is the on-line edition of the Bayambang Newsletter published monthly in Bayambang, Pangasinan, Philippines in fulfillment of the people's constitutional right to information. The people behind the Bayambang Newsletter are: ATTY. FERDINAND L. QUINTOS, Editor-in-Chief / ARMANDO E. ESPINO, GERENERIO Q. ROSALES, EMMA I. MULA and PACIFICO G. DUQUE, Contributing Editors / ANGELITO A. JOSON, LLOYD P. CATABAY and DARWIN M. BUGARIN, Technical Consultants. Contributions (manuscripts and/or photographs) are accepted but subject to editorial policies. Media outlets may use any of the contents of the Bayambang Newsletter, provided however that corresponding credits are given.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Mayor, Vice Mayor, Councilors take oath

Ricardo M. Camacho and Mylvin T. Junio will be installed today in appropriate rites that will usher in their second term as mayor and vice mayor, respectively, of Bayambang.

Also to be inducted are the eight elected members of the Sangguniang Bayan.

They are the first set of elective officials of Bayambang who won in the first-ever automated elections in the Philippines. They will start carrying out their mandates on July 1. The Honorable Lily C. de Vera-Vallo, presiding judge of the Municipal Trial Court of Bayambang will administer the oaths of office.

Pangasinan Governor Amado T. Espino ,Jr. will be the guest of honor and speaker and 3rd District Rep. Rachel J. Arenas and STRADCOM Corporation President and CEO Cesar T. Quiambao will be special guests.

On the same occasion, the marker of the new municipal hall annex will be unveiled.

Thereafter, the edifice will be blessed.

Mayor Camacho garnered a total of 20,880 votes (10,407 more than the nearer of his two rivals) during the May 2010 political exercise.

Sangguniang Bayan members to be inducted are Crisostomo M. Bato (20,408 votes), Gerardo C. de Vera (20,106), Raul R. Sabangan (20,-051), Alan D. de Vera (18,248), Angelito C. de Vera (17,486), Levin N. Uy (15,336), Gerardo D. Flores (14,852), and Junie J. Angeles (14,-645).

In his statement following his proclamation by the Board of Canvassers headed by local COMELEC officer Carmen G. Claveria.

Mayor Camacho thanked the people of Bayambang and called for their full cooperation in making Bayambang a progressive town not only in Pangasinan but in northern Luzon. “Your mandate is my strength and inspiration to perform well,” he said.*

Why this Newsletter

In his meiotic eulogy for the murdered Julius Caesar, Marc Anthony said the good deeds that men do are oft interred with the bones while the evil they do lives on forever.

In the process, Caesar's greatness was emphasized and the people rose against the murderers.

Francis Wayland does away with meiosis. He says "It is by what we have done . . . that we shall be remembered".

Right to information on the goings-on in the government, save only those affecting national security, is assured the citizenry by the Constitution.

On the other end, transparency is buzz word in modern governance.

This Newsletter is a voluntary effort to purvey or help purvey information on what is being by the government for the people and of helping the public know about them.*

Bayambang municipal hall annex completed

A shining jewel in the crown of glory of Mayor Ricardo M. Camacho's first term, the municipal hall annex has just been completed. It is a munument to the close cooperation between his office and the Sangguniang Bayan.

Built at a total cost of P28-million, construction of the two-storey imposing edifice was started in August 2007.

Funds for the construction of the annex building came from municipal funds and loans. It will be the new home to the Sangguniang Bayan, the LGU departments, the Municipal Trial Court, the DILG, among others.

This is the first major improvement to the local government seat.

The main municipal building was constructed in 1937 during the administration of then Municipal President Enrique M. Roldan and Vice President Zacarias Junio.

Except for moving partition walls, it was untouched until the administration of Mayor Leocadio C. de Vera when a visitors' waiting area was constructed on the front part of the building.

The Mayor will continue to hold office in the main building which is planned to be refurbished. The public library will remain there too.*

New traffic scheme mulled

A new traffic scheme for the poblacion of Bayambang is now on the planning board.

This was learned during a meeting between Mayor Ricardo M. Camacho and P/Supt. Aligre L. Martinez, Chief of the Bayambang Police Station, also attended by Sangguniang Bayan member Angelito C. de Vera and some members of the Mayor's staff.

"The new plan will help make Bayambang more attractive to investors," the Mayor said.*

Two-storey RHU bldg. rising

The old squat building of the Rural Health Unit of Bayambang had been torn down and in its place a two-storey structure is now nearing completion.

"This is part of my administration's efforts to continually improve the delivery of health services to our townspeople," Mayor Ricardo M. Camacho said in an interview.

The edifice has a budget of P7-million the Municipal Engineer said*

Bayambang Museum soon a reality

In addition to its concern for economy, education, social welfare, peace and order, and health of the people, Mayor Ricardo M. Camacho's administration has set its sight on the preservation of Bayambang's historical and cultural heritage.

