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July 01, 2026 - Wednesday | 2:58 AM
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Tacloban city government honors its top taxpayers during 16th HUC anniversary

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TACLOBAN CITY – As part of the 16th anniversary celebration of Tacloban’s elevation to highly urbanized city (HUC) status, city government honored its top taxpayers in an awarding ceremony held on December 18, 2024.

Mayor Alfred Romualdez led the ceremony as he was joined by Liga ng mga Barangay president Raymund Romualdez, and acting City Treasurer Jennifer Guy, in recognizing individuals and organizations for their significant contributions to the city’s economy.
Awards were given in three categories: business taxpayers, real property taxpayers, and barangay real property tax shares.

Top business taxpayers

The top business taxpayers were acknowledged for their outstanding compliance and contributions to the city’s revenue. Metro Gaisano Tacloban, Sanford Marketing Corporation, and Toyota Tacloban, Leyte, Inc. led the roster, reflecting the robust commercial activity in Tacloban.

Top real property taxpayers

Real estate developers and businesses that paid substantial real property taxes were also lauded, with Robinsons Land Corporation, Metro Retail Stores Group, Inc., and SM Prime Holdings, Inc. securing the top spots.

Top barangay real property tax shares

For the first time, barangays were recognized for generating the highest real property tax shares. Brgy. 75 Fatima, led by its chairman Sonia del Rosario, topped the list, followed by Brgy. 91 Abucay and Brgy. 52.

Mayor Romualdez extended his heartfelt gratitude to the taxpayers, emphasizing their vital role in driving Tacloban’s economic progress and enabling the city to deliver essential services to its constituents.

“This recognition is not just a celebration of your contributions; it is also a testament to the trust and partnership between the city government and its citizens,” Romualdez said. “Your support allows us to sustain programs that improve the lives of every Taclobanon.”

Romualdez also highlighted the importance of a secure environment in fostering economic growth, noting Tacloban’s stability under his leadership as chair of the Regional Peace and Order Council.
(LIZBETH ANN A. ABELLA)

Former NPA rebels in Samar begin amnesty application process

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TACLOBAN CITY – A group of former rebels from Samar province, now undergoing reintegration into society, have formally applied for amnesty at the National Amnesty Commission.

At least 23 former rebels submitted their applications during an Amnesty Orientation and Initial Acceptance of Amnesty Applications held at the headquarters of the 87th Infantry Battalion in Poblacion 2, San Jose de Buan, Samar.

The event was led by Jazmine Odyssa Lutao of the Local Amnesty Board (LAB)-Catbalogan.
The orientation, designed as part of the healing and reintegration process, aimed to help participants transition smoothly back into their communities.

Lutao provided a detailed explanation of the program’s requirements, emphasizing its purpose: to resolve pending cases against former rebels while offering them a meaningful opportunity to rebuild their lives.

Lutao also addressed participants’ concerns and clarified questions about the amnesty program during the session.

Following the orientation, the former members of the New People’s Army, the armed group of the Communist Party of the Philippines, took their oath of alliance and underwent an interview process.

The Local Amnesty Board-Catbalogan anticipates receiving an additional 32 amnesty applications during the next round of orientation and application activities.

Present at the event were officials of the 87th Infantry Battalion led by LtCol Francis Rugayan, department heads from the San Jose de Buan local government, and barangay officials.
(ROEL T. AMAZONA)

Untamed waters

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The ending year 2024 has been a sharp reminder that the country remains incapable of tackling the endless bane of rising waters, floods, and disasters caused by water. The country has reacted in bits and pieces—being grossly insufficient—to a problem for which experts have repeatedly sounded warnings, let alone the lived experience of an increasingly erratic climate. Days of continuous rainfall especially in Eastern Visayas just pointed to systemic inefficiency and misplaced priorities that are precisely the very cause of greater misery among communities vulnerable to such disasters.

The root of this crisis is the failure to give priority to and institute comprehensive flood management systems. Thus, the urban centers are unprepared for such a deluge with drainage systems that are outdated or utterly neglected. Rivers and waterways choked for decades by siltation and garbage easily overflow and inundate entire communities. Instead, the local governments merely wait for disasters to happen and thereafter offer temporary relief band-aid solutions through the distribution of relief goods without really addressing the root causes of these disasters.

Equally alarming is the lack of serious attention given to environmental preservation and restoration. Rampant deforestation, mining activities, and poorly regulated urban expansion have been ongoing, stripping the land of its natural capacity to absorb rainwater. Mangroves, serving as natural barriers against strong surges of storms, are often sacrificed for developments along coasts. It is these practices that leave communities defenseless against the wrath of nature, turning even just moderate rains into calamities.

