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Borongan bishop calls for simpler, more inclusive CBCP gatherings

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LIVE SIMPLY. Borongan Bishop Crispin Varquez appealed to his fellow prelates to set an example by living simply and do away a life of extravagance. Varquez made the during the 131st CBCP Plenary Assembly on Sunday, January 25. (FILE PHOTO)
LIVE SIMPLY. Borongan Bishop Crispin Varquez appealed to his fellow prelates to set an example by living simply and do away a life of extravagance. Varquez made the during the 131st CBCP Plenary Assembly on Sunday, January 25. (FILE PHOTO)

TACLOBAN CITY — Amid growing financial pressures on dioceses nationwide, Borongan Bishop Crispin Varquez has called on his fellow prelates to embrace simplicity, frugality, and deeper solidarity in Church gatherings, particularly during plenary assemblies of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP).

Varquez made the appeal in a privilege speech during the 131st CBCP Plenary Assembly on Sunday, January 25, urging bishops to ensure that Church activities remain consistent with their pastoral vocation and sensitive to the realities faced by local churches.

He specifically appealed for restraint in CBCP plenary assemblies hosted by dioceses, warning that while the generosity and hospitality of host dioceses are deeply appreciated, they should not be pushed beyond what is reasonable.

“Accepting lavish hospitality can unintentionally place financial strain on host dioceses and may cause misunderstanding or even scandal among the faithful,” Varquez said, stressing that bishops are called to be witnesses of moderation and stewardship.

The Borongan prelate said that practicing simplicity would make it easier for poorer and smaller dioceses to host future CBCP gatherings without feeling pressured to overspend, thereby promoting wider participation across the Church.

Beyond plenary assemblies, Varquez also called for simpler and more affordable conventions organized by CBCP episcopal commissions. He said Church meetings should prioritize formation, dialogue, and mission rather than costly arrangements, allowing bishops and Church workers from resource-limited dioceses to participate meaningfully.

Addressing concerns about unity within the hierarchy, Varquez rejected claims that brotherhood among bishops is weakening, saying genuine solidarity remains strong among those who actively nurture it. He emphasized that no bishop—whether active or retired—should ever be viewed as a burden, as all share the same vocation and responsibility to serve the People of God.

“Our journey of synodality calls us to walk together and help one another with humility and generosity,” he said.

In the same address, Varquez appealed to dioceses to offer modest and capacity-based financial contributions to help sustain the operations and mission of the CBCP. While acknowledging the financial and pastoral challenges confronting many dioceses, he said even small contributions would be a concrete sign of shared responsibility.

He renewed his proposal for each ecclesiastical territory to consider contributing a small percentage of its available resources to a common fund dedicated to supporting the Conference’s programs and administrative needs.

Varquez concluded by urging his fellow bishops to respond with unity and trust, expressing confidence that acts of generosity—no matter how modest—would strengthen the Church’s mission and be returned manifold in blessings as they continue to serve both the Church and the nation.

(JOEY A. GABIETA)

PRO-8 honors heroism of SAF 44 on 11th anniversary

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REMEMBERED. The Police Regional Office 8, led by Regional Director PBGEN Jason Capoy, commemorated on Sunday, January 25, the heroism of the Special Action Force (SAF) 44, six of whom hailed from Eastern Visayas. The elite officers sacrificed their lives on January 25, 2015, during an operation in Mamasapano to apprehend international terrorist Abdul Basit Usman. (PR)
REMEMBERED. The Police Regional Office 8, led by Regional Director PBGEN Jason Capoy, commemorated on Sunday, January 25, the heroism of the Special Action Force (SAF) 44, six of whom hailed from Eastern Visayas. The elite officers sacrificed their lives on January 25, 2015, during an operation in Mamasapano to apprehend international terrorist Abdul Basit Usman. (PR)

TACLOBAN CITY — The Police Regional Office 8 (PRO-8), led by Regional Director B/Gen. Jason Capoy, commemorated the 11th anniversary of the heroism of the Special Action Force (SAF) 44 with the theme, “In Valor, We Remember: A Pledge for Future Generations,” at the PRO-8 Heroes’ Monument in Camp Kangleon, Palo, Leyte, on Sunday, January 25, 2026.

