PBSPVRO

Friday, February 20, 2009

21st PBSP Visayas Annual Membership Meeting: The Sounds & Images Part 2

More than 200 guests attended the 21st VAMM, majority of which came from the business sector – the heart of PBSP. Other guests represented the government, consulates, donor agencies, non-government organizations, community-based organizations, academe and media.

Mr. Wilsong Ng of Ng Khai Development Corporation – a PBSP member company – led his band, The Asian Troubadours, in delivering the Doxology and the Philippine National Anthem. The Asian Troubadours earlier treated the guests to renditions of modern classics.












The 21st VAMM exhibit at the lobby of Casino Español de Cebu was an elaborate retrospection of PBSP’s 21-year presence in the Visayas. Since PBSP first opened its Visayas Regional Office in Cebu City in 1988, more than 1,400 projects worth P498.9 million have been implemented in 13 provinces. Of the total projects, 75% focused on poverty reduction and enterprise development, while the other 25% were dedicated for education, health and water, and environmental conservation.


The efficient registration process was made possible by Ng Khai Development Corporation – a proud PBSP member company.

A Better Life: Stories of Corporate Social Responsibility


YELLOW means freedom from ignorance.
At PBSP, we empower children and youth through quality education.

BLUE means better health and cleaner water.
At PBSP, we secure access to clean water and quality health care for the poor.

RED means a little less poverty.
At PBSP, we provide sustainable livelihood to reduce poverty in many communities.

GREEN means giving back what we take out.
At PBSP, we go the distance to heal the environment.

ORANGE means growing healthy enterprises.
At PBSP, we pool technical and financial resources to spur the growth of small business.



A Better Life honors Corporate Social Responsibility. The dimensions of A Better Life are 12 x 12 inches and 12 x 24 inches when spread. There are 200 full color pages. Proceeds of A Better Life will fund reforestation projects in the Central Cebu Protected Landscape and Olango Island. A Better Life is coming out this July 2009!

Be part of A Better Life. Be a Cebu Flowerpecker sponsor at P100,000. Flowepeckers get two (2) pages and a one-hectare reforestation site named after the company. Or be a Cebu Black Shama or Siloy sponsor at P50,000. Siloys get one page and will be involved in the PBSP’s reforestation caravans. Sponsors will receive complementary copies of A Better Life and will be featured in the project’s promotional activities.

For more information, please contact Jessie Cubijano (jmcubijano@pbsp.org.ph) or Malu Largo (mblargo@pbsp.org.ph) at (032) 232-5270 or 232-5283. Visit PBSP in the Visayas at the 4/F PLDT Building, Juan Luna Ave., Mabolo, Cebu City.


Be part of A Better Life!

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Firms urged to do CSR

Sun.Star Cebu
February 19, 2009


THE chairman of the Philippine Business for Social Progress (PBSP) Visayas executive committee is encouraging more homegrown companies to implement corporate social responsibility (CSR) programs.

PBSP Visayas executive committee chairman Jose Antonio Aboitiz said that if more local companies implement CSR projects, the community would reap more benefits.

Aboitiz, who represents the Aboitiz group in the PBSP, said out of 54 PBSP member companies in Cebu, 45 are local firms while the others are branches of multinational corporations.

But this number is only 25 percent of the 241 total member-base of PBSP nationwide.

Aboitiz, in an interview during the PBSP Visayas annual membership meeting yesterday, said recruitment for new members was “fairly good” last year.

New members

Yesterday, PBSP welcomed three new members, all homegrown Cebuano companies. These are Virginia Foods Inc., Mayflower Inn and Espina, Perez and Espina, a professional service provider for architecture, engineering and planning. The companies committed to allot a part of their income to social development.

Stanley Go, vice president for sales and marketing of Virginia Foods, told Sun.Star Cebu that the company was first interested to adopt a school near its plant in Compostela town through the “Balik Baterya Program.”

Under the program, the adopted school will receive P40,000 in school supplies once the host company collects a certain number of batteries for recycling.

“It will allow us to give back to the community where we are operating,” he said.

Go heard that PBSP’s programs are aligned with what Virginia Foods intends to do. “So we (decided to) course (our project) through PBSP since we don’t have a foundation,” he added.

Despite present financial conditions, Aboitiz said, PBSP will not cut its budget for different programs. Instead, the group will focus on expanding its flagship Area Resource Management (ARM) program, he added.

