Oct 092017
 

Until recently, 29 year-old Merry Rose De Vera was homeless, living on the street, and making ends meet by going through people’s trash.

De Vera, who eloped with her boyfriend when she was only 19, lived in along the South Pier in Manila, where she became a mother of three children. Because of their horrible living conditions, her kids grew up sickly and weak, and were constantly in and out of government hospitals because of pneumonia.

“Ang buhay po sa kalsada sobrang hirap. Naranasan ko na kumain ng galing sa basurahan… Hindi kami halos makaligo ng isang linggo. Ang hirap po talaga tapos kapag umuulan, hindi mo alam kung saan ka tatakbo para makasilong kasi mababasa ka talaga. “’Yung mga anak ko nga halos laman ng ospital ‘yun e… laging polmunya ang sakit,” she told ABS-CBN News.

After suffering through domestic abuse from the father of her children, Merry Rose decided to find away to achieve gainful employment that would provide her children a better life.

The answer to her prayers came from the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), who suggested that she should attend the free livelihood training offered by the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA) in Sampaloc Manila.

“Inalok po ako ng DSWD kasi po 4Ps [Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program] member po ako… Tinanong po nila ako kung gusto ko daw po mag-aral ng TESDA [Technical Education and Skills Development Authority] para magkaroon ng trabaho. Sabi ko ‘susubukan ko po,” she says.

Merry Rose and other benificiaries of the 4P program were the first batch to finish the Tile Setting training in the Technical-Vocational Training School of the DSWD in Sampaloc which allowed her to get a better job as a tile setter in a construction firm in Makati. As of writing, she has been gainfully employed for 7 months.

As a result of the training, she has moved her kids out of their shanty in Sampaloc, Manila into a better apartment near her place of employment. Her kids are now able to attend school.

“Hindi kagaya dati na wala kaming kasiguraduhan kung may kakainin pa kami bukas, paggising ba namin mayroon ba kaming aalmusalin. Ngayon, sigurado na pong may kakainin ang mga anak ko,” Merry Rose says.

Merry Rose has a simple message to the people that are going through the same ordeal: “Ang masasabi ko lang po sa mga nakatira sa kalye na tinutulungan ng DSWD na huwag po nilang sayangin.”

The 4P’s program of the DSWD provides monetary grants to the poorest of the poor, giving conditional cash grants to qualified families for better nutrition, education and to take them out of the poverty threshold.

The TESDA training center in Sampaloc, Manila, gives 4P benificiaries a number of livelihood training programs to help impoverished families learn useful skills that will allow them to join the workforce. Everything in the course is free: from the uniform, tools, the fares to and from the training center, and even the meals they eat, allowing the poorest of the poor a chance to lift their families from poverty.

The post Homeless Woman Triumphs Through Adversity Thanks To Free Training From TESDA, DSWD appeared first on Good News Pilipinas.

Mar 232014
 
DSWD to wrap up probe on rotten relief goods by April

The Department of Social Welfare and Development is expected to shed light by next month on how some relief goods ended up in a dump site or were spoiled when distributed to local government officials. “Next week, we will conclude the proper investigation and discuss it with [the team] for some adjustments. By April 5, we will file our recommendation to DILG (Department of Interior and Local Government),” Social Secretary Corazon “Dinky” Soliman told GMA News Online in a phone interview on Sunday. DSWD’s recommendations will include the the investigation’s findings on who should be held accountable for the spoilage of relief goods, and whether administrative cases should be filed. Soliman clarified that some relief goods were indeed disposed of in a dumpsite in Palo, Leyte since these were “not seen fit for human consumption.” She noted that only a sack of assorted biscuits, 10 cups of instant noodles, and a half sack of rice were buried in the dump site despite media reports that truckloads of spoiled goods had been disposed of there. She said some of the donated food got wet, causing them to spoil. The Social Welfare secretary explained that the rotten relief goods that were given to another village in Palo town did not come from DSWD but from various agencies. The relief goods were almost distributed to Yolanda survivors but were intercepted by the chairman of Barangay Gacao, who saw maggots crawling on some of the packages. Soliman said that the investigation will also look into Read More …