The annual event, held every January 25, featured a wreath-laying ceremony to honor the bravery and sacrifice of the SAF 44, who gave their lives in the line of duty.

Eleven years ago, these 44 elite police officers fell during “Oplan Exodus,” an operation in Tukanalipao, Mamasapano, Maguindanao, aimed at apprehending two high-value targets.
Among the fallen heroes, six hailed from Eastern Visayas: PO3 John Lloyd R. Sumbilla of Sulat, Eastern Samar; PO2 Rodel E. Ramacula of Rosario, Northern Samar; PO2 Glenn B. Bedua of Dulag, Leyte; PO2 Noel N. Balaca Jr. of Oras, Eastern Samar; PO1 Joseph G. Sagonoy of Silvino Lubos, Northern Samar; and PO1 Mark Lory O. Clemencio of Carigara, Leyte. Their sacrifice left a lasting mark on the region, where they continue to be remembered as exemplars of courage and honor.

Capoy paid tribute to the fallen, noting that their heroism serves as a powerful reminder of the responsibilities carried by law enforcement officers.

He said that every day police personnel don the uniform, they are called to embody the courage, dedication, and selflessness demonstrated by the SAF 44—true heroism measured not by recognition but by the willingness to give everything for the greater good.

“The legacy of the Fallen 44 lives on in the hearts of PRO-8 personnel and the entire Philippine National Police,” Capoy added, “serving as a source of strength and inspiration in fulfilling our sacred duty to serve and protect.”

(LIZBETH ANN A. ABELLA)

DOLE-8 settles P18.9M in labor claims via SEnA, aids over 1,100 workers in 2025

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The Department of Labor and Employment Regional Office No. VIII (DOLE-RO8) settled and facilitated a total of P18.9 million in monetary claims, benefitting 1,122 workers from different parts of Eastern Visayas through the Single Entry Approach (SEnA) Program in the year 2025.(DOLE-8 FACEBOOK)
The Department of Labor and Employment Regional Office No. VIII (DOLE-RO8) settled and facilitated a total of P18.9 million in monetary claims, benefitting 1,122 workers from different parts of Eastern Visayas through the Single Entry Approach (SEnA) Program in the year 2025.(DOLE-8 FACEBOOK)

TACLOBAN CITY — More than 1,100 workers in Eastern Visayas received monetary relief in 2025 after the regional office of the Department of Labor and Employment Regional Office (DOLE-8) facilitated the settlement of P18.9 million in labor-related claims through its Single Entry Approach (SEnA) Program.

DOLE-8 said the program benefited 1,122 workers and posted an 88.44 percent settlement rate, exceeding the national benchmark of at least 75 percent of resolved requests for assistance (RFAs).

Lawyer Dax Villaruel, DOLE regional director, said the results demonstrate the value of early, non-adversarial interventions in resolving workplace issues.

“By providing an accessible and non-adversarial mechanism, we are able to protect workers’ rights while promoting industrial peace,” he said in a statement.

Villaruel added that the timely settlement of monetary claims helped provide relief and a sense of justice to more than a thousand workers and their families across the region.
The SEnA program is designed to offer a speedy, cost-free, and accessible avenue for workers and employers to resolve labor concerns through conciliation and mediation, without the need for prolonged and costly court proceedings, DOLE said.

Based on a consolidated report submitted to the National Conciliation and Mediation Board (NCMB), the regional office handled 934 RFAs last year, of which 826 cases were successfully settled through conciliation and mediation.

The remaining cases were either withdrawn or referred to the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC) and other appropriate government agencies, while eight cases are scheduled for mandatory conferences.

Villaruel said 99 percent of all RFAs were disposed of, underscoring the effectiveness of the SEnA mechanism in addressing labor disputes at the earliest possible stage and preventing escalation into formal litigation.

(ROEL T. AMAZONA)

Too early

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The early declarations and endorsements of aspiring national leaders signal an active political season well ahead of the official campaign period. This openness is acceptable in a democratic setting, but it must never become a shortcut to power through fraud, deceit, and abuse.

