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HPG chief highlights road safety at PRO 8 executive motorcycle riding course opening

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ROAD SAFETY. Leyte Board Member Carlo Loreto (left), HPG Director B/Gen. Hansel Marantan, and PRO-8 Director B/Gen. Jonas Capoy lead the opening ceremony of the Executive Motorcycle Riding Course (EMRC) Classes R8-2026-07 and R8-2026-08 in Palo, Leyte, highlighting advanced riding skills and road safety in Eastern Visayas. (Photo Courtesy)
ROAD SAFETY. Leyte Board Member Carlo Loreto (left), HPG Director B/Gen. Hansel Marantan, and PRO-8 Director B/Gen. Jonas Capoy lead the opening ceremony of the Executive Motorcycle Riding Course (EMRC) Classes R8-2026-07 and R8-2026-08 in Palo, Leyte, highlighting advanced riding skills and road safety in Eastern Visayas. (Photo Courtesy)

PALO, Leyte– The Highway Patrol Group (HPG) Director, B/Gen. Hansel Marantan, graced the opening of the Executive Motorcycle Riding Course (EMRC) Classes R8-2026-07 and R8-2026-08, underscoring the importance of advanced riding skills and road safety in Eastern Visayas.

The 16-day specialized program, organized by the Regional Highway Patrol Unit 8 in coordination with the Regional Learning and Doctrine Development Division (RLDDD), kicked off at the Police Regional Office(PRO-8) grandstand on March 6, 2026, Palo, Leyte.
The course aims to enhance tactical riding skills, safety awareness, and discipline among participants, who include 30 Philippine National Police (PNP) personnel, three from the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP), one from the Philippine Army, and 80 civilian riders.

Weekend training sessions are being held in Catbalogan City, Samar, and Palo, Leyte.
B/Gen.Jason Capoy, PRO 8 regional director, highlighted the significance of the event. “The opening of this training reinforces our commitment to elite skills development and road safety, while the screening of ‘Beyond the Badge’ reflects the noble values of our profession,” he said.

Leyte board member Carlo Loreto of fifth district, who joined the ceremony as a Senior Master Rider of the HPG, expressed his enthusiasm for the initiative.

“I am grateful for this opportunity and more motivated than ever to champion road safety here in Leyte. Together, let’s make our roads safer for everyone,” he said.

The EMRC is part of PRO 8’s ongoing effort to professionalize motorcycle operations and promote safer road practices across the region, particularly for law enforcement personnel and civilian riders involved in traffic and community service.

(LIZBETH ANN A.ABELLA)

P41 billion tuition subsidies to aid 2.58 million underprivileged private high school students

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TACLOBAN CITY– The national government has allocated P41 billion this year to help underprivileged students attend private high schools in areas where public schools are unavailable or overcrowded, House Minority Leader and 4Ps party-list Representative Marcelino “Nonoy” Libanan said Monday, March 9.

The funding is expected to benefit around 2.58 million students from low-income households, enabling them to complete their secondary education without the financial burden of tuition fees.

Libanan emphasized that the subsidy is crucial at a time when many families face economic challenges and students are at risk of dropping out to seek immediate employment.

“The P41 billion allocation is not just an education policy — it’s an economic safeguard for families and our future workforce,” Libanan said. “Supporting students through financial hardship gives them a real chance to finish their studies and break the cycle of poverty.”
The allocation is distributed across three programs: P12.3 billion for the Junior High School Educational Service Contracting Program (JHSESC), which allows graduates of public elementary schools to enroll in Grades 7 to 10 in private high schools contracted by the Department of Education (DepEd); P26.5 billion for the Senior High School Voucher Program (SHSVP), providing tuition grants for Grade 10 completers to enroll in Grades 11 and 12 in participating private schools; and P2.2 billion for the Joint Delivery Voucher Program (JDVP), which supports senior high school students in the technical-vocational-livelihood track attending private institutions or specialized non-DepEd schools.

Data from the Second Congressional Commission on Education shows that student dropouts remain a concern. In the 2024–2025 school year, 169,836 of 2,041,601 Grade 11 students — or 8.3 percent — did not advance to Grade 12.

The DepEd and the Private Education Assistance Committee jointly manage the JHSESC and SHSVP, while the JDVP is administered solely by DepEd. Libanan said these programs aim to keep more students in school, particularly those in economically vulnerable households, and ensure a steady pipeline of skilled graduates for the workforce.

