Monday, October 2, 2023

FEATURE
Casa, plaza, escuela

In which ever order, these three words incidentally define the Boholano through the years.

Recently too, the National Museum of the Philippines unveiled important markers of these equally important structures in Tagbilaran, in an apparent move to remind Boholanos of the way it was. And the way it is.

Two houses, at least half-a-century old which figured out prominently in Bohol history, an old Spanish school for girls and the city plaza are the latest in the list of Important Cultural Properties (ICP) that formally gets government supervision and upkeep in their preservation and conservation.

This as the National Museum of The Philippines (NMP) conferred to Bohol Provincial Government, the City Government of Tagbilaran and owners of these structures the certificates that formally declared these among the country’s important cultural properties.

The certificates which were signed by the NMP go with bronze ICP markers that were either unveiled on that day, or would be displayed prominently in these sites.

Signing the ICP certificates were NMP Director for Visayas Museums Atty Ma. Cecilia Tirol and Governor Erico Aristotle Aumentado represented by Atty Handel Lagunay for the Escuela de NiΓ±as and the Bulwagang Rizal (Plaza Rizal which used to be Plaza del Principe, to City Mayor Jane Yap and heritage house owners: Architect Gloria Balili-Katz for the Balili Heritage House along Jacinto Borja Street and Norma Beldia for the Beldia Heritage House in Poblacion Ubos, Tagbilaran City.

Governor Aumentado, who has seen the huge potential for these ICPs as tourism sites, has said that these could be a great help in attaining Bohol’s strategic agenda.

BELDIA HERITAGE HOUSE

Situated in Sitio Poblacion Ubos, the historical value of this house is beyond contest: originally owned by an affluent businessman and gobernadorcillo, this served as the temporary municipal hall of Tagbilaran before it was transferred to the also abandoned hall on top of the bluff overlooking Sitio Poblacion Ubos.

There are also claims that the house hosted Don Manuel Timoteo Hidalgo, Jose Rizal’s brother-in-law in the former’s exile in Bohol, and possibly Jose Rizal himself when the Dapitan-exiled doctor toured Bohol sometime in 1894.

Accordingly built in 1858 by Don Esteban Butalid, the imposing house sports a Chinese-pagoda style clay tile roof, something that could indicate the sangley culture pervasive in this port and trading center, something that survives until now.

The two-storey house has a floor plan in a general u-shaped form to afford an inner courtyard, but this is currently roofed-over, providing yet an enormous space for the house.

Sporting a design carried over by Spanish houses, a huge gallery extended from the massive coral stone walls, affords a wide airy feel, with still polished wood planks as floor, even if its old wooden panels have been long replaced by recent building materials.

In 1971, Judge Antonio Beldia bought the house from the Butalid-Calceta-Gallares family corporation, thus the name.

Beldia heirs, represented by Archt. Norma Beldia now administers the house.

BALILI ANCESTRAL HOME

Tucked behind a huge garden of overgrowths and under the shadows of stately century-old acasia trees, is another treasure of a house that has seen its best days as the favored venue for the who’s who in Bohol’s civil and political societies; it also necessarily attracts national figures in the country’s political sandbox.

Considered to be one of Tagbilaran’s most prized ancestral houses, the Balili House is built by Eladio Balili, a history teacher businessman into lumber, furniture and construction, as a bachelor’s retreat in 1934, and is among the best preserved Art Noveau structures still standing right now right inside the vast Balili estate.

Built in the period of American chalets, the Balili mansion builders have no concern for the use of wood as evidenced by the profuse arches, wooden posts, friezes, intricately carved wooden calados, wooden canopies and gracefully rounded corners sure lend to the mansion its innate charm.

And like the typical poured concrete made famous at those times, the mansion can be accessed through a grand concrete staircase leading to a patio that provides a commanding view of the gardens.

Owing to its being frequented by Bohol’s and the country’s socialites, Balili house became a natural comfortable home and command center of the Japanese imperial army occupying Bohol during the second world war.

Thanks to Archt Gloria Balili-Katz, the youngest child of the owner, the house still mysteriously kept its charm, despite its being rented out in the late 19th century.

ESCUELA DE NIΓ‘AS

In response to the Spanish Education Decree of 1863 by Queen Isabella II of Spain, two stone buildings were built in the 1900s, which would act as the primary school here, for primary education as ordered was to be free and teaching of Spanish was compulsory.