A Bayambang Museum will soon be established in the controversial Homeowners Bank on the eastern side of the town's plaza.

For this purpose, Emma M. Icu-Mula, a native Bayambanguena and formerly of the National Historical Institute, had been hired by Mayor Camacho as consultant.*

LGU pays workers' mid-year bonuses

The officials, department heads and the regular and casual employees of the local government of Bayambang received their mid-year bonuses first week of this month.

The windfall which totaled P1,760,900 is given to enhance efficiency of service delivery by government workers pursuant to existing law.

The other half of the bonuses will be given at the end of the year, along with other employees benefits mandated by law*

Town's farmers get rice seed subsidies

Sustaining its drive to make Bayambang self-sufficient, the local government under Mayor Ricardo M. Camacho turned-over almost 2,000 bags of certified rice seeds and another 1,000 bags of hybrid rice seeds to the town's farmers, according to figures from the Municipal Agriculture Office.

The cost of the first 2,000 bags of certified seeds was subsidized by the LGU at P300 per bag.

However, through a memorandum, the Department of Agriculture Regional Office, gave an added subsidy of P600 per bag.

In addition to the subsidy, the LGU is also providing material and technical inputs through cluster demo farms.

Cluster demos are done in each barangay at five hectares planted to hybrid rice seeds and five hectares to certified seeds.

Demo farms for hybrid seeds are provided with a bag of urea fertilizer and two bags of organic fertilizer per hectare.

Demo farms for certified seeds received a bag of urea fertilizer, two bags of 14-14-14 fertilizer and herbicide.

MAO technicians monitor the demo farms.*


Of cocktails and Bayambang politics

by Atty. Ferdinand L. Quintos

Right after Mayor Ricardo M. Camacho and his teammates have filed their certificates of candidacy and all through the hustings, some local political pundits called them a “cocktail” party.

When asked what they meant, they told me to refer to a lexicon. Webster says “cocktail” is “a drink of liquor mixed with others or with various flavorings.”

Where is the logic?

The Camacho team last May 10 election was composed of himself, Vice Mayor Mylvin T. Junio, incumbent Councilors Crisostomo M. Bato, Alan D. de Vera, Angelito C. de Vera, Levin N. Uy, Gerardo D. Flores, Junie J. Angeles, Victorino S. Payomo, and sophomore campaigner Francis Domalanta.

In the 2007 elections, Camacho romped away with the mayoral plum, but his running mate lost. Only one of his council bets --- Crisostomo M. Bato --- survived.

Junio won as vice mayor, but his partner lost. Three of their council aspirants --- Ruben Bato, Alan D. de Vera, and Uy --- won.

Angelito C. de Vera and Angeles won as independents.

Payomo and Flores were their party’s only winners.

The result was a mayor and a vice mayor from opposite camps and the Sangguniang Bayan had no pronounced majority with a 1-2-3-2 distribution of the chamber’s seats.
The mixture, if it were a drink, appeared thin but, in no time, proved pleasing to the public palate.

While maintaining their independence, Mayor Camacho, Vice Mayor Junio, and the SB members struck a formula of cooperation and unity that contributed much to the town’s progress.

Under the watch of Mayor Camacho and the SB led by Vice Mayor Junio, projects involving the economy, public health, education, and infrastructure projects were launched and completed.

A shining jewel in the about-to-end administration’s crown is the construction of the two-storey municipal hall annex (see front page story). Its construction, at an estimated cost of P28 million, according to the municipal engineer, was started in August 2007. It is the first major improvement in the local seat of power since the presidencia was constructed in 1937 under the administration of the Municipal President Enrique M. Roldan.

The spirit of cooperation that bound them did not escape the attention of the Bayambangueños who threw in their solid support.

Out of it emerged a political phenomenon, the first in the political history of Bayambang. It proved to be a centripetal force that drew them into a common slate that had a common platform of continuing what they had begun for the people. The council lineup would have been intact, were it not for the fact that Ruben Bato was on the last of his three three-year term. Domalanta got his slot.

Their certificates of candidacy show the Camacho team members have been nominated by one party. Said party, however, can only be likened to a mixing vat where they maintain their respective distinctive flavors.

The “cocktail” had a very good mixture of “political flavorings.” Admirers predicted a sweep in the May 10 elections.

Drink connoisseurs, however, have their own taste. So did the voters in the last election. Enough number of them put in their own preference by electing Gerardo C. de Vera (second place) and Raul R. Sabangan (third place). To their credit Gerardo C. de Vera and Sabangan, and with due respect to the two they dislodged in the Camacho team, were good choices. The first was a former SB member. The second is a chip off a good block—his father was a fomer ABC president and ex officio SB member. He is an incumbent Kagawad of Barangay Magsaysay.

As with the first Camacho term, however, only time will tell if this new political “cocktail” will measure up to the Bayambangueňos’ discriminating taste. The time starts July 1.*