(LIZBETH ANN A.ABELLA)

DND team visits Northern Samar to review reintegration program for former rebels

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TACLOBAN CITY — A delegation from the Department of National Defense (DND) visited Northern Samar on March 4 to evaluate the province’s peace-building initiatives and reintegration programs for former rebels.

The team, led by Marcelo Valdez Jr., inspected the Balay Darangpan Reintegration Center, a halfway house established by the provincial government to help former members of insurgent groups transition back to civilian life.

Located in the provincial capital of Catarman, the facility serves as a temporary shelter where former rebels undergo counseling, livelihood preparation, and community reintegration activities.

During the visit, the delegation also held a dialogue with beneficiaries currently undergoing the program.

Valdez commended the provincial government for its sustained commitment to peace initiatives, noting that Northern Samar’s recognition as the 2025 Best Implementer of the Enhanced Comprehensive Local Integration Program (E-CLIP) reflects its strong support for former rebels seeking to return to mainstream society.

He also noted that the Balay Darangpan facility has remained functional and responsive to the needs of its residents since it was established.

Currently, the center houses the 10th batch of peacebuilders, who are undergoing a three-month reintegration program consisting of several modules aimed at helping them rebuild their lives and reconnect with their families and communities. The participants are expected to graduate later this month.

The Balay Darangpan program is implemented through the Provincial E-CLIP Committee in partnership with the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC), Task Force Balik-Loob member agencies, local government units, and non-government organizations.

Following the facility visit, the DND delegation proceeded to the provincial capitol where they met with members of the provincial task force to discuss updates on the peace and security situation in Northern Samar.

Officials presented developments related to people’s organizations, the implementation of the E-CLIP, and other initiatives aimed at sustaining peace and reintegration efforts in the province.

The meeting also allowed local officials to seek guidance from national government representatives on how to further strengthen programs supporting former rebels as they return to normal life.

(ROEL T. AMAZONA)

Funding secured for new power line to boost electricity supply in Eastern Samar

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IMPROVING POWER CONNECTION. House Minority Floor Leader and 4Ps party-list Rep. Marcelino Libanan together with Eastern Samar Rep. Christopher Sheen Gonzales worked for the funding in the construction of a 69-kilovolt (kV) sub-transmission line in Guiuan which is seen to improve electricity reliability in the southern municipalities of Eastern Samar. The two solons made the declaration during the visit of Eastern Samar Electric Cooperative personnel in Congress. (PHOTO COURTESY)
IMPROVING POWER CONNECTION. House Minority Floor Leader and 4Ps party-list Rep. Marcelino Libanan together with Eastern Samar Rep. Christopher Sheen Gonzales worked for the funding in the construction of a 69-kilovolt (kV) sub-transmission line in Guiuan which is seen to improve electricity reliability in the southern municipalities of Eastern Samar. The two solons made the declaration during the visit of Eastern Samar Electric Cooperative personnel in Congress. (PHOTO COURTESY)

TACLOBAN CITY — Government funding has been secured for the construction of a 69-kilovolt (kV) sub-transmission line in Guiuan, a project expected to improve electricity reliability in the southern municipalities of Eastern Samar.

The funding was facilitated by House Minority Floor Leader and 4Ps party-list Rep. Marcelino Libanan and Eastern Samar Rep. Christopher Sheen Gonzales, in coordination with the Eastern Samar Electric Cooperative Inc.(Esamelco).

According to Esamelco, the new sub-transmission line will support the planned 20-megavolt ampere (MVA) substation in Guiuan and is expected to provide a more stable and reliable power supply to communities in the southern part of the province.

For decades, residents in these areas have experienced unstable electricity due to their distance from existing substations and their location at the far end of the province’s power grid.

Esamelco General Manager Jose Michael Edwin Amancio said the project responds to a long-standing appeal from residents of Guiuan and nearby towns.

“This project is the fulfillment of a decades-long plea from the residents of Guiuan. Guiuananons have long endured fluctuating voltage and appliance-damaging power surges because they are at the tail end of the province’s power grid,” Amancio said.

He added that a more reliable power supply could help encourage business activity and support the municipality’s tourism industry.

The electric cooperative also assured its member-consumer-owners that the project will not result in an increase in electricity rates, noting that the infrastructure project will be funded through government support.

Esamelco said the funding will provide critical power infrastructure that would have been difficult for the cooperative to finance using its internal resources alone.

