Showing posts with label good governance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label good governance. Show all posts

Saturday, November 18, 2017

DAR-Cagayan hosts ARBO Summit 2017


The Department of Agrarian Reform Provincial Office of Cagayan-Batanes (DARPO Cagayan-Batanes) hosted an Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries Organization (ARBO) Summit on November 13 to 18, 2017 in Tuguegarao City, Cagayan attended by more than 400 coop/organization leaders and officers.

The ARBO Summit is a way of promoting camaraderie among the different agrarian reform beneficiaries (ARBs) and other farmer-leaders; provide opportunities for learning from specific good practices of other successful ARBOs by meeting and talking about their experiences; share their best innovative practices; and also promote unity and cooperation among the different cooperatives and other organizations in the province.

Presently, there are at least two Agrarian Reform Community (ARC) Clusters in the province and two more are being organized. An ARC Cluster is composed to two or more ARCs organized into groups primarily  to reduce poverty, and have sustained improvements in incomes and quality of life through business engagements proportionate to economies of scale, i.e., a proportionate saving in costs gained by an increased level of production. Hence, unity among the members and officers in the agrarian reform communities is essential value to sustain the programs that will have an impact against poverty in the countryside.

The participants of the ARBO Summit also received updates on the DAR’s programs and thrusts for 2018 particularly on land tenure, farm mechanization, solar irrigation pump projects, sugarcane block farms, livelihood programs, climate change mitigation and adaptation activities, enterprise development, credit and microfinance programs, institutional development programs, etc., all of which are relevant to the management and operation of their coop enterprises towards poverty alleviation in the countryside.

One of the major topics discussed were on the Filipino Values affecting the relationships particularly of rural families and coop members/officers. On a business context, cited example of Filipino values among local entrepreneurs are the traditional relationships which usually develop into regular customer-supplier relationships. Suki relationships build on loyalty (repeat transactions over time) which translates to favors like reduced prices, better quality and even occasional credit privileges. Examples of thse are common in the small neighborhood sari-sari stores (convenience stores). Suki relationships help build and create platforms for personal relationships that  bloom into friendships between individuals. This is also clearly the norm among coop members patronizing the services of their cooperatives.  Of some interests are Filipino entreprenuers who have turned their businesses into multi-billion enterprises such as Henry Sy and Lucio Tan 

Generally, the distinct value system of Filipinos is ingrained mainly in the personal alliance systems such as those in kinship, obligation, friendship, beliefs in God and business relationships. Other dominant values among the members of the ARBOs are: pakikipagkapwa-tao, family oriented, flexibility and adaptability, faith and religiosity, resiliency, hard work and industry. Felipe Landa Jocano, a famous Filipino sociologist said “there are no negative Filipino values, only the wrong use of values”. Values change from one family to another depending on how strong the family promotes them from one generation to another.

The participants were also oriented on the various innovative processes on grassroots implementation of the plans and programs of the government, including how to react and address graft and corruption. An orientation on Participatory Government was also conducted wherein Resource Speakers from the Kilusang Pagbabago and from the Office of Participatory Governance were invited to elaborate further about the government’s efforts on empowerment of the agricultural workers sector. The ARBO Summit also involved orientation on the new credit and microfinance facilities in addition to workshops on entrepreneurship and team building exercises that promote solidarity among the various ARBOs.  
The most common way people give up their power is by thinking they don't have any. -Alice Walker














Friday, May 31, 2013

New CITIZENS' CHARTER up at DARPO-Cagayan

           A Citizens’ Charter is a document which represents a systematic effort to emphasize the commitment of an Office/Organization towards its clients/citizens on the standards of service, information, consultation, non-discrimination, accessibility, courtesy and redress of grievances.  In some cases, it also includes the expectations of the Office from the client/citizen for fulfilling the commitment of the office.
            Thus, the government has declared as a policy of the State to promote integrity, accountability, proper management of public affairs and public property as well as to establish effective practices aimed at the prevention of graft and corruption, and to attain this end, the State shall maintain honesty and responsibility among its public officials and employees, and shall take appropriate measures to promote transparency in each agency with regard to the manner of transacting with the public, which shall encompass a program for the adoption of simplified procedures that will reduce red tape and expedite transactions in government (Republic ActNo. 9485, Anti-Red Tape Law).
Pursuant thereto, the Department of Agrarian Reform–Provincial Office (DARPO-Cagayan) in Tuguegarao City, as directed by its head of office, Virgilio M. Acasili, Provincial Agrarian Reform Officer II (PARO II), has replaced and installed a permanent copy of the Citizens’ Charter on its corridors as a ready reference for its clients to know what do to and where to go for specific transactions pertaining to agrarian reform and rural development. These consists of large tarpaulin posters mounted on aluminium frames and placed on the walls along the office corridors for easy viewing by the public.
DAR’s Citizens’ Charter has the following components: (a) Vision and Mission Statementof the DAR; (b) The procedure to obtain a particular service, e.g., DAR Clearance/Transfer Action, Land Use Conversion, Exemption, etc.; (c) The person/s responsible for each step; (d) The maximum time to conclude the process; (e) The document/s to be presented by the customer, if necessary; (f) The amount of fees, if necessary; and (g) The procedure for filing complaints.  
Republic Act No. 9485 (Anti-Red Tape Law) applies to all government offices and agencies including local government units (LGUs) and government-owned or controlled corporations (GOCCs) that provide frontline services. 
A Citizens’ Charter aims to make the administration accountable and more citizen friendly, to ensure transparency in government transactions and to guarantee the right to information.  /cds

Coop Bank Cagayan GA

  The convergence between the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) and the Cooperative Bank of Cagayan is crucial for the empowerment and fin...