You plan to move to the Philippines? Wollen Sie auf den Philippinen leben?

There are REALLY TONS of websites telling us how, why, maybe why not and when you'll be able to move to the Philippines. I only love to tell and explain some things "between the lines". Enjoy reading, be informed, have fun and be entertained too!

Ja, es gibt tonnenweise Webseiten, die Ihnen sagen wie, warum, vielleicht warum nicht und wann Sie am besten auf die Philippinen auswandern könnten. Ich möchte Ihnen in Zukunft "zwischen den Zeilen" einige zusätzlichen Dinge berichten und erzählen. Viel Spass beim Lesen und Gute Unterhaltung!


Visitors of germanexpatinthephilippines/Besucher dieser Webseite.Ich liebe meine Flaggensammlung!

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Showing posts with label Government. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Government. Show all posts

Monday, August 1, 2016

For Government Complaints: 8888 / Hotline 911 Ready NOW

 (The Freeman)

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Telephone numbers 911 and 8888 are the national emergency and citizen complaint hotline numbers, respectively. The nationwide hotline is one of President Rodrigo Duterte's measures to fight crime and corruption in three to six months. File photo
CEBU, Philippines – Starting today, a 24-hour hotline for citizen complaints and an emergency hotline are already accessible to all Filipinos.
However, for emergencies, a Cebu City councilor said with the emergency hotline system being new, it may be best to call the city's Command Center immediately for now. This is because the 911 system forwards the caller, instead of the information, to the right agency.
Telephone numbers 911 and 8888 are the national emergency and citizen complaint hotline numbers, respectively. The nationwide hotline is one of President Rodrigo Duterte's measures to fight crime and corruption in three to six months.
According to the Department of Interior and Local Government, the 911nationwide hotline will connect the caller to emergency, rescue, police, or fire services.
Earlier, NTC Commissioner Gamaliel Cordoba said all calls to 911 will also be rerouted to the existing Patrol 117 program while the 911 command center has yet to be established.
Telecommunications and digital services provider PLDT, together with subsidiaries Smart and ePLDT, promised to fully cooperate with the government for the nationwide emergency hotline, while Globe Telecom said they would charge P5 per call to the hotline.
Freeman ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch:
DILG Ismael Sueño earlier said all calls to 911 and 117 will still be shouldered by the callers from August until a new MOA is signed by the agencies concerned and a new executive order is issued by Duterte.
When sought for comments, Provincial Board Member Sun Shimura, chairman of the Committee on Peace and Order, said he has reservations with the full-blown implementation of a nationwide emergency hotline 911, replacing 117.
Shimura clarified that although he is not against it, he said it could be subject to abuse.
He also said the 8888 hotline might be used as a tool to ruin a government employee's life, reputation or career by feeding wrong information.
The concerns or complaints of citizens will be relayed to the proper government agencies through the said hotline, where ordinary Filipinos can call in to report corrupt officials, underperforming government personnel, and unfinished government projects.
"I'm not objecting this. Uyon ko sa hotline for criminalities. Pero kaning for complaint, makulbaan pud ta oy for the employees of the government nga ma-terminate," he said.
He said safety nets must also be put in place.
"Kay basin matangtang lang kadtong maayong trabahante sa gobyerno without good reason," he added.
Shimura is appealing to the public not to make prank calls as this would deprive others who are really in need of immediate attention.
DILG Undersecretary Jesus Hinlo Jr. earlier said that there is a need to educate the Filipinos on the use 911 to avoid test and prank calls.
The emergency hotline 117 reportedly received an average of 57 hang and prank calls per hour last year.
With the launching and official operation of the new emergency hotline, the government expects a total of 2,730 hang and prank calls out of the anticipated 3,003 calls per hour.
PNP Ready
The PNP is ready for the implementation of the 911 hotline.
Chief Superintendent Noli Taliño, regional director of Police Regional Office-7 said the concept of 911 hotline is that an operator can connect a caller with the agency he or she wants to reach.
"Like sa fire, if tatawag ka sa 911, the operator will connect you sa Bureau of Fire. Kahit anong concerns and emergencies pwede ka tumawag dito," he said, adding same goes with the police stations.
However, he said if the caller has the direct telephone or cellphone number to the BFP or police stations, they can directly call the number without dialing 911.
"Mas madali kung direct line... if you have the number," Taliño added.
Cebu City Police Office director, Senior Superintendent Joel Doria said they are also ready of the implementation of 911 hotline while Senior Superintendent Jose Macanas, provincial director of Cebu Provincial Police Office, said the implementation of the 911 hotline is a good idea since the one being implemented in Davao City is very effective.
"Ito yong ipinu-push ng present administration at yung police ay magko-complement nito," he said.
In cases of robbery for example, he said the caller can call 911 and the operator will contact the nearest police station where the incident took place.
"With this, iikli ang mundo ng mga kriminal," he said.
Call Command Center instead
After test dialing 911 yesterday evening, Cebu City Councilor David Tumulak said it took almost 4 to 5 minutes before the message was relayed to the local Command Center.
"Akong gi-orasan diri, it takes almost 2 minutes og mo-dial kag 911, Manila operator will answer your call, then they receive your emergency call, 911 will connect to Patrol 117 sa Region 7. Then human sa 117 it takes a few minutes, mo-connect napud sa Command Center diri sa Cebu City for dispatch. So approximately between 4 minutes to 5 minutes," he said.
Tumulak said that the caller will keep on repeating the message to the emergency hotline considering that it will relayed to another emergency hotline until it reaches the local command center.
With this, as the chairman of peace and order committee, he urged the Cebu City residents to directly call the city's Command Center for prompt response.
"Delayed response g'yud, this is an advice to the Cebu City residents. I would rather direct call sa Command Center diri sa Cebu City para maka-save og oras. Para ba nay immediate response ba. Can you imagine ikaw caller, mosulti paka sa imong nature, magbalik balik paka sa imong isulti," he added.
To further address this, Tumulak said he already drafted a resolution asking the DILG, Office of the Civil Defense, Office of the President, among others, to discuss the 911 system to educate the citizens.
"There should be a proper coordination among responders and the call takers which is the 911 because it takes time. Dili man gud na directly. If in case emergency if you wanted to respond directly dili ma-attach sa concerned agency, mura gihapon sila og call center," Tumulak said.
"So there should be more direct way g'yud unta nga tawag supposedly, mao raman gihapon na siya sa previous nga Patrol 117," he added.
The resolution of Tumulak will be discussed this Tuesday, in the regular council session.
The Cebu City Command Center has recorded 5,343 emergency calls from January to May this year, he said. — /BRP (FREEMAN)

