Femocracy 5- A Place in the Global World

Friday, September 22nd, 2006

FEMOCRACY AND HOME ECONOMICS 5

A PLACE IN THE GLOBAL WORLD

The fact that women now choose to vigorously compete with men for high- paying jobs has serious consequences in western societies. Birth rates are well below replacement level which means that not enough workers are being born to replace the ageing population, causing a massive labour shortage - another harsh reality of the downside of femocracy.

More and more developed countries have no choice but re-evaluate their immigration policies to address the issues mentioned above.  Added to that is the constant realisation that they have to compete in today’s global market. While it is true that a lot of businesses move overseas to countries like China for their cheap labour; resourceful countries find ways to take advantage of the new economic landscape by creating new markets and opening up to new opportunities.

In a country like Australia for example,  the steel mining industry was abandoned a decade ago. Due to the lack of demand, the industry suffered and most mining towns were deserted. But now it’s different; the mining industry is in boom again due to increased demand from China. More than half of the materials used in building China’s Auditorium for the 2008 Olympics are made from mineral- rich “dirt” from Australia. China’s construction industry will continue to grow till the next decade, maybe more,  and Australia is cashing in on that. With the increased interest and growing debate on nuclear energy, the mining industry (uranium) can foresee big opportunities. There is now a big demand for labour in the rebuilding of mining towns. The housing, hospitality and entertainment industries are benefiting from it too.

Another case is the wool industry. Wool producing towns suffered due to lack of demand for wool. Again, China’s cheap labour and the use of cheaper synthetic materials decreased the demand for Australian wool from lucrative fashion industry. Sheep farming towns resembled ghost towns as young people moved somewhere else for better employment. But now there are some dramatic changes. Researchers found that there is a big market for goat meat in the U.S. for the Mexican communities there. The wool producing towns are open for business again although now they are part of Australia’s lucrative meat industry, their sheep paddocks are now being used to raise goats. And it doesn’t end there, with the health risk surrounding pork and sheep consumption, i.e. high cholesterol content causing obesity, diabetes, and heart problems, the industry can see bright lights in promoting beef, goat  and kangaroo meat in Europe, Asia and Arab countries.

In cases like these where it is not possible to move the industry overseas, the only resort for them is to bring the labour force into the country.

There are so much rhetoric in the west about the plight of illegal immigrants and what to do with them, but unbeknown to ordinary folks, these immigrants are being used ( and abused) to help their economies. The United States for example have access to cheap labour from Mexico and other nationalities who risk their lives just to set foot in that country; illegal migrants’ labour is a billion dollar industry in the U.S. Rich European countries have access to cheap labour through the decendants of colonial Africa and Asia. They also have waves of illegal migrants from poorer southern European countries, Asia and africa. But Australia has none of that and does not have to resort to cheap labour to move on. 

Being an island continent, Australia successfully controlled the number of people entering the country. They can pick and choose whom they want to allow in, which is understandable as they want to maintain their high standard of living. But, in the 21st century, Australia realised that to be successfully favoured in the growing Asian market, they have to change their tune. Australia welcomed professional and skilled people, investors , brides, sponsored relatives to legally migrate but never opened its doors to contract workers until only very recently, just last year! Filipino workers were one of the nationalities they chose to come! That was just a trial and as far as I gathered through a reputable current affairs shows on television- “Sixty Minutes” and “A Current Affair”- their employers are very happy. “They are very hardworking, you can see the desire in their eyes; they just want the work;  I will have them anytime,” one of the employer enthused. I suspect that more and more job opportunities will be offered to Filipinos.

Already, there are calls in the media complaining that local labour will be disadvantaged as business owners given a choice will prefer cheap labour from other countries.  Politicians were quick to guarantee that contract workers will be given Australian minimum wages and they will not be subject to abuse. There are heated debates going on today whether opening the country to more contract workers is the way to go. The local labour movement are dead against it but big corporations like Mcdonalds expressed their desire to hire contract workers from the Philippines as opposed to hiring Australian teenagers who are supposed to be in college learning a trade or at universities.

There is no doubt that skills migration and opening the country to contract workers is the solution but to satisfy nationalistic concerns and queries both of the leading political parties came with a criteria as to what kind of people they should let in. The preferred factors are: skills and educational qualification, English language proficiency, ability to assimilate and acceptance of the Australian culture and values. Since Filipinos are known to have this desirable qualities, they should have no problem entering the country legally.   

