Involves practical and relevant education for investment and other finance professionals

Inputs to the Program
• The learning process is tied to current practice trends
• Job analysis every five years, which involves thousands of practitioner surveys, answers the question: “What knowledge and skills are needed”?
• Candidate Body of Knowledge (CBOK), Curriculum, Learning Outcome Statements (LOS), and exams are all based on this

The Curriculum
? Readings are drawn from various materials
? Each has learning outcome statements (LOS): “The candidate should be able to…”
? Each LOS has one or more command words, which indicate type of learning expected: “discuss, calculate, contrast”
? LOS are NOT a proxy for exam questions, but ARE the best guide for candidate study

Why Take the CFA?
• The Charter is a globally recognized and portable standard of competence and integrity for investment professionals
• Knowledge across core areas of the investment industry
• Respect and credibility in the investment community

More Tangible Charter Benefits
• Greater earning power; in the U.S., the CFA premium is about $40k (+25%)
• Career opportunities in a competitive environment
– Many local charter holders have gone abroad
– Outsourcing; investment-related jobs will eventually find their way to the Philippines
– Hired by brokers, investment/commercial banks, mutual funds, consulting companies, etc.

Examination Features
• Based on assigned readings and LOS
• Average time to answer is limited
– Level I: 1.5 minutes for each of 240 questions
– Levels II and III: Each question is timed
• Exam type:
– Level I is 100% multiple choice
– Level II is 100% item set
– Level III is 50% item set, 50% essay

Examination Features
• Total exam time is six hours for all 3 levels; three hours each for the AM and PM sessions
• Topic weights are shown in the study guide
• Many questions tend to repeat the same concepts or computational procedures from previous exams
• Again, the LOS provide you an important guide as to the types of questions you will encounter

Grading of the Exams
• Guiding philosophy is fairness and consistency
• A detailed and structured process
• Depending on the type, questions are either 1) machine graded or 2) graded by a team of charter holders
• Answers to Essay questions are evaluated for knowledge and content, not style or language

Minimum Passing Score (MPS)
• Set by the CFA Institute Board of Governors
• Various inputs and metrics used
• Passing rate for each level is a residual determined by each level’s MPS
• The MPS is set for the exam as a whole and not for individual topic areas or item sets
• Ethics/FSA are very important sections; may determine if you pass or fail

Individual Preparation
• The best strategy is to be overly prepared
• Make time for your studies
– Bare minimum of 250 hours; better if 300 hours
– Excludes attendance in review course
– 30 weeks x 10 hours per week = 300 hours
• Read ALL materials (twice if possible) and hone skills through practice exams, quizzes
• Read more about the CFA program
• Use the Study Guide (2006) as your map
• Before each of our sessions, you should have:
– Read the assigned readings
– Solve the quizzes, sample exams, problems, etc.
•After each session:
– Solve more practice questions
– See if you are comfortable with the LOS
• After the course, you will have about 5 weeks to go back and review everything

Assorted Tips
• Try studying/buying materials in groups
• Ask for study leave from your boss/firm
– Write a letter to justify this “special” leave
– You’ll never know unless you try
• Use the sample exams to determine your weak areas and then concentrate on them
• Know your calculator (Texas BAII+/HP 12c only)
• Take a break during Christmas/Holy Week

Raul Castro is new president of Cuba

RAUL Castro was elected Cuban president on February 25 by the National Assembly of Cuba after the ailing Fidel Castro formally resigned as president. Ever since Fidel fell ill in 2005, Raul has taken on the duties of the president of Cuba while concurrently serving as chief of the Armed Forces of Cuba. Raul Castro, who is a younger brother of Fidel, is also a veteran of the Cuban revolution.

Actual US expenses on Iraqi war amount to $3 trillion

THE costs of the US' war and five-year occupation of Iraq has reached a staggering $3 trillion, or ten times more than what is stated in official reports, according to a study conducted by Joseph Stiglitz, former World Bank chief economist.

