Archive for the 'local politics' Category

Meeting with the Mayor, Part 1

Jeanette on Sep 23rd 2007

Reported by Ophelia “Babot” Pasibe Glasser
The video below is one part of the conversation at her home.

As most of you are aware, Mayor Kimi Cojuangco is currently in California to visit with Sisonians in Southern California. There were rumors and questions galore prior to her visit. Some of which are: Why is she coming? What’s her agenda? What is this about a beauty pageant? She’s here to convince each landowner in Sagunto to give up part of their yard to widen the road for her husband’s NCC trucks to destroy our mountain, right? She’s bringing in her cronies from Makati so they can plunder our beautiful town then leave with the loot. AND what is up with this English only rule in the Town Hall (Municipio)??? So on and so on, you get the idea. I was right up there with most of you. I was ready to believe the worst of the worst rumors and questioned her abilities and motives before I even met her.

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Filed in Events, News, local politics | 9 responses so far

Kimi Cojuangco, Mayor of Sison

Jeanette on Sep 23rd 2007

Kimi CojuangcoAs mentioned previously, the newly elected mayor of Sison, Mrs. Kimi Cojuangco visited some of her constituents living in California. Our own “Babot” (Ophelia Pasibe Glasser) had an opportunity to converse with the mayor and get to know her a little better. Before we learn about the various initiatives that she is working on as mayor, we thought it may be a good idea to get to know her a little better first.

According to Babot, this is what she learned about the mayor during their meeting on Sept. 20 at the mayor’s home in Long Beach, CA.

Her Lolo (on her mother’s side)was the owner of the old Pantranco buslines. He was originally from the Ilocos Norte region but settled in Dagupan city. The mayor’s mother married Mr. Schultz ( an expat-German living in the Philippines) thus her maiden name. The mayor was born and raised in the Philippines. Her father must have liked the weather in our country for they never lived anywhere else but the Philippines. The mayor speaks Tagalog and understands Ilocano, her grandparents were, after all, Ilocano. She implemented the English only rule in the Municipio (Town Hall) to show delegates from the different governmental departments (that are invited by her to tour Sison for future grants and loans) that even though Sison is an agricultural town, it is home to highly intelligent individuals that are multi-lingual and can be utilized for jobs such as the call-centers that cater to international companies that outsource such services to the Philippines. She wants a piece of THAT action for the people in Sison. She doesn’t want the current trend of young, intelligent people moving away from Sison to look for jobs in cities or abroad. She wants to slow down the current hemorrhage or brain-drain of young professionals. She said she’s doing it to make the people more competitive in the global market. The Mayor’s focus during her tenure is Agriculture, Education and Health. ~ Babot

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Filed in Events, News, local politics | 4 responses so far

Extending the Olive Branch to Mrs. Carmen "Kimi" Cojuangco

Jeanette on Apr 21st 2007

This is an open letter to our Sison, Pangasinan mayoral candidate, Mrs. Carmen “Kimi” Cojuangco.

Dear Mrs. Cojuangco:

I suppose congratulations are in order since no one is running against your candidacy for the mayoral post of Sison and you’re the default winner. To be completely honest, upon my hearing the news of your mayoral aspirations I was nervous, suspicious, mad and down-right scared. Perhaps it is because I know nothing about you. I don’t know what you have in mind for our beloved little town. I asked myself, why would a rich, metropolitan woman like you want to take on the role of Mayor in a rural farming town like ours? Why not Makati? Surely it is not for the many accolades you’ll receive during ribbon ceremonies for newly installed water pumps or some other bucolic rituals that a farm community like to participate in.

Then (on my many forays on the internet scouring for information to get to know you) I ran into this Op-Ed piece in the Pangasinan Star Online written by Miss Yolly Sotelo. She quoted you saying to the Enquirer, “I know what the town needs. One is livelihood and I want to stir the town and improve the basic services and the town’s infrastructure,”. The piece further states that your husband refers to Sison as his “hometown” and that you have a “pure heart”. For the improvement of infrastructures and the basic services of the town, I definitely support that statement. However, I hope that you will at least get a consensus from your constituents prior to the implementation of what you think the town needs rather than what the people truly need. The mayoral seat is, after all, a “public” office where the elected officer must represent the needs of the people and for the people. Am I correct?