This is a reflection of what is happening in the rest of the western world and  Non-English speaking developed countries. There is a labour shortage and they require skilled workers to keep going and compete. Labour exporting southern European countries like Italy, Greece and Spain hired Filipinas as domestic helpers decades ago while there where restrictive policies in western European destinations like Germany and France. Today, more and more Filipinos are hired in these countries with jobs not limited to domestic duties and with better workplace conditions. Thanks to the pioneers, Filipino nurses are in great demand in the US, and now Britain and Ireland too. I heard Filipinos are needed in Scandinavian countries too.

Filipinos, without a doubt, has a place in the global world. While people from poor countries have no choice but risk their lives in entering developed countries illegally, Filipinos are being offered jobs and are invited to enter countries legally. They have more choices of countries to go to and have access to different jobs. The only thing needed is for the Philippine government to do more in choosing the right countries, negotiate a fairer and secure deals for the overseas foreign workers (OFW) and actually do something to improve the process of training and hiring. The Philippine government should not send Filipinas to countries were women are treated like second class citizens, have no respect for individual rights and freedoms, or societies whose culture is very limiting.

Femocracy 4- Filipina, I Seek You

Friday, September 22nd, 2006

FEMOCRACY AND HOME ECONOMICS 4

FILIPINA, I SEEK YOU

Women giving high priority to their career is the main cause of families breaking down in the western world. As a result some disgruntled men are looking for family- oriented women from different cultural background. The majority of those that westerners seek are Filipinas.

People’s perception of the Filipina vary from country to country, some of it  are very negative indeed. Most of it are classic stereotypes that  I mentioned in the first chapter of this series. But all that are changing.

Countries who hired Filipinas in their homes soon realised that they are decent people who wants nothing more than be given a chance to work and be paid inorder to support a family back home. They soon realised that since Filipinas are educated, religious, peace- loving and clean, they can be trusted to run their homes smoothly and with ease. In some non- English speaking countries, families intentionally choose a Filipina over other nationalities for a maid because they could double as tutors as they speak English fairly well, or better that they could.  Filipinas hardly complain and just concentrate on the work at hand. It has to be said that even though they sank in the bottom of the career ladder, they tried their best to just get on with it .

The fact that many countries wanted to hire more Filipinas signifies that we have good qualities that people want us to fill that need in their homes. People observe that  and may be one of the reason why a great number of Filipina maids became brides particularly in Canada and Italy.  I remember a series in “Wakasan”, a  magazine in the Philippines when I was in high school in the 80s, (my entrepreneurial brother Alex has komiks for hire sa tyangge).  The title has something to do with “langis at tubig” (they will never mix)  where the Italian “boss” fell in love with his niece’ nanny named Laura (a Filipina), and the girl’s name was Marnelli (if I remember it right). It was a cute little series, I was just reading it for the love story element of it and was completely naive of the Filipino psyche then. 

The fact that some western men fall in love with a Filipina or in many instances deliberately choose a Filipina for a wife angers some so called elite Filipinos. It is a total impossibility to them and they take it to themselves to find a reason why those men could possibly want a Filipina. They seem to apply a counter stereotype directed to the foreigners, like they are looking for ignorant women that they can abuse; they are looking for backward women that would serve and obey them; they are looking for workers to take care of their children and clean their house for free; they will insure the Filipina (get her a life insurance policy) , kill her and claim the insurance money afterwards; and the most gruesome one: they will kill her, chop her body, keep in the freezer and consume in the winter when food is scarce.

I wonder whether these ridiculous preconceptions has something more to do with our insecurities as a country. Having been colonised for so many years,  we may not feel comfortable being directly linked to former colonisers or people from superior societies as equals. Not  wanting to accept the simple concept that these men want a woman who would make a wonderful wife and mother to their children. Someone to share their simple dreams with. While these stereotypes are mainly directed to the foreigners, I, as a Filipina who married a “foreigner” could not avoid but feel affected by it, hurt even. I used to ask myself: Are Filipinas not good enough to deserve the attention of the then colonisers? Are we that insecure?

During the mid 90’s I attended a function which the mayor in the neighbouring town organised especially for the Filipino community as part of the town’s “Beef Week” celebrations (by Filipino community, I mean Filipinas as there are only 2 Filipino men here). The Philippine government bought heads of cattle from Australia to be transported to the Philippines. In the presence of the Philippine Ambassador to Australia, the local mayor has nothing but praise for us Filipino- Australians . He stressed that since Filipinas  are “westernised”, we have no problem assimilating in the Australian society. We are always participating in events, we bring Filipino foods to share and our culture makes it easy for us to adapt and conform. Unlike other nationalities, we are comfortable in our skin, always smiling and always happy.