Stiglitz said the inflated expenses are due to huge contracts worth $193 million bagged by Halliburton, a close ally of Vice President Dick Cheney; high salaries of contracted private security forces ($400,000/year) compared to the relatively low salaries of soldiers ($40,000/year); and overpriced contracts for items such as painting that could have been awarded to the Iraqis at $5 million but were instead contracted out to an American company at $25 million. A huge part of the expenses also went to hospitalization, caring for the sick and funerals for war casualties that were not reflected in the military budget but were instead posted in other departments like the Department of Health.

The actual amount is even bigger if soaring prices of oil are to be factored in. Five years after the occupation, the US has not benefited from Iraqi oil. The total costs also exclude expenses incurred for attending to internal and external Iraqi refugees, medical treatment of Iraqi casualties and the long-term rehabilitation of both American and Iraqi bombing casualties.

The US has resorted to foreign borrowing to sustain its terrorist war on the Iraqi people. A substantial part of this loan amounting to $1 trillion came from China.

Meanwhile, according to a study by an economist of the UK Defence Department, the UK has already incurred war expenses amounting to 5 billion euro ($7.5 billion) as of 2006. An estimated $1 billion was also spent last year.

American soldier in Japan rapes Filipina

A Filipina migrant worker was raped by an American soldier in Okinawa, Japan on February 18. The victim has filed charges against the rapist and is now under the protection of the Okinawa police.

The incident has fueled outrage anew among Filipinos. Successive protests were launched by various women's groups led by Gabriela, at the US embassy to condemn the rape and push for an end to US military presence in the Philippines and other Asian countries. The militant women's group likewise condemned the Arroyo regime's inaction over the issue. If this case is not closely monitored, said Gabriela, the puppet regime will surely cover up the crime just as it did on the rape case of a Filipina in Subic in 2006.

In a related development, 52 women representatives passed a resolution supporting the victim in filing charges against the American soldier. They also called on the Arroyo government to provide legal and financial assistance to the victim throughout the duration of the case and urged the Arroyo government to file a diplomatic protest against the United States.

The Japanese people likewise abhor the US military ases and the huge American military presence in their country. The rape of the Filipina in Okinawa occurred just a few days after an earlier rape of a 14year old Japanese student by another American soldier. Outraged, the local government of Okinawa imposed a curfew and restricted American troop movement in the area. Irate Okinawans also set up a surveillance camera at the gates of the base to monitor the soldiers' movements. They have long been demanding the immediate pullout of all American troops due to repeated cases of human rights violations and the trampling of the Japanese people's sovereignty.

Bayan Muna demands investigation of ODA-funded projects

Bayan Muna demands investigation of ODA-funded projects

THE Bayan Muna party called for an immediate investigation of government projects funded by foreign loans. Rep. Teddy Casiño urged Congress, through the Congressional Oversight Committee on Foreign-Funded Projects to review projects financed by overseas development assistance (ODA) to uncover anomalies involving them. The call was made after the sudden cancellation by Arroyo of 11 projects belonging to this category.

The projects are the Angat Water Utilization and Aqueduct Improvement Project Phase 2 in Metro Manila worth `5.75 billion; Bataan Manila Pipeline Project, `7.2 billion; LRT line 2 Phase 2 Extension (Santolan to Masinag, Antipolo), `10.33 billion; LRT line 1 North Extension, `5.98 billion; Cyber-Education Project, `26.48 billion; Mainline Southrail Project Phase 1A, `15.30 billion; LRT 1 line 1 South Extension (Pasay to Bacoor, Cavite) `15.3 billion; New Communications, Navigation, Surveillance and Air Traffic Management Systems Development Project in North Luzon, `2.64 billion; Regionalization of Mental Health Services in Luzon Urban Beltway, `1.32 billion; Redevelopment of Tacloban Airport Development Project Phase II, `1.12 billion; and even the construction of classrooms for elementary and high school that totals `45.67M. In total, these projects amount to `104 billion.



Choose to be Rich Program
031108

Liquidate your credit card loans. Take stock of your unsecured credit card debt by filling in the chart below. In the margin reorganize the list in descending order of interest rate. Pay off the card with the highest Annual Percentage Rates (APR) first then proceed doewn the line.