Public expressions of intent to run for the presidency or other high offices are not, by themselves, a problem. They allow voters to scrutinize aspirants early, assess their records, and measure the strength of their platforms. In theory, early visibility should widen public debate and sharpen political choices. Yet this same early start often becomes a testing ground for illicit machinery—money, influence, and covert networks—long before election laws are strictly enforced.

The country’s political history offers little comfort on this matter. Elections have repeatedly been marred by vote-buying, manufactured consent, padded voter lists, and manipulation at various stages of the process. Early endorsements by powerful blocs, when coupled with unchecked resources, can create a false sense of inevitability around certain names. These conditions lead voters to accept outcomes not because of merit or mandate, but because of money-driven momentum and manufactured popularity.

Such practices do not merely taint individual races; they weaken democratic discipline. When deceit becomes routine, public participation turns hollow and cynicism deepens. Citizens begin to expect cheating as a fact of life, while candidates learn that winning clean is optional. This environment rewards those who bend rules early and often, and sidelines those who rely on competence, integrity, and genuine public support.

The answer lies in sustained vigilance, not seasonal outrage. Election authorities must enforce rules from the moment political activity begins, not only during the campaign window. Civil society, schools, churches, media, and local communities must keep watch, educate voters, and call out abuses without fear or favor. Democracy survives not because ambitions are announced early, but because the people refuse to let power be taken through dishonest means.

Menaced reality

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I pause on a video mid-scroll because the face looks familiar, the voice steady, the gestures convincing. Only later does the small label appear: AI-generated. That moment—brief, ordinary, unsettling—captures why these hyper-real photos and videos worry me more than they amuse me.

I admit the technology can be entertaining. Seeing historical figures “speak,” watching playful face swaps, or restoring old photos with eerie clarity can feel like harmless fun. I’ve laughed at some of them myself. But entertainment stops being innocent when it trains the eye to accept anything polished as real and anything real as suspect.

What troubles me most is how realism has become the selling point. These images and clips are no longer obviously fake; they are smooth, well-lit, and emotionally accurate. Skin has pores, voices carry pauses, and eyes blink at the right time. When imitation becomes better than the original, truth loses its visual advantage.

This is where lies find fertile ground. A fake video does not need to convince everyone; it only needs to confuse enough people long enough. In politics, a few seconds of fabricated speech can ruin reputations before corrections arrive. In daily life, altered images can shame, threaten, or mislead, causing real damage even after exposure.

I feel this shift in my own habits. I hesitate before believing footage that would have shocked me a few years ago. I double-check clips that confirm my views, then triple-check those that challenge them. That constant suspicion is exhausting. A world where every image demands interrogation is not a healthy one.

There is also a quieter loss happening—the loss of shared reality. Photos and videos once served as common ground, proof that something happened. Now they are arguments waiting to happen. Conversations begin not with “Did you see this?” but with “Is this even real?”

I do not blame the tool alone. Technology has always raced ahead; people decide how recklessly it is used. Platforms profit from speed, not verification. Creators chase clicks, not consequences. Meanwhile, viewers like me are left to sift through a flood where truth and trick wear the same face.

The way forward, I think, is slower and less glamorous. Stronger labeling, real penalties for malicious fakery, and better public education matter. So does personal restraint: pausing before sharing, questioning before reacting, valuing credibility over thrill. In an age that can manufacture reality, choosing patience may be the last honest act left to us.

“Circular economy: Your path to zero-waste production”

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In a world grappling with resource depletion and environmental degradation, the concept of a circular economy is gaining traction as a viable solution. The circular economy is a smart alternative to the traditional linear model. Forget “take-make-dispose”—it’s about minimizing waste and getting the most out of our resources by keeping products and materials in circulation. For businesses, embracing a circular economy offers a path to zero-waste production, not only reducing their environmental impact but also unlocking new economic opportunities.

Understanding the Circular Economy

The heart of the circular economy is reimagining how we create and use products. It’s a system that cherishes resources, hates waste, and makes sure everything is built to last, be reused, and easily recycled – system where waste is minimized, resources are valued, and products are designed for durability, reuse, and recyclability. This involves shifting away from a linear model to a closed-loop system where materials are continuously cycled back into the production process.