By the end of the Second World War, the Escuela de Ninos was damaged that it has to be demolished to give way to the present Philippine National bank building.

During the American period, the surviving Escuela de NiΓ±as building was still used as a school by the Thomasites: school teachers deployed by the U.S. Government to establish an American educational system in their newly occupied territory.

Needless to say, in the building was molded the minds of Bohol leaders, who have charted a way to bring Boholwhere it is now.

In June 1958, the building, since it has ceased operation as a school, was opened to the public as the Bohol Provincial Library, and in the next forty years it catered to the educational needs of Boholanos.

In July of 2007, the building was inaugurated as the NMP Bohol Branch and served as a repository of archaeological and ethnographic artifacts, as well as paleontological, geological, botanical and zoological specimens collected from the province.

But after the 2013 Bohol Earthquake, the building also became the headquarters of NMP’s Bohol Heritage Task Force, where experts and technical personnel assessed the damages sustained by Bohol’s declared built heritage, most of which have already been restored.

July 22 of 2018, after Bohol donated to the NMP the old provincial Capitol, the Escuela de Ninas would soon be an open use facility until Bohol Tourism Office put up their office in the building.

PLAZA RIZAL (Plaza del Principe)

Established in accordance with the 1573 ordinance of King Philip II of Spain which prescribed the layout of towns in the Spanish colonies, Plaza Rizal, which used to Plaza del Principe, is situated between the Tribuna (old Capitol) and the St. Joseph’s Cathedral, the seat of the Bishop of the Diocese of Tagbilaran.

From stretches of open spaces and greens at the turn of the 20th century, it was during the American period when plazas were adorned with, the Rizal Monument for example, erected in 1912, for which the site is named today, and the neoclassical kiosk, which was the formal bandstand.

The plaza now also features a fountain was built in the latter half of the 20th century, and tucked in the northern corner of the plaza is concrete kiosk created by Bohol’s first architect, Venerando Dumadag, for players of chess, the favorite sport of Bohol’s famous son, Carlos P. Garcia.

A regular venue for public debates, the plaza has seen heated altercations: politicians campaigning, faith-based groups in their public evangelization missions and ambulant vendors eking out their family’s next meal.

Then a regular public area where people can pass time after celebrating mass, the plaza was then adorned with President Garcia’s statue, as created by Boholano National Artist for sculpture Napoleon V. Abueva.

This statue has long been transferred to the courtyard of the National Museum in Bohol, across the plaza.

MORE TO COME

With the unveiling and turnover of markers, NMP Director Tirol said these are just four yet of the 12 ICPs that Tagbilaran City has identified as its important cultural treasures.

She also reminded Boholanos that preservation and conservation of these properties mean community stewardship of these invaluable heritage structures.

For City Mayor Jane Yap, she assured that this ensures that Tagbilaran City legacy lives and that the task of cultural preservation and conservation that the city commits to, would also be a legacy telling the people’s creativity and resiliency. (PIA-7/Bohol)
Heirs to use city CPG property,
Want heritage house relocated

TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol, Sept 30 (PIA) –On the same week that the National Museum handled heritage markers on two houses, a stone building school and a plaza, Boholanos were awakened to an irony: it could be losing a marker that may not be as important to a generation that may have forgotten.

The historic Carlos P. Garcia House situated at the back of the old Capitol, upon the decision the heirs of Bohol’s most illustrious son, would have to go, as the family intends to use the property more commonly known to Boholanos now as the CPG Museum located at Dagohoy, corner Rocha Street, Tagbilaran City.

Through a Deed of Usufruct, the Garcia Family has entered into an agreement with Talibon Real Estate and Development Corporation (TREDEC), which is the owner of the CPG Museum converted from the house, and the Pres. Carlos P. Garcia Foundation Incorporation (PCPGFI), which is an entity assigned to manage and maintain the CPG Museum, but it is now terminating the agreement.

With that, all the items herein displayed in the museum, as to the decision of the Garcia Family represented by Carla Garcia-Campos and grand daughter of the former president, would all be transferred to the National Museum in Bohol, to which, the National Museum has already agreed in principle.