Credit Card - Minimum Monthly Payment - Balance - Interest Rate -

Sad to say (or the reverse) I don't have a credit card...



I AM SO HAPPY AND GREATFUL NOW THAT…
031108

1. I don't have a credit card!
2. I am intelligent and full of tactics!
3. I am a millionaire!
4. I am going to Dubai by July!

Jonas Burgos listed in the AFP Order of Battle

Jonas Burgos listed in the AFP Order of Battle

EDITHA Burgos, mother of missing activist Jonas Burgos recently said in an interview that a military secret report states that her son was listed in the Order of Battle (OB) of the AFP, which establishes the motive for his abduction by military agents. The OB is a military list of targeted enemies.

According to Mrs. Burgos, a soldier (who requested anonymity) belonging to the 56th IB of the Philippine Army based in Norzagaray, Bulacan disclosed that Jonas was suspected to be the head of the NPA Intelligence Department in the province of Bulacan and hid under the aliases Ka Raymond, Ka Ramon or Ka Simon.

Jonas has reportedly been in the AFP OB since Marso 17, 2007. The document also revealed that the military was behind his abduction in the Ever Gotesco in Quezon City in April. He underwent tactical investigation first before being reported "neutralized", a military term for "killed."

The military has also implicated Jonas' wife Marian, whose cousin has suffered harassment from persons who introduced themselves as members of the Commission on Human Rights who were trying to locate Jonas' wife and child.

Mrs. Burgos disclosed the information in the course of hearings at the Court of Appeals on her family’s petition for a writ of amparo. Mrs. Burgos has also brought the campaign to surface Jonas to the United States.



Choose to be Rich Work Book
031008

The Waste Watcher's Diet

Write down enough belt-tightening measures to yield at least $150 in savings each month (or as much as you can realistically save) then commit to shredding your budgetary flab. Your financial health depends on it.

I agree to cut back on For a monthly savings of

Total = $
Signed:

As of now I can't answer it yet Im still on the record keeping stage on to where my money goes specifically.



I AM SO HAPPY AND GREATFUL NOW THAT…
031008

1. I am disciplined on my money!
2. The food cart is nearly finished!
3. I am awaiting almost P10,000 by the month's end!
4. I will be at Dubai by July!

Moro groups file case on Sulu massacre at UN rights body

The Suara Bangsamoro and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front will file a case before the United Nations Human Rights Council on the massacre perpetrated by the Special Warfare Group ofPhilippine Navy and Light Reaction Company of the Philippine Army. The massacre, which took place at dawn of February 4 claimed the lives of eight civilians from Ipil, Maimbung, Sulu. The announcement was made after the AFP absolved the soldiers responsible for the massacre.

Suara national chair Amira Lidasan called the results of an AFP probe claiming the slaughter was a legitimate encounter with the Abu Sayyaf "incredible". An investigation had yet to be made but the AFP had been quick to conclude that the victims were either members or coddlers of the Abu Sayyaf. The AFP merely reiterated the same line when it released on February 28 the results of an alleged investigation conducted by the Judge Advocate General's Office of the Western Mindanao Command.

The findings of an investigation by the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) released earlier revealed that no real encounter took place in Maimbung that day and that none of the victims was an Abu Sayyaf member. The report detailed how government troops assaulted the island village of Maimbung and gunned down residents as they pleaded for their lives and shouted that they were civilians.

Two of the raiders were also killed and five others wounded when they mistook each other as enemies and traded shots, according to the CHR.

The one-sided AFP investigation came under severe criticism, prompting Lt. Gen. Nelson Allaga, chief of the Western Mindanao Command, to announce that the results of their probe were just preliminary and that the soldiers involved in the incident were not yet in the clear.

AFP misencounters in Bicol

SIX AFP soldiers died and two others were wounded in a misencounter between the 8th Scout Ranger Company and 3rd Scout Ranger Battalion in Irosin, Sorsogon on February 25.

To cover up the incident, the AFP issued a false report that a clash between the AFP and NPA had transpired and that two NPA fighters were killed and two M16 armalite rifles were recovered.

