Sunday 26 July 2009

Poem written by a Filipino Engineer



Tao..Saan ka Patungo? (By: George Fosana)

Isang hiwaga na ang kimpal na alabok nang mahingaha’y naging
nilalang sa paraisong kinapal…
Binigyang laya at karapatang maging hari ng kanyang kaisipan
Sumasagwan sa ilog ng buhay
Na di turol ang landas na tatahakin…
…mabato
…minsa’y malalim ang tubig na tila bahaw sa katahimikan
…matinik ang mga siit ng bakawang humahampas ang
mga dahong tumatampal sa nanlalamig na pisngi
sandaling dadako sa maingay na lagaslas ng tubig na
tila naguunahang makahimlay sa dulo ng karimlan.
Mahaba ang paglalayag subalit bawat paglipas ng sandali
ay nagbibigay ng ibayong lakas sa katawang
pinanday ng karanasan
iba’t ibang hugis…kanya kanyang pangarap
ang panahon ay tila napakadaling sandali na ating ninimnimin
napakaraming ugat…
….napakaraming daan ang nilalagusan ng batis ng buhay
naghihintay kung saan papadparin ng along humahawak sa bangkang
papel na patuloy na aanurin ng panahon at pagsubok…
kung saan hahantong ay isang hiwagang sasagutin ng isang paslit
na walang muwang sa mundo…doon sa ibayo
…maghihintay
…magtitiis
… hahanapin ang buhay sa kabila ng kabilang pampang
pasasaan ba’t tao’y dadalhin ng kanyang pangarap doon sa dulo ng ilog
upang hagkan ang karagatang naghihintay ng di malirip na katanungan..

Source

Friday 24 July 2009

PICE raises fund for family of departed colleague

In times of need, the Filipino trait of "Bayanihan" or the effort of helping one another prevails to their community here as what they did to the bereaved family of a Filipino engineer who died in his sleep after succumbing to heart attack last week.
Since early this week, various individuals and groups have extended support, both financial and in kind, to the family of the late Jose Zoilo, 43, a civil engineer working at a company that implemented the new airport project in Doha. The Philippine Institute of Civil Engineers –Qatar Chapter (PICE-Qatar) of which Zoilo belongs started the fund drive to respond to the financial needs of his wife and three children and other community members took no time to shell out from their pockets.
Zoilo was sleeping with his two children when he suffered a stroke. "I tried to woke him up but he never reacted and learned later from mom after I took a bath that he was already gone," said seven-year-old Jun Angeline of Philippine School Doha.
Zoilo had just brought his family here last May after he started working in Qatar from August 2007 from a long stint in Saudi Arabia. His wife Jade said Jose or "Jun" was a loving husband who always look after the future of their children besides being an active community leader.
The fund-raising drive initiated by PICE-Qatar has also drawn attention of other community groups, a company and individuals that had already reached to Ras Laffan area who donated money and food stuff to help the bereaved family’s needs as they prepared to return to their home province in Bohol in the Philippines.
Among the other groups who helped were the Skyfreight Cargo who took charge of the freight handling of the family’s belonging back home , El Seif Company, ABS-CBN’s The Filipino Channel, Philippine School Doha and concerned workers of Qatar Petroleum based in Ras Laffan and Doha.
" I wholeheartedly thanked all the people who helped us during these times of uncertainty and I will never forget what they’ve done to us," said wife Jade
. Source : The Peninsula / By CHRIS V PANGANIBAN

Sunday 19 July 2009

Nominations for 2009 Model OFW Family of the Year Award now accepted

The Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA-CAR) is now accepting nominations for the regional search for 2009 Model OFW Family of the Year Award (MOFYA).

The search for the MOFYA is an annual award-giving project designed to give recognition to outstanding Overseas Filipino Worker (OFW) families. It also promotes the best practices of OFW families in achieving success in all aspects of their life in the face of overseas migration of one or more members of the household.

For this year’s MOFYA search, it emphasizes the importance of family values thereby giving more credit for the “wholesome OFW family relationship and solidarity.” “Civic or community involvement”, “success in education or profession of family members” as well as their “success in managing family finances” will also be considered.

There will be one regional winner each for the “land-based” and “sea-based” categories, which will represent Cordillera in the national level competition. About P2 million in cash and in kind, are at stake as prizes for the regional and national winners and special awards from OWWA and its major corporate sponsors.

Any Non-Government Organizations (NGOs); People’s Organizations (POs); religious organizations or associations; community-based socio-civic organizations/associations; and Local Government Units (LGUs) can nominate an OFW family.

Criteria for nominations are: the family should be headed by an OFW, land-based or sea-based, formerly or presently working abroad, with a formal or informal contract of employment or work permit and with a proof of OWWA membership; the OFW either married or single, is the head of the family and has at least for years of work experience as an OFW; the OFW family should be known as a solid/stable family in the locality(with certification of family solidarity by their barangay captain, Parish priest or religious leader); and the family must be financially stable.

In case of OFW migration, it should be not permanent, that is he/she is a holder of valid Philippine Passport and does not have an immigrant status in a foreign country; and not irregular, that is employment is documented and possesses a valid residency or work permit, as well as other employment documents.