At present, there are 10 ARM areas nationwide, eight of which are based in the Visayas. The ARM program aims to provide basic health services, education and access to clean water, as well as raise awareness on environmental protection among underprivileged communities in the country. (DME)

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

21st Visayas Annual Membership Meeting

21st Visayas Annual Membership Meeting
Wednesday, February 18, 2009, Casino Español de Cebu, Cebu City

Corporate Citizenship in the Face of Challenges


Cebu Daily News
18 February 2009


The Philippine Business for Social Progress (PBSP) in the Visayas is holding its 21st Visayas Annual Membership Meeting (VAMM) today, February 18, 2009, at the Salon de España, Casino Español de Cebu, Cebu City. The theme of the 21st VAMM is “Corporate Citizenship in the Face of Challenges.” PBSP is a private and non-profit foundation dedicated to promoting business sector commitment to social development.

More than a decade ago, the Philippines was also gripped by the Asian Economic Crisis, which retrenched thousands of workers. At that time, PBSP was implementing the Metro Cebu High Growth Area Program. Our goal then was to equip Cebuano workers with skills that would match the requirements of new industries, majority of which focused on exports. The financial crash turned the city’s priority on its head with the issue no longer on the quality of workers, but the availability of jobs itself.

PBSP responded to the challenge and launched the Metro Cebu Workforce Development and Education Program (MCWDEP). PBSP organized the retrenched workers into workers’ cooperatives. Today, assisted coops continue to earn income through production of furniture, fashion accessories and house wares, food processing, and community-based enterprises. MCWDEP is one of eight poverty reduction programs managed by PBSP in the Visayas.

Promoting Corporate Citizenship in the Visayas

The commitment of the Visayas business sector to PBSP’s efforts in the region became indelible with the creation of the Visayas Executive Committee in 1987. The following year, the PBSP Visayas Regional Office was opened. By 1989, PBSP partnered with the Cebu City Government and Cebu business sector for the Cebu Hillyland Development Program to address two challenges – poverty and environmental degradation in the hillylands. Through the years, 12 more provinces in the Visayas were reached through 1,400 projects worth P498.9 million.

Poverty reduction in Cebu

In the Cebu hillylands, the Cebu Watershed Management Program is making positive changes in the lives of 2,500 families. Before, hillylands residents were unaware of the high value crops that can be yielded by their vast agricultural lands. With PBSP’s assistance, they now produce high value vegetables, cutflowers, abaca and organic fertilizers,and raise livestock to augment their income.

More than 5,000 hectares have been reforested through partnerships with business, government, donor agencies and communities. In 2008, the Save the Buhisan Watershed Project was launched. PBSP aims to rehabilitate Buhisan, provide income opportunities for its poor residents, and transform it into an eco-tourism destination.

The Metro Cebu Workforce Development and Education Program (MCWDEP) continues to assist workers cooperatives and community-based organizations. Under the quality education advocacy of MCWDEP, PBSP supports the high school division of the Science and Technology Education Center, which pools together the best elementary graduates and provides them with information and communication technology (ICT)-based instructions recommended by the business community.

Meanwhile, Coalition for Better Education brings together representatives from business, academe, government and civil society to improve the education curriculum, hones teachers for competence in ICT for education, in teaching Science, Mathematics, English and values, and involves the larger community as education stakeholders.

PBSP further responded to poverty and environmental degradation in Olango Island. Through the Olango Island Development Program, PBSP provides family health services such as medicines, consultations, feeding and family planning counseling while sanitary toilets and potable water systems were constructed. Twenty hectares of mangrove sites have been reforested while environmental education is taught in the island’s public elementary schools.

In 2008, PBSP in partnership with the Philippine Amateur Swimming Association and Shangri-La’s Mactan Resort & Spa, held the first Olango Challenge: Swim for A Cause. Seventy-three swimmers crossed the five-kilometer wide Gilutungan channel to vie for gold, raise funds for livelihood and education projects, promote environmental conservation and educate the public about the importance of swimming.

Rebuilding lives through sustainable disaster response

In 2006, the landslide in St. Bernard, Southern Leyte almost buried the dreams of people in the village of Guinsaugon. PBSP and its donors and partners helped the landslide survivors spring back to life through productive activities such as the production of concrete hollow blocks and bamboo-based furniture, skills training on masonry and carpentry, vermiculture, growing of vegetables and ornamental plants, and processing of food and virgin coconut oil. Water, education and other basic social services were channeled to the rehabilitation site so the survivors are encouraged to start their lives anew.