According to a report by the Celso Minguez Command of NPA-Sorsogon, a team of NPA snipers was on its way to the ambush site when they heard gunshots. Three government troops were hit in the first volley.

The snipers were quick to avoid being caught in the firefight when the second round of shooting ensued between the two military units. After the clash, the enemy soldiers secretly retrieved their casualties.



Choose to be Rich Work Book
(030808)

Debt Quiz: How Deeply Dug in Are You?

1. Do you pay your bills late? yes 2. Have you hidden a bill from your parents, gf/bf, spouse? yes
3. Have you neglected repairing the car/motor because of insufficient funds? yes
4. Is there family tension because of overspending? yes
5. Have you bought something recently that you didn't need and could'nt afford? no
6. Do you regularly spend more than your paycheck? yes
7. Have you been turned down for credit? no
8. Do you buy lottery tickets in the hopes of etting out from under? no
9. Have you put off saving money for a rainy day? yes
10. Does your total debt (mortgage excluded) exceed your rainy day reserve? yes

Score = 0 yes answer - Good for you! Your in control of your cash flow
1-5 yes range answers - you need to reduce your cost
6-10 yes answers - Watch out! You may be headed to a financial disaster!

My score = 7 yes answers - OUCH!



I AM SO HAPPY AND GREATFUL NOW THAT…
(030808)

1. I will be away from financial disaster!
2. Millions are on it's way!
3. I am disciplined and focused!
4. Success is mine!

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Looming food crisis

HUNGER is set to worsen in the Philippines and other impoverished countries with a severe food crisis expected to hit this year.

According to economists, one of the factors contributing to soaring prices of basic food items is the proliferation of biofuels. The prices of corn, for instance, which is used in the manufacture of ethanol, increased by a staggering 88% in the world market—which has also triggered a domino effect on the prices of pork and chicken. Corn is a main ingredient in animal feeds.

Also affected by skyrocketing world market prices are coconut oil (96%), rice (54%), soybeans (85%) and wheat (148%). Prices of foods that use wheat and cooking oil (such as bread) are likewise projected to increase as a result. The effects of this crisis are expected to be felt in the Philippines by March.

Another factor is the spiralling price of crude oil that has now come to $103 per barrel, the highest recorded in the last 30 years.

Rapidly rising food prices are sure to worsen the already miserable conditions of the impoverished majority in the Philippines. National Statistical Coordination Board figures state that the proportion of poor Filipinos increased from 24.4% in 2003 to 26.9% in 2006. In fact, up to 80% of Filipinos live in abject poverty because of widespread unemployment and wages pegged at extremely low levels.




Choose to be Rich Work Book
(030708)

HOW WEALTHY ARE YOU?
Total Assets (Rich Dad Version) = P4,690.50
Total Expenses = P16,030+
ZERO WEALTH
Your Wealth (Assets/Expenses) = months
Total Passive Income = P
Note: Once your monthly passive income exceeds your monthly expenses, you're infinitely wealthy because your assets are working for you.
GOAL: TO PURCHASE ASSETS THAT GENERATE PASSIVE AND/OR PORTFOLIO INCOME IN EXCESS OF MONTHLY EXPENSES.

I AM SO HAPPY AND GREATFUL NOW THAT…
(030708)

1. For the movie Goal! I AM REACHING NOW MY DREAMS! NOTHING AND NO ONE CAN STOP ME!
2. March is the month where I am focusng on riches!
3. Money is coming to me in huge amounts! THANKS FOR THE MILLIONS!
4. The youth mag will be a big hit!

New witness confirms bribery in ZTE

The direct involvement of Gloria and Mike Arroyo in the anomalous NBN-ZTE project is further being unravelled as the probe on the graft-ridden contract continues.

On February 26, a new witness named Dante Madriaga, former consultant to ZTE, testified before the Senate that it was the Filipino partners of ZTE led by former COMELEC Chair Benjamin Abalos who received bribes from the Chinese corporation and facilitated kickbacks for the Arroyo couple. One of the Filipino partners, Leo San Miguel, recruited Madriaga for the project.