Dec 142013
 
Soliman dismisses reports food donation not reaching survivors

U.S. and Philippine military personnel prepare boxes containing tent material from U.S. relief organization USAID to be deployed by airlift to the victims of super typhoon Haiyan, at a Manila airport November 13, 2013. Philippine officials have been overwhelmed by Haiyan, one of the strongest typhoons on record, which tore through the central Philippines on Friday and flattened Tacloban, coastal capital of Leyte province where officials had feared 10,000 people died, many drowning in a tsunami-like wall of seawater. (MNS photo) MANILA (Mabuhay) – Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) Secretary Corazon “Dinky” Soliman on Wednesday dismissed new reports from the foreign media that food donations and other essential relief supplies are not reaching “Yolanda” victims in the Visayas Region. During Wednesday’s briefing at the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council headquarters at Camp Aguinaldo, Quezon City, she said helicopters from the Philippine Air Force (PAF) and foreign military contingents have ensured that food and other essentials have reached the most far-flung barangays in the affected regions. “Helicopter deliveries are even done with the PAF and other foreign assets in some hard-to-reach barangays. In fact, the helicopter that crashed in La Paz, Leyte last December 6 was carrying two DSWD volunteers who were doing relief work. Both sustained various injuries but are now being given medical attention,” Soliman stressed. The DSWD chief added that regular spot checking and monitoring of relief works in affected areas are being conducted to ensure goods are delivered directly to the affected individuals. Read More …

Dec 132013
 
DSWD chief denies reports of US, UK food donations sold in markets

British aircraft carrier, HMS Illustrious, carrying around 500 tons of aid for victims of Typhoon Haiyan docks at Pier 15 in South Harbor, Manila on Wednesday (December 11, 2013) for relief operation in Tacloban, Leyte. Led by Capt. Mike Utley, the Royal Navy ship carries supplies provided by the Department for International Development (DFID) including 12,500 blankets, 20,000 candles, 30,000 bags of rice and 9,800 tins of sardines, thousand cans of vegetables, shelter kits, and jerry cans. HMS Illustrious is replacing HMS Daring, which has been distributing aid in remote communities for the past week. (MNS photo) MANILA, Dec. 11 (Mabuhay) – Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) Secretary Corazon Soliman on Wednesday vehemently denied reports circulating in the foreign media that donations from the US and UK consisting of MREs (meal-ready-to-eat) are being diverted and sold in markets. She said that this claim is preposterous as the two nations did not made any food donations to the Philippines. “Per DSWD’s records, the UK donations that have entered the country only include non-food items such as shelter boxes, communication equipment, solar lights, and blankets among others,” Soliman said during a briefing at the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council headquarters in Camp Aguinaldo, Quezon City. She also added that these items are impossible to divert as all are consigned to non-government organizations and United Nations agencies except for the 504 tents which arrived in Manila last Nov. 25 and were consigned to the DSWD and another 576 relief Read More …

Dec 012013
 
Women-friendly spaces set up at Yolanda evacuation centers

Women-friendly spaces have been set up at evacuation centers for female survivors of Super Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan), especially those who need to breastfeed their children. The DSWD said the women-friendly spaces (WFS) will also let the women survivors get counseling and learn about health and well-being. Initially, the DSWD said five WFS had been set up at the Redemptorist Church, San Fernando Community School, San Jose Elementary School, Rizal Central School, and the Tacloban Convention Center. The DSWD said the WFS also serves as a venue for women to interact and share stories as part of their coping mechanism to overcome their trauma. Social workers trained in stress debriefing are on hand to guide them. The DSWD said the establishment of the WFS is integrated in evacuation camp management, which seeks to respond to the effects of displacement on women and children. WFS strategy focal person Alona Bermejo said this project, where the WFS can be set up in a classroom or even a tent, is co-funded by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). The DSWD said the WFS concept taps service providers in providing psycho-social support for the internally displaced women as well as medical, reproductive health services and basic food and non-food needs. “Beneficiaries of the WFS will become part of the local government unit referral system where they will be accessed to different agencies for livelihood opportunities,” the DSWD said. — LBG, GMA News