(ROEL T. AMAZONA)

Manipulated contents

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The war unfolding today is not only fought with missiles and fighter jets; it is also fought with lies spreading at the speed of a click. The rampant circulation of fake news, manipulated images, and fabricated videos has left the public’s understanding of the conflict in confusion. This dangerous distortion of reality must be confronted with urgency and discipline.

The problem begins with the overwhelming flood of information pouring through social media platforms. Within minutes of any major event on the battlefield, hundreds of posts appear claiming to show “real-time” footage of explosions, troop movements, or civilian casualties. Many of these materials are either taken from unrelated past conflicts, digitally altered, or entirely generated by artificial intelligence. Yet they have been shared thousands of times before anyone has verified their authenticity. In such an environment, the line between truth and fabrication becomes dangerously blurred.

Artificial intelligence has intensified this crisis. Software can now produce highly convincing photographs and videos that appear indistinguishable from genuine documentation. A single fabricated image showing a destroyed city block or a supposed military atrocity can provoke outrage across the globe before fact-checkers can even begin their work. In wartime, such misinformation does more than confuse the public; it becomes a weapon of propaganda, capable of inflaming anger, spreading panic, and shaping political attitudes based on falsehoods.

Another troubling aspect is the willingness of many social media users to believe and share information without scrutiny. Emotional reactions often replace careful judgment, especially when posts appear to confirm political loyalties or ideological positions. In the rush to repost dramatic content, verification is treated as an unnecessary delay. This behavior multiplies the reach of misinformation and allows fabricated narratives to travel faster than responsible reporting.

The spread of false information during war demands a firm response from governments, media institutions, technology companies, and the public. Social media platforms must strengthen systems to identify manipulated content, while journalists must maintain strict verification standards before publishing battlefield claims. Most importantly, citizens must resist the impulse to share sensational material without checking its source. Truth is the first casualty of war only when societies allow deception to circulate without restraint.

Surviving the war

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Oil prices begin to climb the moment war intensifies in the Middle East, and the tremor is felt immediately in countries that import fuel. When that happens, every bus fare, market delivery, and electric bill slowly follows the same upward path. That is precisely why this moment demands one thing from ordinary households: restraint and careful living.

I have seen this pattern before. Whenever conflict erupts in that volatile region, the global oil market reacts almost instantly because a large share of the world’s petroleum supply passes through the Strait of Hormuz. The Philippines, which imports most of its fuel, cannot escape the consequences. Once pump prices rise, transportation costs climb, food prices creep up, and the daily rhythm of family spending feels heavier. The crisis may be thousands of miles away, but its shadow falls quietly across the kitchen table.

In moments like this, the first practical adjustment is movement. Not every errand requires gasoline, and not every trip demands an engine. Walking to nearby places and riding a bicycle for short distances suddenly regained their old importance. A bicycle leaning against the wall becomes more than a childhood relic; it becomes a small declaration that survival does not always require a full tank of fuel. Many of the world’s most disciplined societies rely on this habit even in prosperous times. It would not hurt if families here rediscovered it.

Another habit worth reviving is the quiet art of planting food. A few tomato vines behind the house, a row of pechay beside the fence, or eggplants growing in recycled containers may look modest, but they reduce dependence on expensive market produce. Vegetable gardening is not a romantic hobby; it is a practical response to rising food costs. Every harvest gathered from one’s backyard is a purchase that no longer needs to be made at the market.

At the same time, households must rethink what truly deserves a place in the shopping cart. Difficult times reveal the difference between necessity and impulse. Gadgets that entertain for a few weeks, clothes that crowd the cabinet, and decorative items that gather dust do little to strengthen a family’s stability. When the economy becomes uncertain, every peso must justify its existence.

Saving money also begins with small, disciplined habits inside the home. Lights left on in empty rooms, appliances left plugged in all day, and water running longer than necessary may seem trivial, yet they quietly drain resources month after month. The wisdom of previous generations often rested on simple rules: waste nothing, repair what can still be used, and stretch every resource as far as possible. Those old habits were born from experience, not nostalgia.

What strikes me most is how crises often remind people of skills that modern comfort has pushed aside. Cooking at home instead of ordering takeout, fixing broken items instead of discarding them, and sharing resources within the family were once ordinary practices. They now return not as burdens but as practical shields against uncertainty. There is something steadying about rediscovering these small acts of self-reliance.

If the war continues to escalate, the economic ripple effects will intensify. The wise response is not panic but preparation. Families that begin tightening their spending, planting food, reducing fuel use, and setting aside savings will face the coming months with far greater confidence. In uncertain times, careful living becomes the quiet strength that keeps a household standing.

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