Monday, May 18, 2020


NBI-Bohol resumes clearance processing on May 18

TAGBILARAN CITY, May 18 (PIA)--The National Bureau of Investigation (NBI)-Bohol resumes the processing of clearance today, May 18.

The NBI advised the public in its Facebook page on Sunday, May 17 that the agency will be implementing guidelines which have to be observed in securing clearance, in pursuant to the directives set by the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID).

“All applicants must register online and pay online before going to any NBI clearance center,” it told clearance applicants.

Applicants are also required to strictly follow their preferred appointment dates.

The agency also discouraged those who are below 21 years old and 60 years old and above, those with immunodeficiency, comorbidities and other health risks and pregnant women to get their clearances.

In getting the clearances, the NBI said escorts will not be allowed and applicants are required to wear masks and observe social distancing at all times.

The agency suspended processing NBI clearances last month following the imposition of the enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) in many areas of the country due to the coronavirus disease 19 (COVID-19) pandemic.

NBI clearance is a certificate issued by the NBI to a person which shows the person has no derogatory or pending criminal record. It can be used as an identification card for many different transactions. (ecb/PIA7-Bohol)

1Bohol COVID Medical Team lays
guidelines for stranded Boholanos

TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol, May 16 (PIA)—Finally, two months after Bohol shut its doors to Boholanos who were in different places in the country when the measures to stem the transmission of coronavirus disease (COVID-19), Bohol hints on accepting returning Boholanos who may have been stranded, a document from the Provincial Emergency Management Administration (PEMA) showed.

The document, entitled Documentary Requirements for Returning Stranded Boholanos, is a quick guide for offshore Boholanos to comply with so as to be allowed to finally sail home.

The document, signed by Dr. Cesar Tomas Lopez representing 1Bohol COVID19 Medical Technical Team comprised of Dr. Angelito Lechago, Dr. Jefferson Ong, Dr. Ray Atup, Dr. Celestina dela Serna, Dr. Ellan Lyll Salada, Dr. Kazan Baluyot, Dr. Jeia Pondoc and Dr. Fruserma Mary Uy detailed the guidelines which should be followed so Boholanos here could be assured that nobody among the returning paisanos would be carriers.

The 1Bohol COVID-19 Medical technical Team ruled out that each returning Boholano should be able to show through test results that they are negative of the virus in a Food and Drug Administration-approved Reverse Transcription Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR) test.  

Unlike the much popularized test called the Rapid Antibody Assay which tests the antibody’s reaction to the presence of the virus, the RT-PCR is considered the gold standard for COVID tests as it detects the presence of the virus in the Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA) of the person, at a time when the virus is not manifested in the person.   

Medical practitioners have also been critical about the Rapid Antibody Test and the reliability of its test results, which probably is why the medical team opted to the highest standard for safety assurance.

The downside however, is that an RT-PCR test, which is only done in a high level bio-secure laboratory, entails costs, which Bohol said, they would coordinate with the national government to have the payments waived. There has not any information about any development on this arrangement though.  

The returning individual also needs to present to the PEMA a 14-Day Quarantine Completion Certification issued by the Municipal Health Officer or the City Health Officer of the local government unit of origin.

The requirement however proves to be a hurdle as most stranded Boholanos did not stay in LGU operated and supervised facility, that getting a certification might be a bit tricky.

On this, Capitol sources said the Province of Bohol is now coordinating with neighboring LGUS to iron out the kinks in the release of subject certification, or the returning individual would have to undergo another 14-day LGU supervised quarantine to earn the certification.

Third, a returning Boholano stranded within the country has to secure a medical certification from the local Rural Health Unit of his origin stating that the person does not exhibit any of the COVID-19 symptoms, this certification issued within 72 hours before he travels to Bohol. 

Finally, the returning Boholano must execute an undertaking that as a risk, they agree to be quarantined for 14 days in an LGU-operated and supervised quarantine facility and that they agree to undergo all medical tests and processes as may be required to determine their being safe from COVID.