Nov 192013
 
No tax on cash donations from abroad – BIR

U.S. Marine helps deliver relief goods to areas affected by Typhoon “Yolanda” on Friday (Nov. 15) at the Villamor Airbase in Pasay City. US Agency for International Development (USAID) was managing relief assistance for the victims of Typhoon “Yolanda” (international name: Haiyan). (MNS photo) MANILA, Nov 18 (Mabuhay) – The Burea of Internal Revenue (BIR) on Monday clarified that no donor’s tax is imposed on cash donations from overseas. “Kung pera from abroad, wala naman binubuwisan ang gobyerno. Kasi kung donation, ang batas ng ibang bansa ang iiral, kung may donor’s tax sila or wala. As far as the Philippines is concerned, cash donations from abroad, walang donor’s tax yun. Kung meron babawasan, bank charges yun at di napupunta sa gobyerno,” BIR chief Kim Henares said. She added that there is no donor’s tax on local cash donations given to the government or accredited foundations. Donors can also deduct their donations from their income. However, cash donations made to organizations that are not accredited with the Department of Social Welfare and Development and NDRRMC may be taxed. “Kung nag-donate kayo sa isang hindi accredited (na organization), if beyon P100,000 ang donation niyo meron ho donor’s tax. Graduated yun. Up to P100,000 exempted naman yun,” Henares said. “Yung kumakalat sa Facebook na sinasabi nag-donate sila sa GCASH or Pasa Load ng P3,000 eh nabasawan pa, hindi ho buwis yun, charges ho yun at dapat magtanong sila sa telco nila,” she added. As for in-kind donations sent from abroad, the BIR chief Read More …

Nov 102013
 
DSWD in dire need of volunteers in Cebu to repack relief goods

Typhoon Yolanda relief ops in Pasay. Volunteers are repacking relief goods at the DSWD ware house in Pasay City on Saturday, November 9, for the victims of typhoon Yolanda. DANNY PATA Danny Pata As Cabinet Secretary Rene Almendras in a press conference on Sunday announced to gathered media that routes by land into Tacloban City have opened up, he also called on the public, especially those in Cebu to volunteer with the Department of Social Welfare and Development in repacking relief goods for those in Tacloban and other hard hit places. “Cebu has been targeted as a logistics center, so DSWD is appealing for repacking volunteers in Cebu,” Almendras said, noting that the DSWD in Cebu is in dire need of volunteers to help repack goods. “We have to step it up, palakasin pa ang repacking sa Cebu, kasi it is our closest logistics center we have for repacking,” he said. DSWD aims to give families food supplies enough to last at least five days, Almendras added. – Patricia Denise Chiu / KDM, GMA News 

Oct 192013
 
COA: DSWD has P854M unliquidated ‘pork’ funds

The Department of Social Welfare and Development has not yet liquidated pork barrel funds amounting to P854.4 million that was released through it for programs of various non-government organizations,  according to the Commission on Audit report. In a COA report released Friday, state auditors disclosed total fund releases to NGOs from 2006 and prior years and until December 31, 2012, amounted to P1.042 billion, of which 83 percent or P872.611 million has remained unliquidated. A detailed breakdown attached to the audit report showed at least half of the unliquidated amount was disbursed between 2010 and 2012. Of the total P1.042 billion, P854.4 million was from lawmakers’ Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF) allocations, commonly called “pork barrel.” NGO beneficiaries were supposed to liquidate cash allotments through submission of “Fund Utilization Reports (FURs),” a requirement most of them simply ignored, and that the DSWD had been lax about monitoring compliance, the COA report said. “Insufficient efforts to monitor project implementation and failure to enforce the immediate liquidation of fund transfers… resulted in minimal settlement on funds transferred to various NGOs and/or POs [people’s organizations],” it added. Moreover, it said, “We recommend that management send demand letters to NGOs/POs with outstanding obligation and monitor continuously its settlement.” State auditors have recommended that DSWD stop granting additional funds to NGOs with unliquidated balances. Likewise, it suggested to “impose sanctions against NGOs/POs found remiss in the discharge of their duties and responsibilities.” The PDAF has become controversial since the alleged P10-billion pork barrel scam surfaced Read More …

Jul 312013
 

MANILA, July 30 (Mabuhay) — The Department of Social Welfare and Development has set aside P12.7-million worth of emergency relief resources for the victims of floodings that have hit Mindanao due to heavy rains, Malacanang said on Tuesday. In a press briefing in Malacanang, Deputy Presidential Spokesperson Abigail Valte said the DSWD has also been […]