The Southern Leyte Rehabilitation Program also made mariculture a viable livelihood option in the community. Today, Guinsaugon survivors have made St. Bernard an important supplier of large quantities of milkfish and high value fish species in Region 8.

In August 2006, a massive oil spill in the island province of Guimaras affected its primary source of income: fishing. PBSP provided alternative livelihood projects such as vegetable growing and hog raising. The people now also grow and market seaweeds to areas like Cebu.

In June 2008, Typhoon Frank ravaged Iloilo. Among the ravaged areas were the rice bowls of the province. In response, PBSP provided immediate relief assistance. As a long-term support, PBSP provided rice farmers access to financial assistance for training, technical support, and marketing of farm yields.

Innovative marine and upland technologies

Bohol used to be one of the poorest provinces in the country and the limited knowledge in farm productivity was one of the main causes of poverty. PBSP responded by implementing projects on palay trading and rice farming, which transformed the farmers into net rice exporters. Vegetable growing, livestock raising, agroforestry and consumer store operations were also introduced while households have accessed water for irrigation and domestic use.

Samar is the home of PBSP’s innovative Coastal and Upland Technology Testing and Verification Center. The center is located along Maqueda Bay, which provides food to 14 towns in Western Samar. The center has a multi-species hatchery containing fish fry and fingerlings that have high market values. Counteracting the depletion of Maqueda Bay, the center tests and validates culture systems of high value marine species. Tested technologies are adapted by fisher folk yielding for them better income.

Planting the seed of Corporate Citizenship

The eight ARM programs in the Visayas reached 27,000 families in 2008 alone. After 21 years in the Visayas, PBSP commits itself to more years of business empowering the poor. In the face of challenges, PBSP will continue planting the seeds of corporate citizenship to realize a collective goal – a better life for all Filipinos.

The establishment of PBSP in 1970 was a revolutionary move by the Philippine business community---strategic response to the socio-economic turmoil of the times. Fifty of the country’s top business leaders consolidated their efforts to uplift the quality of life of the Filipino poor through PBSP. Since then, PBSP’s programs on livelihood and enterprise development, health and water, education and environmental conservation have reached four million Filipinos.

In 2008, PBSP’s membership grew to 238 companies from Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao. PBSP members contributed P75.84 million, which were leveraged to generate additional P247.60 million from donor agencies and other partners. More than 200,000 poor Filipinos benefited from PBSP’s grants and financial assistance in 2008 that reached P300.92 million.




PBSP’s Area Resource Management (ARM) Program

The Area Resource Management (ARM) is PBSP’s flagship poverty reduction program. ARM provides sustainable livelihood opportunities and enterprise development support to disadvantaged groups---landless rural workers, sustenance and marginal farmers and fisherfolk, disaster victims, and urban poor.

To ensure sustainability, ARM employs an integrated approach involving provision of access of the poor to basic social services, environmental conservation, livelihood generation, and creation of cooperatives and community-based organizations that will eventually implement the projects on their own when PBSP phases out.


Eight ARM programs are currently implemented in Cebu, Western Samar, Bohol, Guimaras, Southern Leyte, and Iloilo.

Message of Her Excellency, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo


MALACAÑAN PALACE
MANILA


MESSAGE


Congratulations to the Philippine Business for Social Progress as you hold your 21st Visayas Annual Membership Meeting!

PBSP has shown that corporate citizenship can indeed improve lives. For nearly four decades, your 238 member companies and corporate social responsibility partners have vigorously implemented projects to fight poverty in the Philippines. Your programs on poverty reduction, health and water, education and enterprise development have improved the quality of life of many Filipinos in the Visayas, most especially in the provinces of Bohol, Cebu, Guimaras, Iloilo, Samar, and Southern Leyte.

The theme of this year’s gathering, “Corporate Citizenship in the Face of Challenges,” demonstrates once again PBSP’s firm commitment to human development amidst the global economic crisis. More than ever, it is during these times that your corporate social responsibility would manifest their relevance. Our people, especially those in the depressed areas, would need your continued support.

Together, let us continue to enrich more lives and give hope to our people.

Mabuhay ang PBSP!