On the other hand, receiving local government units prior to the travel of the returning person, to issue a Certification that they will see to it that the returnee would be quarantined for 14 days in an Municipal or City Health Office approved and supervised LGU Quarantine facility. The LGU also needs to commit to a seamless transport to pick up the returning constituent until his confinement to the quarantine facility.

The receiving LGU also needs to secure a Confirmatory FDA-approved RT PCR test, one week after the date of quarantine. 

As of the latest information, Capitol has accordingly agreed to let loose of the negative RT-PCR test requirement for the returning constituent, over a negative Rapid Antibody Test result.

It has not been confirmed too, if the new information did come from the 1Bohol Covid-19 Medical Technical Team, or was just a suggestion now carried as official position.  (rahchiu/PIA-7/Bohol)
LAYING THE GROUND WORKSBohol Governor Arthur Yap confers with Bohol mayors for a common agreement on the facilitation of the return of stranded Boholanos who have been locked out of the island following the March 15 travel ban. (PIA-7/Bohol/fotos by Art Yap)

PEMA BOHOL ON THE GROUNDPEMA Bohol ground commander Alfonso Damalerio briefs the mayors of Bohol on the responsibilities of LGUS now that Bohol is open to the return of stranded Boholanos, during a recent meeting this week at the Capitol. (rahchiu/PIA-7/Bohol)
TESDA Bohol offers PPE-
production partnerships

TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol, May 15, (PIA)—Amidst the medical frontliners’ dire need for the proper suits in attending to patients suspected of having corona virus disease (COVID-19), the government’s lead technical vocational training agency is offering partnerships for the production of personal protective equipment (PPE).

Speaking during the Kapihan sa PIA Thursday, Technical Education Skills Development Authority (TESDA) Bohol supervising technical education skills development specialist Carlito Quintano said that even during the start of the COVID quarantines, TESDA Bohol, through its Provincial Training Centers in Tubigon and Balilihan have been producing face masks which they distribute to front-liners and poor communities.

In fact, they have supplied face masks they produced in their dressmaking training center in Tubigon to suit up cash-for-work workers in the Department of Labor and Employment’s Tulong Pangkabuhayan sa mga Disadvantaged and Displaced (TUPAD) Workers implementing community based barangay disinfection and clean ups in Barangay Ko, Bahay Ko projects.

He however explained that TESDA is more on government sponsored training, which the people can access for free, the materials for projects would usually come from the trainees or from the government on certain scholarship packages. 

TESDA is actually more on the training side of things, and when we have started the free training courses in dressmaking and after the government had our classes suspended, we asked our trainers instead to make the face masks of which, the material comes from our partners, he said.

TESDA owns a pool of trainers in dressmaking, but we have not produced any PPES yet, Quintano added.

He however is certain that with the right material and specification, they can make a pattern and produce it for Bohol’s medical personnel in the fore fronts against the dreaded disease.

We understand there is a need for more PPEs, especially in coronavirus cases, Quintano admitted.

We are calling for well-meaning groups and individuals willing to partner with us in the sourcing out of materials for the PPE production, just get to us at the TESDA in Tagbilaran, he urged.

Due to the high probability of infection, protocols dictate that a medical professional has to change PPEs every time they get close to a patient, and these can not be recycled, so the turn-over is almost always fast.

While Bohol has only one recorded case present, the stocking up of PPEs can be very critical in the care or patients believed to be with the virus.

He also shared that TESDA in Bohol is still hoping that it can start in Bohol a technical vocational innovation hub like robotics.

The Department of Health has posted notice about the need for more automatic defibrillator machines, which can come as a critical equipment for patients with respiratory problems.

In fact, the Department of Science and Technology has been on to developing home-made defibrillator as COVID cases in the country continues to rise and the potential to swamp the health care system remains high.