For now, I will have to trust your husband’s observations of the pureness of your intentions. Therefore, I will reserve all judgments, suspicions and whatever foreboding premonitions I may have and extend you an olive branch- a gesture of friendship and peace. May we all work towards the betterment of our town, its people and all the while preserving its natural beauty. So once again, I extend a most heartfelt congratulations to you, Mrs. Mayor.

Sincerely,

Mrs. Ophelia P. Glasser

USA


Filed in local politics | 15 responses so far

Vote Green

Jeanette on Apr 21st 2007

It is election time again in the Philippines. As you ponder who to vote for, you might consider these ‘commandments’ found on the Alyansa Tigil-Mina website:

“TEN COMMANDMENTS”
to Guide Voters in choosing Green Candidates


1. Thou shall not vote for candidates using 4Gs to win: Guns, Goons, Gold, Garbage. Vote for candidates who stand for the essential Ms in the genuine exercise of the right of suffrage: Malinis, Maayos, Matipid, Mapanindigan, Marangal, Mapayapa, Makatao, Maka-Kalikasan, Maka-Diyos. Support candidates known for their simple, pro-people and ecological lifestyle.

2. Thou shall not support candidates who nail, strap or plaster campaign materials on defenseless trees and other restricted sites. Vote for candidates who plant and love trees, use the least amount of campaign materials and abide by the campaign rules.

3. Thou shall not pick candidates who use smoke-belching vehicles that contribute to worsening air quality. Go for candidates on bicycles rather than those who come in a convoy of cars. Vote for those who use fewer vehicles in motorcades to reduce fuel consumption and car emissions.

4. Thou shall not fall for candidates who make beautiful speeches about their love for the people and the environment, but fail to match their words with deeds. Does the candidate walk his/her talk? Check if she/he is engaged in any environmental advocacy or project, or has financial interest in any polluting or environmentally-destructive business. Vote for those who live by what they say.

5. Thou shall not select candidates who profess to protect the environment, but are mute on what they intend to do. Ask thy candidates, point blank, how they intend to serve the interest of the environment. Vote for those who will work earnestly to heal and protect the environment.

6. Thou shall not choose candidates who are hooked to the outmoded “hakot-tambak-sunog” and fail to shut down illegal dumps. Vote for those who segregate their discards at home and in the work place and support ecological, low-cost and community-driven alternatives to dumps, landfills and incinerators.

7. Thou shall not vote candidates who ignore the health, environment, socio-economic and human rights concerns against “sanitary” landfills, “waste-to-energy,” dams and similar infrastructure plans. Vote for candidates who will assert the people’s sovereign rights to a clean, safe and healthy environment. Go for candidates who will work for sustainable economy that will respond to people’s basic needs and not to the dictates of the World Bank and other international funding institutions.

8. Thou shall not elect candidates who want to build big dams and allow mining, logging and other extractive industries to rape our land and abuse human rights, especially the rights of our indigenous peoples. Vote for those who will take the cudgels for the human as well as non-human victims, such as trees, plants and wildlife, of environment-damaging human activities.

9. Thou shall not back candidates who will not take action against the health and safety threats of genetically modified crops and food products. Vote for candidates who will advance the people’s right to safe and healthy foods as well as food production systems that nurture the earth.

10. Thou shall not vote for candidates who refuse to acknowledge global warming. Vote for candidates who see the needs for preventive and precautionary actions to stop climate change. For instance, go for candidates who oppose new coal power projects and support community-owned utilities using renewable energy sources.

Developed and issued by the EcoWaste Coalition with inputs from the Add Up Youth Environment Group, Bangon Kalikakasan Movement, Concerned Citizens Against Pollution, Ecological Society of the Philippines, Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives, Greenpeace Southeast Asia, Health Care Without Harm, Miriam PEACE, Mother Earth Foundation, Sagip Bukid and Mailet Diokno-Pascual.

Filed in Eco-Friendly, environment, local politics | 18 responses so far