Previous MOFYA nominees who have not won at the regional level yet can be nominated again. Relatives of officials/employees of OWWA, DOLE and its attached agencies and corporate sponsors of MOFYA, up to the third degree of consanguinity and affinity are disqualified from nomination.

Nomination period is until August 15. For more details and nomination forms you may inquire to the OWWA-CAR office at telephone number (074) 445-2260, 619-4558 and 3-3658. (Source)

Sunday 12 July 2009

OFWs can now ‘remit’ Jollibee treats to relatives

How can overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) show their love to their families or loved ones in the country besides sending cash? How about “remitting” a Jollibee cheeseburger or chicken joy?
On Friday, iRemit Inc. and Jollibee Foods Corp. entered into a non-exclusive memorandum of agreement for the “Jollibee Salu-Salo Padala Treat Mula Sa iRemit” program.
Under the program, Bansan Choa, iRemit chairman and chief executive, said that overseas Filipinos can go to any iRemit foreign office or their partners and order from a variety of Jollibee meal and party packages. Then the fast-food chain would deliver the order at the doorstep of their beneficiaries in Metro Manila. For the provinces, the overseas Filipino’s family picks up the package at the nearest Jollibee outlet.
“It’s just like sending remittances, only this time, they are sending their love and good wishes through food,” said Jollibee president Ernesto Tanmantiong.
According to him, the system is simple, since the overseas Filipino can just go to any iRemit branch or foreign office, choose from the five “Jollibee Langhap-Family Blow-Out Packages” that he wishes to send and then pay for the order.
After payment, Tanmantiong said, the iRemit remittance system uploads the order through a remote delivery system, which the Jollibee head office in Manila, through its delivery hotline 8-7000, accesses and views.
For Metro Manila recipients, the food is delivered right at their doorstep. Provincial recipients, meanwhile, are issued a reference number, which they need to present to their nearest Jollibee store so they can claim their package.
“How fulfilling it is to know that OFWs, through this service, would be able to surprise their families here in the Philippines during birthdays, anniversaries and other family occasions,” Choa said.
Tanmantiong and Choa said that iRemit and Jollibee have set a system in place to make sure that the deliveries are complete and are on time.
“Both companies are focusing on accuracy and prompt delivery especially with the anticipated surge of orders placed not only during family celebrations and occasions but even during ordinary days when OFWs just feel like sending a surprise ‘padala’ to their loved ones,” Jollibee said in a statement. Source

Monday 6 July 2009

Rice hull gasifier-combustor bags award by Helen Flores

MANILA, Philippines – The Industrial Technology Development Institute (ITDI) of the Department of Science and Technology won first prize in the recent Renewable Energy Project Competition of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) for its rice hull gasifier-combustor.
The ITDI’s Fuels and Energy Division led by engineer Loren Pacatang developed the rice hull gasifier-combustor.
The gasifier-combustor is an energy biomass that converts solid fuel such as rice hull, corn cobs, coffee hulls and other biomass materials into a form of gas that can be easily used for various processes.
The gas that is generated has a heating value of between 4,500 and 5,000 kilojoules per standard cubic meter, or between 140 and 150 BTU per standard cubic foot.
The awarding ceremony will be held on July 29 in Mandalay, Myanmar in conjunction with the ASEAN Energy Business Forum and International Conference and Exhibition.
According to the ITDI, the technology has been adopted by some 50 individuals and industries nationwide.
(Source)

Thursday 2 July 2009

Featured Pinoy Engineer - Daniel Dingel


For more than three decades now, Daniel Dingel has been claiming that his car can run with water as fuel. An article from the Philippine Daily Inquirer said that Dingle built his engine as early as 1969. Dingel built a car reactor that uses electricity from a 12-volt car battery to split the ordinary tap water into hydrogen and oxygen components. The hydrogen can then be used to power the car engine (see video).
Daniel D. Dingel hails from La Union, his mother's province, but lived in an orphanage, as his parents died when he was still young. Americans from Clark and Subic provided the lad opportunities for a predominantly technical education.
"I earned my mechanical engineering degree by dint of effort from the International Correspondence School. Perfected by practical experience, my educational attainment could be equated to a Ph.D.," he says.
Dingel admits that he once nurtured the ambition to study for the priesthood but Providence willed otherwise, Still, he firmly decided to commit his God-given talent for invention to the service of humanity. Read more ......

Wednesday 1 July 2009

Guam governor expects Filipinos to fill jobs


Thousands of Filipino workers could be hired in the construction of new military bases on the US territory of Guam, the island's governor said during a visit to the Philippines.


Guam will be hiring between 10,000 and 15,000 workers to support the US military buildup, including the relocation of 8,000 Marines and their families from Okinawa over the next few years, Gov. Felix Camacho told reporters in Manila on Tuesday.


He said he expected skilled Filipino workers to fill job demands that cannot be met by local labor alone.


"It is not exclusive but the likelihood is that most will be from the Philippines," Camacho said. Chinese workers will not be hired because of security concerns related to work on military bases, he said.


The buildup will cost at least $15 billion. Japan is covering $6 billion of the bill.


US Rep. Neil Abercrombie of Hawaii said last week that foreign workers won't be allowed to do more than 30 percent of the work on the projects.


The 2010 National Defense Authorization Act requires the minimum wage for all Guam construction projects be at the prevailing wage level for similar work in Hawaii, he said. (courtesy of Philstar)