TESDA Bohol however said they have not acquired any skills to craft any such machine.  (rahchiu/PIA-7/Bohol)
FROM FACE MASKS TO PPESTESDA Bohol supervising specialist Carlito Quintana urges well-meaning individuals and groups to partner with them in sourcing out materials and specific patterns for PPES so they can also help produce PPES for medical fronliners here. Beyond that, TESDA has offered free online courses available at etesda.gov.ph. (rahchiu/PIA-7/Bohol)

“Pista sa Mayo” sa
Bohol goes virtual!

It would have been lavish: fireworks explode in the early evening sky, the cacophony of videoke and the unmistakable woof from the loudspeakers sending shivers to the church’s metal trusses, and as the procession winds back to the town plaza, the patron santo soon to be taken off the pedestal back to the altar.

The smell of burnt candles, incense and fresh flowers in the puerta mayor would be overpowering but in a few minutes, the smell of grilled pork belly, or some neighbors’ cooking would assault the senses in horde of believers wielding candles and dressed for the thanks giving. 

Streamers and banners strung across the streets convey the festive fever. A green and white SMART giant lighted air balloon occupies a prominent space in the plaza, announcing a street dancing festival on the feast day, and amidst the raucous of the nearby feria, throbs of distant drums on street-dance rehearsals and the blare of trumpets and bugles betray the degree of preparations everyone keeps to add more fun in the feast day of thanks-giving.

Everywhere would have been pandemonium: classmates from a school batch long time ago, shake hands, hug and exchange contact numbers.

In the loft, the choir ends the joyous song with a hail of applause and the invitations for dinner gets cast and thrown to just anyone.

Not this time.

Shared and made viral on social media is the provincial government’s anti-coronavirus disease (COVID) policy banning mass gatherings, drinking in public, and lavish spending in a time of great tribulation with many getting hungry from work stoppages.

This is fiesta sa Mayo sa Bohol in the COViD era.

There are no fireworks that light the sky, the caro bearing the patron winds the procession route somber, with only a few cars and motorcycles in tow, back to the church’s puerta mayor.

No live brass bands fill the air with solemn hymns and lively marches after the procession: only a piped in hymn from a public address borne by the caro betrays the holy rite.

In fact, the caro, unlike the usually elegantly lavish and brightly lit with a pompous image in a pedestal festooned with fresh flowers; this one was simple table set at the back of a pick-up truck.

In the few cars joining the procession are few people, motorcycles with solo riders, all in facemasks, some even sporting not the rosary or some scapular, but oversized ID cards and home quarantine passes.
  
Along the procession route, houses still light candles by the roadside, others open up windows so the kids with candles could watch the holy procession.

The millennials, gadget wielding, have their mobiles documenting and updating their favorite social media platforms, thanks to stronger internet connectivity.

“We could not imagine how we would have known and shared the information without an access to the internet,” a church lay minister, who misses the church services since two months now, shared.

“Or, text for that matter,” he added.

Information like COVID-19 prevention, contact tracing, updates by the National Disaster and Risk Reduction Management Council, National Telecommunications Commission and the Department of Health, all messages get to us through the SMART infocast, he added.

By tradition, and with the faithful clearly missing the practice of devotion, few devotees kneel by the roadsides as the procession passes, their home urna images placed in decorated altareses strewn along the route.

Some few more shower and cast flower petals, like angels, as the procession progresses.

Earlier, the parish bulletin on the Parish Social media Page announced the procession route, the post alone generated over a hundred shares and comments bearing well wishes, devotional prayers heartwarming greetings from stranded town-mates, unable to come home due to the lockdowns.

As processions then were also venues for small talk, this time it’s the mobile phones taking over, making sure those marooned in some distant lands also experience the fiesta, now on social media.

Following social distancing directives and ban on mass gatherings, even churches have to close.

But the masses, now missa sine populo (private masses) continue daily.