San Miguel allegedly disclosed to Madriaga that the payoffs to the government officials were released in three tranches. The first, he stated, was $1 million given in August 2006 when negotiations for the contract began. The second tranche was $10 million after NEDA approved the contract in March 2007, half of which went to the Arroyo couple. The third installment was $30 million which was released soon after Gloria Arroyo witnessed the signing of the contract in Boao, China in April 2007. This amount was used to fund the Arroyo coalition's electoral campaign in 2007.

Because of huge kickbacks, the contract ballooned with more than $170 million allotted to bribery.

Madriaga also said that former Malacañang chief of staff Mike Defensor was also involved in the project, and his role was to protect and secure the Arroyo couple's share during the NBN-ZTE transactions.

Still another witness, who according to Sen. Panfilo Lacson has "direct information regarding the flow of money from ZTE", is expected to corroborate Madriaga's testimony.

Meanwhile, the Senate has rejected the Supreme Court's ruling on former NEDA chief Romulo Neri's appearance before the Senate. Neri, who was among the first to blow the whistle regarding the involvement of the president's husband in the anomalous deal invoked "executive privilege" to stop the Senate from forcing him to reveal his discussions with Gloria Arroyo on the now-scuttled ZTE deal. He earlier filed a petition with the Supreme Court seeking to define the parameters of "executive privilege," a provision that bans government officials from from $50 million to a whopping $329 milli on, disclosing conversations with the president.

In a compromise agreement proposed by the Supreme Court on March 4, Neri would be obliged to appear before Senate inquiries but the senators will be probihited from asking the following questions: 1) did the president follow up on the contract; 2) did Arroyo order Neri to proceed with the project even after he had reported about the bribery attempt; and 3) did Arroyo order NEDA to give priority to the ZTE contract.

Both the senators and legal experts said the privilege could not be used to cover up criminal acts, and that it was not proper to limit the scope of questions that the senators may ask witnesses.

Meanwhile, Malacañang recently scrapped Executive Order (EO) 464 as a result of mounting criticisms on the controversial provision. Arroyo was forced to nullify Memorandum Order (MO) 108 as well, which contains illegal provisions the Supreme Court discarded in 2007. Both EO 464 and MC 108 impose restrictions on the attendance of members of the executive branch in congressional and senate investigations. Despite the Palace move, however, the regime continues to evade hearings, prohibit government officials from testifying and weave a web of lies.




Choose to be Rich Work Book
(030608)

WHAT IS YOUR RETURN ON ASSETS?
Total Assets (Rich Dad version) A = P4,690.50
Total Passive and Portfolio Income B = 0 x12 = P0
Cash - On - Asset Return (Annualized Income B/Total Assets A) = 0%
GOAL: INCREASE YOUR CASH-ON-ASSET RETURN



I AM SO HAPPY AND GREATFUL NOW THAT…
030608

1. I am pro people...
2. My aura is good!
3. Everythings gonna be alright!
4. I am healthy and wealthy!

Arroyo's mad scramble to save herself

Gloria Arroyo is in a mad scramble to extricate herself from the quagmire she now finds herself in. In her desperation, she only succeeds in exposing her lies and underscoring her severe isolation from the people.

Gimmicks galore. Arroyo strains to display her handful of supporters even as the oust Arroyo movement expands. Among this handful are members of her cabinet and governors, congressmen, mayors and military and police officials on her payroll. All of them profit from the regime's multitiered corruption.

Arroyo and her minions have conducted a number of "solidarity walks," with one such "walk" held in Malacañang on February 19. On February 25, the 22nd anniversary of EDSA 1, all available military and police officers, among them AFP chief of staff Gen. Hermogenes Esperon and Philippine National Police (PNP) Director General Avelino Razon Jr. marched along EDSA from the People Power Monument to Camp Aguinaldo to show their alleged adherence to the chain of command.

To counter anti-Arroyo rallies joined by growing numbers of people, the Arroyo camp paid a number of barangay councils to organize a pro-Arroyo rally. A handful of fake and mercenary Arroyo supporters rallied at the Welcome Rotunda on February 28-29 simultaneous with the huge mass action then being held in Makati.