One of the solutions that the New South Wales government thought of to meet the challenge of nursing shortage in Australia was to offer a three- year  nursing scholarships to all migrants. More than eighty percent of those who took advantage of it and were qualified were Filipinas. The positive result reflects the fact that most Filipinas already have a college degree from the Philippines, have a good command of the English language, passed the exams and interviews.

A hospitality scholarship course was offered in a local TAFE college for migrants to prepare for tourism boom in the area, again, more than half of those who enrolled and qualified for the course were Filipinas. Some of these Filipinas were already working as cleaners in hotels or motels, but given a chance, you can see the burning desire to go in there to move up and compete.

An Australian couple, both teachers in the local private school wanted to adopt a child. They chose a boy from the Philippines. The adoption was approved and a year later, they adopted another one, this time a girl. The went back to the same excruciating adoption process and now they are proud parents of two Filipino kids. When asked why they chose Filipino children, they said, “because there are so many Filipinos here, they will never be lonely here. There will be plenty of support from the Filipino community.”

If a westerner choose a Filipina for a wife, it has to be because of the positive reasons. We are family- oriented, highly- spiritual, values friendships and simple- minded. It is not because we are stupid, ignorant, subservient, nor docile. There are instances when Filipinas find themselves in an unfortunate situation but as far as I know, in the developed world, the percentage is very low. I know of Filipinas who divorced their husbands and knows what to do when things go ugly. Filipinas are generally shy and peaceful in nature but knows how to growl when provoked.

Femocracy 3- U.S. Migration And The Other Face Of The Filipina

Friday, June 9th, 2006

FEMOCRACY AND HOME ECONOMICS 3

US MIGRATION AND THE OTHER FACE OF THE FILIPINA

Filipino migration to the United States started way back during the era of colonisation. The Americans forced the Spanish out of the Philippines in 1898 and the new colonisers sent Filipinos to North America between 1901 and 1935. They mainly worked as errand boys, janitors and houseboys. During World War II, many of them served the US Army’s First Filipino Infantry Regiment.

Few decades after World War II, a lot of Filipino war veterans and their families were permitted to migrate to the United States. The presence of American Air Base in the Philippines also gave Filipinas a chance to migrate to the US and other allied countries as brides. They had very limited employment opportunities then and most if not all were subjected to racial abuse. We heard stories but we can not begin to comprehend the appalling treatment these pioneers had to endure before they successfully managed to adopt and assimilate to the American culture. 

Like typical Filipinos, they struggled to send their children to school. They believed that education is vital if their children were to survive and blend in to western culture. Many of these children, and their children afterwards, successfully finished their education and had decent work. They mainly found employment in industries dominated by women like nursing, teaching, child care, sales, hospitality, and factory work. Filipinas and other migrant women from different nationalities happily filled the available jobs that American women vacated to pursue better careers.

Today, there is no turning back for women in the developed societies. Their main role in society: homebuilding, care giving, raising and nurturing the next generation are all but marginalised. They argue that it is urgent and necessary to penetrate business and politics as they have social and emotional intelligence about interpersonal relationships that few men have. They claim that men are more interested in profits; they are convinced that women’s motherly qualities will put human and social concern on the agenda like children and women’s adverse conditions in other parts of the world.

While that is a valid enough reason, I tend to agree more on the notion that the real motivation is hard economics.  Now more than ever women find themselves driven by money, they simply cannot afford to stay at home . This may be due to the privatisation of health and education, the cost  of petrol, the continuing flow of digital must haves, the basic necessities of westerners like entertainment, recreation, travel; and the irrepressible urge to keep up with the Joneses e.g. second car, spa bath, pool, renovations, etc. etc.

This economic pressure is luring women to the top jobs. They don’t want just any job anymore; they are aiming for top- level, high- paying jobs that used to be dominated by men. Time is precious for high- earning busy career- women, the financial disincentives of childbearing have become so high that a great number of them now choose to shun marriage and baby- making altogether to concentrate on the pursuit of a career. The homes in the developed societies reflect the appetite of global capitalism for all talent, female and male, at the expense of the family.

Modern Filipinas are following that same path. Filipino- Americans as they rightfully call themselves successfully integrated and continue to labour and insist that young bloods attend colleges and universities and make something out of themselves. The same pride and conviction is shared by Filipinos in other western societies and in the Philippines itself. With the dawning of globalisation upon us, there is an assortment of employment opportunities for Filipinos worldwide from hard labour to top level jobs. Few Filipinos today are patiently breaking the grounds in higher education, medicine, law, engineering and business while many are successfully competing for top corporate jobs.