Processions are still done, image not anymore borne by the shoulders of believers. It is set on a pick-up truck winding through the town’s thoroughfares, and on streets not in the traditional processional route.  

Bohol Executive Order Nos. 14 through 18 puts in place measures like mandatory use of face masks outside homes, mandatory curfew for minors and elderly, province-wide curfew and liquor ban, including travel bans for all inbound passengers, basic hygiene and social distancing.

Here, churches has posted a new norm for the Fiesta Month: simple and yet different, far from the notoriously lavish banquets most Boholanos and tourists relish.

Dioceses of Tagbilaran Bishop Alberto Uy and Talibon Bishop Patrick Daniel Parcon issued a joint pastoral letter “On Celebrating Fiestas,” in times of the health crisis.

The celebrations should be devoid of lavish banquets that outshine the reality of the religious foundations of the celebrations, the church hinted.

Instead of overflowing churches in the fiesta mass, only the parish priest and vicar along with few servers attend.

For the faithful, bishops urged priests to broadcast the church activities, from the novena up to the Fiesta proper, mount exterior speakers in churches and chapels so the faithful can also participate from their homes.

In homes, families face the laptop broadcasting the mass.
As celebration is streamed online, parishioners listen to radios or turn to online boradcasts and watch parties as the pastoral letter directed.

Where streets were usually flowing with fiesta revelers, now, streets are eerily empty.

Parishioners light candles in front of their houses, while maintaining silence and praying as the image of the patron passes by.

After the procession, silence takes over, the disco loudspeakers in pre-COVID times practically silent.

On facebook, the Hermana Mayor, whose family is in-charge in safekeeping the santo, posts: “Thanks to those who lit candles on the roadsides during the procession, and those who offered flowers for the procession. Online fiesta mass is set at 9:00 AM.

When people line up for food, the church sees spending profusely in time of need would seem inappropriate.

Divorcing from the tradition of an overflowing fiesta table might be tough, a fare for the family however is never out of order. Lechon, seafoods array, a side table for sweet desserts and pastries, along with native kakanins maight still be there.

But, church officials discouraged families from inviting guests when everyone is always treated as a transmission suspect.  That same message has been sent countless times on text and facebook bulletins in a country acclaimed as the texting capital of the world.

Fiesta are times for family reunions. Now teens take to group chats, or scroll to a watch party, hovering mobile phones over food, faces, the house and its new addition, like any Boholano would show.

For households who have more, church calls for sharing food to poor neighbors and hungry brethren.

Packed cooked food, or raw, is brought to a neighbors house, completing the bring house tradition.

Fiestas here are essentially connecting, urging people to live and live life more fully.

And thanks to an ever increasing high speed internet connectivity and almost borderless access to digital services, the Boholanos have leveled the tables: if they’d miss the physical banquet and the warm presence of family, friends and kin over overflowing food and drinks, the dazzling options for the virtual communication menu offer little comforts to get connected. 

As they said, in an ever-changing world, digital communication platforms have led Boholanos to adapt to a bold, new future. (rahchiu/PIA-7/Bohol)

CANDLES LIGHT UP THE ROUTE; With people banned from walking after the image in processions, families stayed in their houses and lit the roadsides with candles to welcome the passing image. (rahchiu/PIA-7/Bohol)
IMAGES FROM HOME ALTARS. With the procession winding, houses take their images from hosuehold urnas and enthrone them in small altars along the processionl routes, as Bohol Fiestas take on a new norm. (rahchiu/PIA-7/Bohol)
SHARING AND CONNECTING. While those who may have more are encouraged to share to the least, Bohol fiestas have also found a way to adapt to the times by being virtual. (PIABOhol/Abet Uy fotos)
MASKED BELIEVERS. As the fiesta procession winds across town, people line up the streets following social distancing policies, while communities light up the street sides with candles, some showering the image with flowers as the image passes by. (rahchiu/PIA-7/Bohol)

DOLE CAMP covers thousands of
Bohol tourism industry workers

TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol, May 14, (PIA)—True to its objectives, the government’s financial alleviation program to help workers affected by the measures to curb the spread of coronavirus disease benefitted thousands of workers from 194 Bohol establishments, a huge percentage of them from the tourism industry sector.