Fake witness, more lies. Arroyo has concocted various lies and slanders to damage the credibility of Rodolfo Noel "Jun" Lozada Jr. Among her maneuvers was the sudden appearance of Erwin Santos, a former employee of Lozada's at the Philippine Forest Corporation (Philforest). Amid tears, Santos accused Lozada of being responsible for anomalies at Philforest. Many people found Santos' testimony laughable, especially since it was Malacañang that obviously drew up his script. Santos was unable to hoodwink anyone, and was not even invited by the Senate to testify because of his incredible statements.

On February 12, agents of the National Bureau of Investigation raided Lozada's office at Philforest in Taguig City to dig up evidence and come up with a false story line from the seized papers.

Arroyo thought she could "shed light" on the NBN project by granting an interview over dzRH on February 23. But she ended up incriminating herself when she said that she approved the project even if she knew that the contract was "flawed." She allegedly found out about the "flaw" only on the eve of the contract signing and thus found it awkward to cancel the project outright. The next day, the regime realized that Arroyo's admission over the radio was a faux pas and has since been trying hard to deny that she ever made the statement.

Black propaganda. The regime has been spreading black propaganda in an effort to belittle the protests. It has insisted that the protests are confined to Metro Manila when mass actions are in fact widespread and have been attracting growing numbers both in the provinces and overseas.

The regime claims that conflicts are rife within the ouster movement when there is in fact an overriding unity against Arroyo within.

It likewise continues to spread lies about so-called plans by the New People's Army or the Abu Sayyaf bandit group to sow violence during rallies, when it is in fact the presence of battalions of military and police elements that indicates that the regime is ready to create havoc once Arroyo is in danger of losing her post.

Trembling in fear, sowing terror. Arroyo is deathly afraid of every witness against her who comes forward and has thus been mounting a campaign of harassment and repression.

She has ordered a tight watch against her regime's detractors, ordering the installation of a surveillance camera in front of La Salle where Lozada and his family have sought sanctuary. On February 28, Malacañang tried to spread panic among students of the Polytechnic University of the Philippines by phoning in a bomb threat on the day Lozada was scheduled to speak at a forum in the school. It failed to stop the students from massively showing their support for Lozada and manifesting their hatred for the regime.

There has been an overkill of military and police deployments during rallies, especially last February 29. Makati was declared a "no fly zone" that day to prevent the media from capturing in pictures or on video the actual size of the rally. Convoys of rallyists from the province were likewise blocked.

On the day of the huge rally, Arroyo was so terrified that she locked herself inside Camp Crame for three hours and put high-ranking military and police officers and members of her cabinet under strict surveillance. She left Crame only when the rallyists started to go home.

On March 4, she ordered the arrest of nine activists who staged a rally in the middle of one of her sorties in Laguna.

On the night of March 6, police forces violently dispersed more than 1,000 workers from Southern Tagalog who were rallying in front of the DOLE office in Intramuros, Manila. According to initial reports, three rallyists were arrested, 13 wounded and six missing after the bloody dispersal.

Worsening crisis.

Meanwhile, the International Crisis Group (ICG), a Belgium-based organization that analyzes crisis situations worldwide cited the growing presence of military forces in Metro Manila as an indicator of worsening crisis in the Philippines. The regime has justified the militarization of the national capital region by citing alleged assassination plots against Arroyo. The heightened military presence is in fact a reaction to intensifying anti-Arroyo protests in Metro Manila.



Choose to be Rich Work Book
(030508)

HOW MUCH DO YOU SPEND ON DOODADS?
Total Doodad Amount P66,520
Total Assets (Banker Version) P71,210.5
Doodad percentage of total assets (doodad total/total assets) 93.41%
GOAL: KEEP YOUR DOODADS UNDER 33% OF TOTAL ASSETS. THE LOWER THE PERCENTAGE, THE FASTER YOUR ASSETS WILL GROW.



I AM SO HAPPY AND GREATFUL NOW THAT…
(030508)

1. I am on my way to millions!
2. The youth mag is a success!
3. I am calm and cool!
4. I am in total control!