Thursday, June 2, 2016

No More Excuses and Stop Inconveniencing The People!

Office of the Senate Majority Leader
Alan Peter S. Cayetano
Rm. 603 GSIS Complex Senate of the Philippines Roxas Blvd Pasay City
         

PRESS RELEASE
2 June 2016

Cayetano to Gov't agencies: No more excuses, stop inconveniencing the people, cut the red tape

"No more excuses. Cut the red tape bureaucracy. Stop buderning the public with poor public service. Provide the people with swift, courteous and efficient services."

This was the statement issued today by Senate Majority Leader Alan Peter Cayetano to all government agencies.

Cayetano said that all government agencies must become "ambassadors" of the "real change" that the people are expecting from the incoming Duterte administration. "It's time to end the long lines in all frontline services, expedite the issuance of driver's licenses, licensed plates, passports and other public documents necessary for people to do their work and conduct business," he said.

"It's time to end the awful public service which the government is infamous for," Cayetano added.

The Senator said that he is also supportive of President-elect Rodrigo "Rody" Duterte's push for a "three-day-window" to process business permits and clearances. Cayetano said that the proposal is part of their campaign platform to eliminate corruption and the barriers for small businesses to prosper.

Duterte and Cayetano are also studying the possibility of crowd-sourcing the best ideas for red tape reduction similar to the what is being done by the European Commission, which holds a competition "aimed at identifying innovative suggestions for reducing unnecessary bureaucracy stemming from European law."

"We would like to involve the people and civil society as red tape deprives the people of quality public service and in forging positive dynamics between the government and its citizens. Worse, it breeds a deep culture of corruption and indolence that is hard to eliminate," Cayetano explained.

"We start the process of real change by starting with how the government relates with the people. We begin by providing the people the services they truly deserve from their public servants," Cayetano concluded. 

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Get Serious

Re-published Editorial from MINDANAO DAILY MIRROR dated February 11, 2014 with friendly permission of publisher Marietta F. Siongco.

"The bus accident that claimed the lives of 15 people - including comedian Arvin "Tado" Jimenez and former Ateneo de Davao University Grade School teacher Leah Abrasaldo Reyes - is yet another tragedy that need not have happened had government only taken seriously the calls for it to clamp down on wayward bus companies. The accident in Bontoc, Mountain Province last Friday happened less than two months after the fatal fall of a bus from the Metro Manila Skyway on December 16 last year which killed 18 people, and at the time an outraged populace had demaanded that government do something to keep passengers safe while in public transport. Indeed, a big fuss made officially on the issue for a while, only to die down as the matter got buried in other news.

As it is, our roads often seem like highways to hell, each trip we make a gamble on whether or not we would live to tell the tale. For a country whose people must regularly travel through hundreds of kilometers of concrete and asphalt, this is a totally unacceptable state of affairs. Bus drivers literally have our lives in their hands as they weave in and through roads and traffic as breakneck speeds, with obviously no regard for safety. Many such drivers seem to feel earning money is the be all-end all, and they drive recklessly in order to achieve it. Caught helplessly in the middle are the passengers who often have no choice but to take the bus, especially on long trips.

Each time an accident like this happens, we ask: How many more mishaps need to happen before government does something? The answer is obviously, "Much more". The Skyway accident last December passed without any real solutions being made, and now the Bontoc tragedy has really overwhelmed it. Not even the fact that a celebrity was one of the fatalities seems to be moving the authorities to doing something about the problem of abusive bus companies. The proper agencies have not yet gone around inspecting buses to make sure they are roadworthy, and none has bothered to check the licenses and franchises given to the companies. Last week's accident need not have happened, but government allowed it to. It's time to get serious about transport safety."