This is according to the complete list of the Department of Labor and Employment’s (DOLE) in the COVID Adjustment Measures Program (CAMP) in the government labor department’s regional facebook page.

On the 1940 formal sector establishments in Bohol whose workers benefitted from the one-time P5,000 cash assistance, about 54 percent of a little over a hundred establishments are directly involved in tourism activities from hotels and resorts to inns and pension houses, into tour and travel operators and tourism transport sector, data from the DOLE showed.

CAMP is among the government’s income mitigation as workers have been temporarily laid off, or work in reduced hours, of told to adopt work from home, some even forced out of work as the government implements social distancing, and strict community quarantines.

To cover for the lost income or lessened take-home pay, DOLE puts up CAMP for the formal sector while those in the informal sector can avail of still other package of cash aids like the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board’s cash aid for transport drivers, Social Security System’s Small Business Wage Subsidy, Rice Farmers Financial Assistance, and Financial Subsidy for Rice Farmers and the widest coverage of the Social Amelioration Program under the Department of Social Welfare and Development.

Other than that, DOLE also implements Tulong Panghanapbuhay sa Displaced Disadvantaged Workers (TUPAD) cash for work in the Barangay Ko, Bahay ko program.

At the opening of applications for the DOLE CAMP, the government never thought the sheer number of establishment applicants could swamp their system, DOLE VII in an advisory said.

In a statement sent April 16, 2020, DOLE announced with regret the suspension of acceptance of application for financial assistance under the CAMP for formal sector workers, effective 5:00 pm of April 15.

“The labor department has been swamped with volumes of requests that the available fund for the program amounting to P1.6 billion is very close to being depleted,” DOLE Information and Public Service Departments aid.

It also reported that since the implementation of CAMP from March 23 to April 15, DOLE has provided the one-time P5,000 assistance to 236,412 workers from 10,663 establishments, with total cash disbursements of Php1.2 billion.

By April 15, the government has yet to 85,563 more workers in the coming days.

On this, they sought full understanding of employers and workers who were unable to receive the assistance as the requests simply ballooned beyond the capacity of DOLE’s resources.

Moreover, the extension of the Enhanced Community Quarantines and the continued General Community Quarantine aggravated the situation of need.

It also promised that they will work closely with other agencies, including Congress, for an immediate alternative program to help ease the burden on the greater number of workers who did not benefit from CAMP.

Not every long after that, DOLE directed applicant establishments which failed to make the cut to the Department of Finance and the social Security System Small Business Wage Subsidy, a program that was also closing on May 8.

On the CAMP, DOLE said “our regional operations had enormous challenges in attending to the 1.6 million CAMP applications nationwide, but we are happy to extend assistance to those who had received the cash aid.”

DOLE is now moving fast its recovery plan for workers and employers to cope up with the “new normal” after the ECQ. We are preparing a menu of programs that will complement national efforts to effectively address the needs of the people, the labor department’s statement said. (rahchiu/PIA-7/Bohol)
BYGONE DAYS. Gone are the days when the Loboc River, populated by families who are actively engaged in tourism activities were up and about, relishing the benefits of tourism. Now, in COVID times, most of the families here are now seeking government intervention even as DOL:E CAMP has helped most of their establishments, through a one time P5,000.00 cash assistance. (rahchiu/PIA-7/Bohol file foto)  
SIDELINED.  Sidelined Bohol tourist drivers were among the beneficiaries of the DOLE CAMP in Bohol, tourism industry sector workers comprise over 50% of the CAMP beneficiaries. (rahchiu/PIA-7/Bohol file foto)