GLORIA MACAPAGAL-ARROYO

MANILA
18 February 2009

Thursday, February 05, 2009

21st Visayas Annual Membership Meeting

PBSP's 21st Visayas Annual Membership Meeting will be held this February 18, 2009, 11:00 A.M. to 2:00 P.M. at Salon de España, Casino Español de Cebu, V. Ranudo St. Cebu City. The Keynote Speaker is respected economist Prof. Solita Collas-Monsod.



For more information about PBSP's 21st Visayas Annual Membership Meeting, please call the PBSP Visayas Regional Office at (032) 232.5270 or 232.5283. You can also email at jmcubijano@pbsp.org.ph or mblargo@pbsp.org.ph.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Motolite-PBSP Balik Baterya Program

Project Balik Baterya commences
By: Ma. Bernadette Parco
Cebu Daily News
17 November 2008

The cabinet at the back of the garage or informal junk shops are no longer the only places where you can store used motor vehicles or used lead acid batteries.

The Philippine Business for Social Progress (PBSP has formalized a tie up with Oriental and Motolite Corp. through the Balik Baterya program.

PBSP member companies can donate their ULABs, which would be collected by authorized Motolite personnel, to the program for recycling.

The collected ULABs are shipped to Philippine Recyclers Inc. (PRI) located in Marilao, Bulacan where these are converted into pure lead, lead alloys and plastic chips. The sulfuric acid from the batteries is also treated.

The ULABs should be disposed of properly because these contain lead, which is toxic. Used electrolytes also contain dissolved lead.

These motor vehicle batteries contain sulfuric acid, which is corrosive and contaminated the soil and water when spilled.

Ingestion or inhalation of these chemicals can cause anemia, high blood pressure, kidney problems, infertility, miscarriage, and nervous system damage.

Children, if exposed to these harmful chemicals, may suffer from neurological disorders like learning disabilities and short attention span.

The practice of sending ULABs to informal recyclers and junk shops is prevalent. But remember, these shops do not practice proper pollution control measures.

Breaking batteries could cause contamination of our water and drainage systems such as canals, rivers, creeks and wells.

Moreover, improper battery recycling is a violation of Republic Act No. 6969 or the Toxic Substances and Hazardous and Nuclear Wastes Control Act of 1990 as specified under the Department Administrative Order No. 29 of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources.

PBSP, which is the largest corporate-led, nonprofit, social development foundation in the country, conducted its first series of collection last October 17, 20 and 21.

According to Maria Luisa B. Largo, PBSP Membership and Corporate Involvement Program officer, about 9.6 tons or 9,600 kilos of ULABs were hauled from Lear Automotive Services (B.V.) Netherlands – Philippine Branch, Lear Automotive Services (B.V.) Netherlands – Philippine Engineering and Technology Center, Fairchild Semiconductor and Petron Corporation – Mandaue Terminal.

The following Petron gasoline stations in the following sites accept ULABs: barangays Banilad and Talamban, Natalio Bacalso Avenue, B. Rodriguez Street in Cebu City, North Reclamation area and barangay Guizo branches in Mandaue City. The Petron station along M.L. Quezon Avenue in Lapu Lapu City also accepts ULABs.

Also included are Wellmade Motors and Development Corporation offices in Lapu Lapu Street, Cebu City; Tipolo, Highway, Mandaue City; and Lawaan, Talisay City.

The program is aimed at providing support to selected schools.

“In the first year of the implementation, 100 primary schools in the province of Cebu will be benefited. The proceeds of the Balik baterya Program will be used to establish 300 learning resource centers in primary schools in the Visayas,” said Largo.

Companies are urged to establish learning resource centers through collecting at least 100 ULABs, which has an initial donated value of P40,000. Each learning package contains books, instructional materials and a bookshelf.

At present, there is still no equivalent amount for the 9.6 tons of ULABs that were collected. The amount will be determined by Motolite and PRI, added Largo.





Sunday, September 28, 2008

PBSP’s Buhisan watershed rehab project gets support

PBSP’s Buhisan watershed rehab project gets support

Cebu Daily News
First Posted 10:13:00 08/31/2008

Property developers Landco Pacific Corporation (Landco) and its partner, Genvi Development Corporation joined the Philippine Business for Social Progress (PBSP) in the Central Visayas to help the PBSP in their advocacy to rehabilitate the Buhisan watershed in barangay Buhisan, Cebu City.