But while career divides homes  in western families, it has an entirely opposite result in migrant families. Through family sponsored migration, Filipino families reunite and help each other. Filipinas do not feel as much guilt and not suffer as heavy a consequence for pursuing a career compared to their western counterparts. They can look forward with confidence and go out there knowing that Nanay and/or Tatay, Mama and/or Papa, will be around to take care of the home front.

When competition in the femocracy is fierce and the going gets tough, Filipinas have large willing families to rely on.  Thus, the other face of the Filipina: qualified, capable, competitive, confident.

Petropolitik, Sapian and China 6

Sunday, May 21st, 2006

Petropolitik, Sapian and China - Sixth in a Continuing Series

Another way to revisit the saga of Sapian, China and oil crisis is tracing the thread of Philippine petroleum deregulation. Fidel V. Ramos (FVR) pushed for the enactment of Republic Act 8180, the Downstream Oil Industry Deregulation Act of 1996, to promote a more competitive market and prices by allowing the entry of “small” oil players to the market monopolized by the so-called Big Three, namely, Pilipinas Shell Petroleum, Caltex Philippines Inc. and Petron Inc. This involves the removal of the government subsidy to oil prices, called the Oil Price Stabilization Fund, which provided a cushion to oil price increases. In 1999, a new oil deregulation law (RA 8479) was enacted to pave the way for the full deregulation of the oil industry.

During World War II, many countries heavily regulated industries and nationalized critical industries (e.g., petroleum, coal mines, steel mills etc.) to provide maximum support and efficient use of resources for war efforts. After the war, many countries continued or expanded controls on industries to rebuild their war-ravaged economies, and well into the 70s. By the 80s, U.K. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher - plagued by paralyzing strikes, mismanagement, and bankruptcy - started to privatize government companies. In economic circles, it was called Thatcherism. In the U.S., President Ronald Reagan tried to relax government control on businesses, called Reaganomics. Both trends lean toward Keynesian economics. A very influential 20th Century economist, John Maynard Keynes theorized that government should use its power sparingly at the macro-economic level to regulate (e.g., interest rates, use of reserves etc.) but let the private sector and market forces try to equalize itself. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keynesian_economics

Along these lines U.S. President Bill Clinton, FVR and other leaders promoted a book by David Osborne and Ted Gaebler, entitled, Reinventing Government: How the Entrepreneurial Spirit is Transforming the Public Sector. The authors looked into model governments efficiently run like corporations, with performance-based budget, partnership with the private sector, and people empowerment themes. It called for leveling of the playing field, deregulation, decentralization, devolution, and liberalization, in all aspects of government, politics and the economy. From Washington, to Europe, to Tokyo, a chorus of international organizations told Cory and FVR to pursue these goals. Hence, it was institutionalized in FVR’s Philippines 2000. http://govinfo.library.unt.edu/npr/index.htm

Under this philosophy, started by Cory but staunchly implemented by FVR, the bureaucracy worked double time to deregulate, decentralize, and devolve powers of governance. Among the first tangible result of these is the Local Government Code
- to the perpetual chagrin of my mother and Nono Varon’s parents (it’s a relief they are all in the United States now!) - that included the devolution of the Department of Health’s Rural Health Units (RHUs) to local government units. There were persistent rumors that RHUs will be renationalized, but early on I asked former Health Secretary Juan Flavier (now, Senator) and he told me to tell my mother to change career because it’s not going to happen. In theory, local governments should have more control over their local affairs and would be able to prioritize their policies and fine-tune their programs according to local needs.

Another example is today’s proliferation of cell phones. PLDT monopoly was broken by giving away franchises to any company able to install 5,000 lines, can apply for telephone franchise anywhere in the Philippines. Many leapfrogged with infinite cell lines, so you now have a galaxy of cell service providers. This also was true with Cable TV providers and a host of other telecommunications sub-sectors. Philippine Airlines franchise monopoly was also broken. Now, passengers are no longer at the mercy of PAL. Anyone who has a plane, compliant with all BOT regulations, could apply for an air franchise anywhere in the Philippines. Then you have BOT (Build-Operate-Transfer, Build-Transfer-Operate, Build-Own-Operate etc.) alphabet schemes, which allowed building of dozens of giga-wattage power plants by Hopewell Holdings, Enron, etc. worth billions of dollars. The caveat, contracts for 50 years for guaranteed power purchase by the National Power Corporation. This wiped out the brown outs overnight, particularly when power grids throughout the country have been interconnected. Then, you have your Skyway, North Luzon Expressway, MRT and many others. Under the general theme, base lands, like the Fort Bonifacio area, have been opened to joint ventures with the private sector.

For a moment, the Philippines was referred to as one of the Tiger Cubs of Asia.