In fact, via a deed of donation, Director Jeremy Barns, Director-General of National Museum of the Philippines, has already accepted some memorabilia in their home in Quezon City like the life size painting of the President and his wife Leonila D. Garcia by Fernando Amorsolo, furniture, fixtures, writings and photographs.

In a visit to the museum, Director Barns and his also identified memorabilia items that wouold be pulled out and transferred to the nearby National Museum including 15 pieces of furniture, 4 pieces of artwork, 17 pieces of clothing, 8 pieces of plaques and 26 other pieces.

As to the house, the Garcia heirs are intending to have it relocated so that they can use the property, and in fact, during the term of Governor Arthur Yap, the Garcia Family requested the Provincial Government to relocate the house, so the family can procced with their development plans.

And if the Provincial Government of Bohol (PGBh) has no intention to transfer or relocate the CPG Museum, the Garcia Family has reportedly initiated discussions with the management of Las Casa Filipinas de Acuzar to donate the house, hence, it may potentially be relocated to their cultural heritage and tourist site in the Province of Bataan.

The problem however, is that in 2009, the National Historical Commission of the Philippines declared the house as a heritage house, being the residence of former Philippine president, in Tagbilaran City.

Known as the “National Cultural Heritage Act of 2009,” by Republic Act 10066, it provides for the protection and conservation of national cultural heritage, including priority funding from the government.

The declaration prohibits destruction, demolition, mutilation of any national cultural treasures, important cultural property and archaeological and anthropological sites; and anyone who modifies, alters, or destroys the original features of or undertakes construction or real estate development in any national shrine, monument, landmark and other historic edifices and structures, declared, classified, and marked by the National Historical Institute, without the prior written permission from the Commission.

With this, the option for the owners to get the National Heritage Declaration nulled could start while the national government would also initiate measures for its protection and preservation while making sure the owners also are properly compensated. (rahc/PIA7/Bohol)
CPG HERITAGE HOUSE. The house which used to be owned by the Forolan family and rented to then President Carlos P. Garcia is now the subject of an interesting case when owners of houses declared as heritage sites, want to use the property, but not by adaptive reuse as provided by the Heritage Act. This house was declared as Heritage House by the National Historical Commission of the Philippines on September 4, 2009. (PIABohol)
Tagbilaran City, Panglao, Corella
Corella in ‘22 competitive index

TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol, Sept 30 (PIA)—Panglao ranks second all over the country in Most Competitive Infrastructures for third to fourth class municipalities while Corella ranked third in the same category for fifth to sixth class municipalities.

During the Philippine Creative Cities and Municipalities Competitive Congress held at the Manila Hotel September 28, Corella also bagged yet another competitive advantage in Most Competitive Innovation for its sixth rank.

Mayor Edgardo Arcay personally received the award for Panglao and Corella Municipal Administrator Eduardo Macalandag representing Mayor Juan Manuel Lim, for Corella, during the Congress.

Meanwhile, Tagbilaran City completed the honor for Bohol with its fourth ranking in Component Cities for Most Competitive Government Efficiency, seventh in Most Competitive Infrastructure, ninth rank in Most Competitive Resiliency and tenth rank in Most Competitive Innovation.

The recognitions which the city bagged also catapulted Tagbilaran to the tenth rank in Most Improved Local Government Unit and the prestigious Most Improved Over-all rank.

According to the Cities and Municipalities Competitive Index (CMCI), rankings are based on the sum of their scores on five pillars.

These are Economic Dynamism, Government Efficiency, Infrastructure, Resiliency, and Innovation.

Developed by the National Competitiveness Council through the Regional Competitiveness Committees (RCCs) with the assistance of the United States Agency for International Development (USAid), CMCI is an annual ranking of Philippine cities and municipalities.

For the government, building local competitiveness is critical to enhancing long-term national competitiveness.

In pursuit of this goal, the National Competitiveness Council encouraged the creation of Regional Competitiveness Committees (RCCs) across the Philippines.

Each RCC is composed of members from the public sector, private sector and academe. It should have one chairman from the public sector and a co-chairman from the private sector. (RAHC/pia-7/Bohol)
434 Bohol micro rice retailers
get P15K cash aid from DSWD

TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol, Sept 29 (PIA) –Four-hundred 34 micro rice retailers who have been diligently helping Boholanos surf through the hard times by selling the mandated rice price ceiling gathered at the Poblacion II covered court September 29 and received their P15,000 cash assistance payout from the government.

The Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) through Social Welfare And Development (SWAD) Bohol officer Jimmy Crusio, along with Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) Bohol Officer In Charge Vierna Teresa Ligan and City Mayor Jane Cajes-Yap received the micro rice retailers from 24 towns who came to Tagbilaran City for that short relief after sacrificing their profits just to be able to offer the mandated rice price cap which the president issued a few weeks ago.

It may be recalled that, upon the recommendation of the DTI and Department of Agriculture, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr, issued Executive Order No 39, in response to the sudden surge in retail price of rice giving ordinary Filipinos undue economic strain.

In the DTI and DA joint recommendation, both agencies pushed for the P41 price ceiling for regular milled rice and P45 for the well milled rice.

Tasked to monitor and implement the same, the DTI said they also partnered with local price coordinating councils to evaluate compliance by small scale retailers, and then followed the validations, shared DTI Bohol’s Ligan.

Initially, there were 6 retailers who were first validated and were given the first batch of those who were found to be complaint with the price cap, DTI said.

“And then, we paid 317 micro rice retailers and disbursed a total of P4,755 M representing the region’s first and second payout,” DSWD shared.

Those who could qualify then were those small time rice retailers who have at least a business name and registration from the DTI, and then just recently, we have in the list those who own at least a mayor’s permit to operate, Ligan added.

In Bohol, with P15,000 for each of the 434 micro retailers, the government spent some P6.51 M, via the DSWD, through its Sustainable Livelihood Program’s (SLP) 29.79M assistance funds for the entire central Visayas.

Micro rice retailers in Cebu, on the other hand, some 1,103 of them got allocated with 16.545M while Negros Oriental’s 405 beneficiaries would be using up another P6M for the DSWDs funds.

Of Bohol towns, monitored with the widest compliance was Guindulman, with 65 retailers getting the pay-out, followed by Ubay at 60 retailers and then Lila with 35 complaint retailers.

We have not received any instructions for the Central Office as to the next batch but we have committed to continue the monitoring, evaluation and validation, according to the DTI, so that those retailers who have implemented and have not received their cash assistance either from the DSWD Assistance to Individuals In Crisis Situations (AICS) or SLP.

This third payout only included the 434 rice retailers from towns of Alburquerque, Anda, Antequera, Baclayon, Batuan, Bilar, Calape, Carmen, Catigbian, Clarin, Dagohoy, Dimiao, Guindulman, Lila, Loay, Sagbayan, San Isidro, San Miguel, Sierra Bullones, Tagbilaran, Talibon, Trinidad, Ubay and Valencia.

Before they received their cash aids, the retailers signed a memorandum of undertaking that attests that the retailers are qualified to receive the assistance, that they were directly engaged or offering rice for sale and hat they have been compliant with the price ceilings, explained Crucio, how was accompanied by a team of disbursing officers to facilitate the release of the assistance.

We do hope that with the P15K cash assistance, you would add up to your capital and continue your service to the Boholanos, urged DTI’s Jerome Gabin. (PIA-7/Bohol)
PSHS-CV brings Sci-Math
Battle to Tagbilaran City

TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol, Sept 26 (PIA) –The use of horizontal axis turbines for generating power for street lights in rural areas merged as the grand champion in poster design in project proposal in the engineering category as the Department of Science and Technology’s Philippine Science High School Central Visayas 𝘩𝘰𝘴𝘡π˜ͺ𝘯𝘨 𝘡𝘩π˜ͺ𝘴 𝘺𝘦𝘒𝘳'𝘴 π˜™π˜¦π˜¨π˜ͺ𝘰𝘯𝘒𝘭 𝘚𝘀π˜ͺ-π˜”π˜’π˜΅π˜© π˜‰π˜’π˜΅π˜΅π˜­π˜¦ brings it to Bohol 𝘒𝘡 the 𝘐𝘴𝘭𝘒𝘯π˜₯ 𝘊π˜ͺ𝘡𝘺 π˜”π˜’π˜­π˜­ π˜ͺ𝘯 π˜›π˜’π˜¨π˜£π˜ͺ𝘭𝘒𝘳𝘒𝘯 𝘊π˜ͺ𝘡𝘺.