Representatives of the two realty firms signed a memorandum of agreement with the PBSP for the “Save the Buhisan Watershed” project late last month.

Landco and Genvi agreed to provide P350,000 to PBSP for the purchase of indigenous tree species for the period August 2008 to July 2010.

Employee volunteers from the two companies will conduct occasional visits to the site to monitor the trees planted.

The PBSP will assign a reforestation site within the Buhisan watershed and forest reserve where Landco and Genvi can plant trees.

Landco executive vice president Francis Ceballos said the company's partnership with PBSP is part of Landco's efforts toward the welfare of the community and the environment, especially those where their projects belong.

Landco is the developer of Monterrazas de Cebu, a 200-hectare premier mountain development that transverses barangays Labangon, Guadalupe and Banawa in Cebu City.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Microsoft NGO Day 2008

September 26, 2008 (Friday)
8:30AM to 5:00pm
Salon de Madrid, Casino Español de Cebu, Cebu City

A forum for non-profits aimed to maximize their potentials
to achieve their goals for nation building.




Mr. Jose Antonio Aboitiz
Chairman
PBSP in the Visayas

Keynote Speaker


Financial Management:
On Earned Income

Speaker:
Mr. Gulliver Go
Consultant for Business Development & Non-Profits



Financial Management:
Microsoft Tools

Speaker:
Mr. Boy Bawal
Sales Operations Director for Southern Philippines
Microsoft Philippines





Fund Raising:
Teaching The Joy of Giving


Speaker:
Ms. Mayan G. Quebral
Executive Director
Venture for Fund Raising


Fund Raising:
Using Technology in Fund Raising


Speaker:
Mr. Enrico Ibana
Infobuilder Technologies, Inc.

Project Management:
Realities in Project Management


Speaker:
Mr. Rene Fortuno
Manager -
Product Development and Management Service
Training and Consulting Group

PBSP


Project Management:
Microsoft Project Management Tool


Speaker:
Mr. Edwin Leoncio
Technology Specialist
Microsoft Philippines


New Media In Fund Raising:
Digital Marketing Using Silverlight


Speaker:
Mr. Jericho Matawaran
Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila
Microsoft Philippines



Working With Microsoft

Speaker:
Ms. Laurie Mae Rivera-Moreno
PR and Community Affairs Manager
Microsoft Philippines



New Media In Fund Raising:
Using Ammado.com


Speaker:
Mr. Joeri Gianotten
Director for Asia Pacific
Ammado.com


Working With Microsoft

Speaker:
Ms. Audrey Ong
Microsoft Singapore



Mr. George Parilla of Microsoft Philippines welcomed the participants of the Microsoft NGO Day 2008.



Ms. Dianne Therese Rallon, Board of Director of the Cebu Uniting for Sustainable Water, hosted the NGO Day.













Taiyo Yuden Philippines plants 10K seedlings at Buhisan

Employees of Taiyo Yuden Philippines planted 10,000 native and endemic tree seedlings on a four-hectare site in Toong, Cebu City.

The activity is led by their EMR Director Koichi Iguchi, General Managers Toshihiko Uemura and Akira Takahashi, Assistant General Manager Keiichi Kimura, and EMs Shozaburo Kanai, Satoshi Miyamae, Toshiaki Nakano, and Koji Taketome.

Taiyo Yuden Philippines has been a partner of PBSP for its reforestation efforts since 2001. The company will continue to adopt four hectares for reforestation every year until 2015.


Veco employees plant trees with PBSP

More than 70 employees of the Visayan Electric Company (Veco) planted 12,500 seedlings over five hectares of the Buhisan Watershed and Forest Reserve.

This activity is in partnership with the Visayas Regional Office of PBSP.

In 2010, Veco also partnered with PBSP for a five-year reforestation park project in the Cebu Hillylands. The Veco Refo Park Project aims to plant 1 million trees over 540 hectares of the Cebu Hillylands.


Art 'N' Nature's Venus Genson is Woman Entrepreneur of 2012

Congratulations to Ms. Venus Genson for bagging the Women Entrepreneur award for her trailblazing feats in social entrepreneurship and community development through Art 'N' Nature Manufacturing Corporation.

The award is one of the citations given during the recently capped Entrepreneur of the Year Philippines 2012 awarding ceremonies.

Ms. Genson is also the president of the Venus Group of Companies, a member company of PBSP.