Besides, ineffective national policies on climate resilience turn it for the worse. Being considered one of the highly vulnerable countries to climate change, disaster preparedness remains an underfunded and incoherently organized setup in our country. The handful present is majorly implemented within city areas, hence the need to leave the countryside—where infrastructure is so frail and poverty incidence high—on the mercies of increasing waters. The lack of foresight in urban planning also worsens the situation: communities are built in areas known to flood, ensuring that disaster strikes with grim regularity.

The country’s top brass needs to realize it cannot continue with piecemeal measures.

Indeed, what is urgently called for is a long-range, scientifically guided water-management policy involving better infrastructure to minimize flooding, strict law enforcement concerning the environment, and fair apportioning of funds for disaster management.

Difficult as these measures may prove to be, they hold the promise of breaking the cycle of suffering and ensuring that future generations inherit a nation that resists the forces of nature.

A necessary shift

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DOMS PAGLIAWAN
DOMS PAGLIAWAN

The idea of phasing out gasoline-powered vehicles no longer seems to be a whisper of possibility; rather, it feels more like an oncoming tide. While I am no fan of change for the sake of appearances, I believe it’s about time we stopped guzzling oil like there was an endless supply beneath the ground and started treating electric cars as the practical, forward-thinking choice they truly are.

I must say, electric cars are beautiful. Have you ever stood near one at a stoplight? (Not in Tacloban, though). They’re like a cat padding across a tiled floor: silent, sleek, and unassuming. Contrast that with the roaring beast of a diesel truck or the coughing wheeze of an old gasoline sedan sputtering to life. And it is not just the noise—or lack of it—but what they leave in the air. While gas guzzlers belch smoke clogging our lungs and skies, e-cars promise a cleaner, quieter world. It is called respiration and should not resemble inhaling the exhaust from a thousand impatient tricycles racing for a flagdown.

But beyond that romantic notion of fresh air and quiet roads; well, there is the more undeniable fact: oil isn’t eternal. You ask that of fish folk who get their catch upstream of an oil rig apocalypse assuming they could find any. The world’s reserves are shrinking, and every barrel pumped from the earth is a tick-tock closer to the inevitable. Transitioning to electric cars isn’t just an environmental statement; it’s practical preparation for the future. It’s like switching to solar panels when you know the electric grid is one typhoon away from total blackout.

Of course, I’ve heard the arguments against e-cars. People say they’re too expensive, or that charging stations are as rare as a sunny day in a monsoon. But wasn’t this the same skepticism greeted by the mobile phone, the Internet, or even the solar calculator? Technology has this way of catching up with our needs, and most times a lot quicker than we think. Besides, the e-cars could be cheaper to keep over time since they tout fewer moving parts than their gas-powered brethren. Imagine no more waiting at the repair shop while a mechanic shakes his head over yet another busted carburetor.

The irony is that most of us already use “e-vehicles” every day without batting an eyelid. That’s right, even here in our region. Those electric tricycles zipping around town, the e-bikes wobbling through backstreets are cousins to the world’s Teslas and Leafs. They’ve proved their worth in small ways, ferrying goods and people efficiently, and they don’t leave a trail of smog in their wake. If small-town folk can make the shift, why not the rest of us?

Admittedly, there’s a touch of melancholy in saying goodbye to gasoline cars. They’ve been part of my life since I learned to drive a car, their growls and purrs woven into memories of long drives, roadside stalls, and the occasional engine failure that taught me the art of patience and shelling out hard-earned cash. But progress often demands trade-offs. I’ll gladly swap nostalgia for a planet where my future grandchildren can see the stars without squinting through smog.

The bigger picture, though, isn’t just about cars. It’s about mindset. We’ve clung to gasoline because it’s convenient, familiar, and tied to the image of freedom on the open road. But freedom isn’t about burning finite resources; it’s about adapting to new paths when the old ones crumble. Electric cars aren’t just vehicles; they’re symbols of a shift—an acknowledgment that the road ahead needs a different kind of fuel.

As for what comes next, the answer is simple: we have to make e-cars accessible, not just a luxury but a practical choice for everyday use. Charging stations need to sprout like roadside eateries, and manufacturers must think beyond shiny price tags. But if we can manage to steer the collective effort to build the infrastructure that supports e-cars, we may finally enjoy smoke-free thoroughfares that don’t suffocate our nostrils with black fumes nor stain our light collars as we commute to our workplaces.

Savior’s birth

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AL ELLEMA
AL ELLEMA

The day that people have been waiting for is a good reason to celebrate. More that our individual birthday is the birth of our Savior who dwelt among us. He was sent by God the father to fulfill the promise to save mankind from sin. It has been over two centuries since the messianic mission that was foretold by the prophets in the Old Testament had been proclaimed, yet, many people are still do not believe that Jesus Christ has come. There are many people who are still looking for the coming of the Savior and more who had been proclaiming falsehoods. This is why there are many modern-day preachers who established their own religious sects not in line with the true Church that God has established in the institution of the Holy Eucharist.