The inaugural day of the event spotlights Research Forum and Poster Competition, featuring four outstanding teams from Bohol Wisdom School, Holy Spirit School of Tagbilaran, Inc., Tagbilaran City Science High School, and University of Bohol, pitting themselves against each other’s wits for the 3rd Regional SciMath Battle 2023 in applied sciences and industry research.

Bannering a research on the Efficacy of the different wind turbines in generating power for street lights in rural areas as submitted by Bohol Wisdom School students earned the thumbs up of judges from the DOST’s Philippine Science High School Visayas Campus, here in Bohol for the two day MathSci Battle.

With the Philippines having the most expensive prices of electricity in the Asian region brought about by dependence on fossil fuel, which in itself is adding to the already fast environmental degradation, the study, which also included testing of the different types of 3D printed wind turbines showed that at constant wind velocity, the horizontal axis wind turbine showed highest rotational rotors speed, highest power coefficient and produces enough voltage to generate sustainable clean power for rural streetlights.

Students Ramasola Ange and Ibba, Helene Alexia submitted the project and the poster.

Still in the engineering category, Tagbilaran City Science High School’s (TCSHS) Lead Zirconate Titanate or piezoelectric ceramic material embedded in a doormat to power a night light wins the second place as student inventors said night lights provide security.

Using piezoelectricity, the students employed experimental quantitative research, in determining the average charging current is generated on a step, the charging duration and the number of steps needed to charge the battery to keep a sustainable night light.

It was found that when more people stepped on the piezoelectric energy harvesting doormat, the charging current increased and the charging time decreased, showing how human motion energy can be used to charge batteries usable now in real-world applications.

Students Franzyne Adelle Lagapa, John Dio Lumacang and Rixel Rashid Manimtim submitted the project.

In second place in the engineering category is still Tagbilaran City Science High School with their Smart Blind Stick.

The Smart Blind Stick which uses earphones and Arduino nano technology as the central control unit which processes data, generates sound cues and managing power use, the walking stick automatically vibrates and issues an audio cue and instructions when it senses an obstacle.

When tested on the visually impaired, respondents found the walking stick satisfactorily functional, with spot-on sensor accuracy that guides the stick bearer highly effective obstacle awareness and avoidance, helping the visually impaired walk with lesser worry of hitting obstacles and hurting themselves.

The study by April Karen Daleon, Ryan Kyle Hamoay and Sophia Maye Vale picked the slogan “walking towards the future, guided by innovation.

In the Life Science Category, TCSHS, the sole entry bagged the first place with their study on the Hypocholesterolemic effect of Carabao Mango leaves on Broiler Chicken.

Using the leaves of carabao mangoes, they proved that this is effective in lowering cholesterol levels. The mangiferin in the leaves increases the high density lipoprotein and enhances the flow of cholesterol from the blood levels to the liver for faster metabolism, assailed Allysa Jane Damalerio, Jessa Marielle Bongcaron and Labina Mae Gilbuena, students.

For the physical sciences category, TCSHS again ruled with the potential of smooth ribbon seagrass leaf extract as an alternative source of electricity, as presented by Mike Joseph Cartagenas, Ibiza Dalogdog and Venice Loraine Rollorazo.

Students here bared that leaf extracts of the often washed ashore sea grass can be valuable source of cleaner and greener alternative for electric generation, an area that needs further large scale trials.

On second place in this category is Bohol Wisdom School is the efficacy of snake plant fibers as an innovatibve air purification solution for mitigating cigarette smoke contamination as submitted by Trevor Alturas and Famke Ysabelle Boybanting.

The study proved that snake plant fibers could be viable alternative for air purifiers, showing capacities similar to commercial purifiers in filtering cigarette smoke.

PSHC Visayas Campus Director Rachel Luz Rica handed the awards and tokens, assisted by PSHS CV faculty. (rahc/PIA-7/Bohol)
BATTLE TESTED. From the students minds, they create process diagrams, test theories and prototypes, after which they pitch it in a poster which the judges from the Philippine Science High School Visayas Campus take on, assess and evaluate and weigh them in on engineering, physical and living sciences, during the 3rd Regional SciMath Battle here at the ICM with PSHS CV Campus Director Rachel Luz Rica nading out the awards and tokens. (PIAbohol)