The principles of a circular economy can be summarized as follows:

Design for durability and recyclability: Products should be designed to last longer and be easily disassembled and recycled at the end of their life.

Resource efficiency: Businesses should minimize their use of raw materials and energy, and explore alternative, sustainable resources.

Waste reduction: Waste should be minimized at every stage of the production process, from design to manufacturing to distribution.

Reuse and repair: Products should be designed for reuse and repair, extending their lifespan and reducing the need for new production.

Recycling and recovery: Materials that cannot be reused or repaired should be recycled and recovered, closing the loop and minimizing waste.

Steps to Achieving Zero-Waste Production

Achieving zero-waste production is a journey, not a destination. It requires a commitment from all levels of the organization and a willingness to embrace new ways of thinking and operating. Here are some practical steps that businesses can take to embark on this journey:

Conduct a Waste Audit: The first step is to understand where waste is being generated in your operations. Conduct a thorough waste audit to identify the types and quantities of waste produced, and the sources of that waste. This will provide a baseline for measuring progress and identifying areas for improvement.

Redesign Products and Processes: Based on the waste audit, redesign your products and processes to minimize waste. This may involve using different materials, simplifying designs, or implementing new manufacturing techniques. Consider designing products for disassembly and recyclability, making it easier to recover valuable materials at the end of their life.

Implement Waste Reduction Strategies: Implement strategies to reduce waste at every stage of the production process. This may involve optimizing material usage, improving inventory management, and implementing closed-loop systems where waste materials are recycled back into the production process.

Embrace Reuse and Repair: Design products for reuse and repair, extending their lifespan and reducing the need for new production. This may involve offering repair services, providing spare parts, or designing products that can be easily upgraded or refurbished.
Partner with Suppliers and Customers: Collaboration is key to achieving zero-waste production. Work with your suppliers to source sustainable materials and reduce packaging waste. Engage with your customers to encourage them to return products for reuse or recycling.

Invest in Recycling and Recovery Technologies: Invest in technologies that enable you to recycle and recover valuable materials from waste streams. This may involve setting up your own recycling facilities or partnering with specialized recycling companies.

Track and Measure Progress: Regularly track and measure your progress towards zero-waste production. This will help you identify areas where you are making progress and areas where you need to improve. Set targets and monitor your performance against those targets.

Benefits of Zero-Waste Production

Embracing a circular economy and striving for zero-waste production offers numerous benefits for businesses:

Reduced Costs: By minimizing waste and maximizing resource efficiency, businesses can significantly reduce their operating costs.

Improved Brand Reputation: Consumers are increasingly demanding sustainable products and practices. Embracing a circular economy can enhance your brand reputation and attract environmentally conscious customers.

Increased Innovation: The pursuit of zero-waste production can drive innovation and lead to the development of new products, processes, and business models.

Reduced Environmental Impact: By minimizing waste and conserving resources, businesses can significantly reduce their environmental impact and contribute to a more sustainable future.

Enhanced Resource Security: By relying on recycled and recovered materials, businesses can reduce their dependence on virgin resources and enhance their resource security.
Overcoming Challenges

While the benefits of a circular economy are clear, there are also challenges to overcome.

These may include:

Lack of Infrastructure: In some regions, the infrastructure for recycling and recovery may be limited.

Technological Barriers: Some materials and products may be difficult to recycle or recover with existing technologies.

Consumer Behavior: Changing consumer behavior and encouraging them to embrace reuse and recycling can be challenging.

Regulatory Barriers: Regulations may not always support circular economy initiatives.

Conclusion

We can build a more sustainable and prosperous world by embracing the circular economy. By embracing the principles of a circular economy and striving for zero-waste production, businesses can reduce their environmental impact, unlock new economic opportunities, and build a more resilient and sustainable future. While the journey may not be easy, the rewards are well worth the effort. It’s time for businesses to step up and embrace their role in creating a circular economy that benefits both people and the planet.
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If you have any questions or would like to share your thoughts on the column, feel free to send an email to jca.bblueprint@gmail.com. Looking forward to connecting with you!

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