It is therefore a great challenge for every person to know Jesus Christ through the Word of God, the Holy Bible that was compiled by the Roman Catholic Church. It is the Word that was made flesh and became man to live with mankind through our Lord Jesus Christ. Apart from the Holy Bible, there are other sources of faith, namely: Sacred tradition and the Church magisterium. Very clearly, Jesus Christ never told His disciples to write His teachings. In the Gospel of Mark, Chapter 16, Verse15, Jesus told His disciples to “Go into all the world and preach the gospel to all creation”. One must read or listen to audio versions of the Holy Bible in its entirety and not just selective piecemeal verses for one to know Jesus Christ.

One could easily be deceived by pretenders who claim to be preachers carrying Holy Bible that had been translated by sects that tailor-made according to their own personal interpretation. Such is prone to many errors that may lead the listeners to believe what the preacher tells. It requires apt knowledge not just of the bible verses but a good background of hermeneutics to one to understand the context of the bible as expressed by the writers at the time of its writing, considering the culture and social norms of the communities during those biblical times.

For many non-Catholic preachers for instance, they do not give respect to Mary the mother of our Savior as they claim that in the Gospel of John, Chapter 19, Verses 26-27, Jesus Christ while hanging on the cross shouted, “Woman behold thy son. Son, behold thy mother. They misinterpret the statement of Jesus Christ not even giving due respect to her mother as He simply addressed her “woman”. With a good background in hermeneutics, one would understand that during that time in history, the word woman is a high form of addressing a woman, mothers included.

It is therefore a misplaced interpretation for preachers who pretend to know the bible, to disrespect the mother of Jesus Christ. Even in our times, we need to respect the mother if we want to be in good terms with the son. How can one claim to be a good friend with the son if he disrespects or even blasphemes the mother. Can one have the courage to ask for any favor from the son if he does not respect the mother? It is a good question to ponder if we want to obtain God’s favor. In this year’s Christmas, may we all learn to honor Mary, the mother of Jesus Christ as we celebrate our Savior’s birth.
comments to alellema@yahoo.com

The Benedictus

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FR. ROY CIMAGALA
FR. ROY CIMAGALA

THIS is the outpouring of praise and thanksgiving that Zechariah, the father of John the Baptist, prayed after what was told him by the archangel Gabriel that he would have a son despite his old age and his wife’s barreness, finally took place. (cfr. Lk 1,67-79)

It’s a joyful prayer that we should make also as our own as we approach the greatest event of human history when the Son of God is finally born to us. This prayer is the proximate prophecy of what the birth of Christ would mean to all of us.

“Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel; for he has come to his people and set them free,” the prayer begins. “He has raised up for us a mighty Savior, born of the house of his servant David. Through his prophets he promised of old that he would save us from our enemies, from the hands of all who hate us.”

Especially nowadays when there is a lot of confusion about what our life here on earth is all about, this prayer would clarify things for us and put us in the right condition and outlook in our life.

This prayer will give us a strong and abiding sense of the real purpose of our life. Indeed, with the flowering of technological developments around, we need to realize more deeply that the quantum leap in that area also calls, nay, requires, a matching quantum leap in our sense of purpose. Otherwise, we would get what is tantamount to an overdose, an overload of something that would be very harmful to us.

It would be ideal if we can manage to have an abiding sense of the real purpose of our life, so we can avoid getting entangled in the distractions or, worse, lost in the maze of concerns or stranded in idleness, laziness, loneliness, worries and the like.

And what kind of purpose can this be that would keep us going no matter what situation we find ourselves in? This could only be God, our love of God, from whom we come and to whom we belong. He is our beginning and end, our everything.

That’s why we need to sharpen our awareness of him, feel his presence and his abundant merciful love for us, learn to discern his will and ways in every moment, and know how to relate everything in our life to his ever-functioning Providence.

We need to strengthen our faith that only in God can we have the ultimate purpose in life. St. Paul said so: “Whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.” (1 Cor 10,31)

Before that, Christ himself told us to “love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your mind.” (Lk 10,27) Nothing could be clearer than this as to what our final purpose in life is. All other goals and objectives we have in life should only be secondary and instrumental to this ultimate purpose of our life.
We need to find ways to correspond to this clear commandment of God to us. That effort will help us to broaden our mind, to continue making initiatives, to widen our perspectives, to deepen our hope and inflame our charity.

It will spur us to action always, not contented with knowing things alone or having some theoretical attitude in life. It will push us to develop a universal heart, capable of dealing with everyone and of reaching out to everyone, including the most difficult personalities and enemies we can have in this life.

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