Petropolitik, Sapian and China 9

Thursday, May 18th, 2006

Petropolitik, Sapian and China - Ninth in a Continuing Series

Since it might prove hopeless for us to compete against China for limited petroleum supply, we should rather focus our energy to develop our agriculture. It was believed that we could not industrialize without modernizing our agriculture; now that we might never industrialize, it is the more reason to modernize our agriculture and small and medium enterprises (SMEs).

Projects in Negros and Bulacan deserve notice because they transcended limitations of land sizes. Size of lands has always been a perennial obstacle in economies-of-scale rice farming, especially since parcel sizes continue to be reduced as properties are passed down from generation to generation. In two barrios of Silay, Negros Occidental, farmers surveyed their properties, measured each parcel and valued them into commensurate share of ownership in a cooperative. Then, using their combined lands as collateral, they applied for multi-million Land Bank loan, bought tractors, seeders, and built post-harvest facilities. Then, they destroyed the pilapils, flattened their farmlands, installed irrigation system, and hired an agriculturist. They themselves have rotated turns in Board of Directors, as company officials, and as drivers and manual laborers. A similar project in Santa Maria, Bulacan, involves hundreds of farmers who established a self-sufficient, chicken production plant. They planted corn, manufactured feeds, raised chicken, produced eggs, processed meat, and hired sales and delivery staff to market their products. Their conveyor-based processing plant, which looks more like a Magnolia plant, was worth nearly P25 million. In Leyte, instead of selling copra, a cooperative built a coconut oil mill worth about P1.25 million. Because of profitability, they expanded to two more plants. Later, Japanese businessmen imported their coconut oil to be processed into special lubricant for high precision instruments. Now, they are reaping the benefits of their entrepreneurship.

FVR’s trip to Samar-Leyte was memorable. I was the point-person on the visit’s leg to Calbayog, Western Samar. So, I contacted the province, made all the arrangements and prepared the itinerary. On the morning of our ocular inspection, my alarm did not go off and woke up at 7:00 a.m., which was our take off time. I jumped up and sped to Villamor Air Base’s 205 Presidential Airlift Wing. When I arrived 45 minutes later, everyone, including Colonel Hermogenes Ebdane, then Deputy Commander of the Presidential Security Group (now DPWH Secretary), was already aboard the plane. People did not talk much to me until we arrived at Romualdez International Airport in Tacloban. Our aircraft stopped at the regional composite force helipads and we quickly boarded two waiting Hueys. After a brief warm up, we took off and I was relieved that my tardiness no longer matters. After about 15 minutes airborne through the coastline, the Huey in front turned back, then we followed. Soon we were back in Tacloban airport. The pilot of our Huey said that since we left too late that morning, return flight from Calbayog could be impossible because of thickened cloud cover that day. Now I had cold-chills again. Stranded after 10:00 a.m., everyone’s blaming me now. Colonel Ebdane was cool. That cool brought him to top. With no prior arrangement made on land transport, we boarded and transferred into a succession of government vehicles, practically from town to town.

We arrived in Calbayog by almost 3:00 p.m. The late Governor Jose Rono (former Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Local Government under Marcos) patiently waited for us. Governor Rono was cool too. We ate (and cherished) a lunch that was ready since that morning and ready to spoil at that time. After an abbreviated meeting and a quick look into FVR’s venues we quickly headed back to Tacloban, non-stop this time. We arrived in Tacloban airport at around 8:30 p.m. and luckily, it is one of few domestic airports with fully operational night navigation system to support our type of aircraft. An Air Force officer joked that airport’s night instrumentation has been installed because Imelda usually flew home anytime she and Marcos had fights.   

That next day, our ocular trip was the worst in the history, I was ready to volunteer to swap with a co-worker for another visit. However, in an afternoon that next day, PSG operations staff called me that we were probably been saved by my tardiness. One of the two Huey choppers we briefly flew in exploded at sea. Everyone died, including General Orina, father of ABS-CBN anchorwoman Ces Orina-Drilon. If I remind Secretary Ebdane now, I may get a free meal in DPWH cafeteria.

Petropolitik, Sapian and China 8

Thursday, May 18th, 2006

Petropolitik, Sapian and China - Eighth in a Continuing Series

First, there were faults in the assumptions. Proponents say downstream deregulation will make the economy stronger and better because it will, as it should, be left upon a free market to operate. Market is said to be a self-equalizing force; that all things being equal, profit interests and buyer interest will synthesize into general welfare.  So the theory goes. But opponents argue that since there is no upstream industry to guarantee a free play of supply and prices for downstream industries, deregulation has no net positive effect because downstream entrepreneurs are still dependent on Big Three for supply. Hence, there is no real competition. Proponents believed that as soon as deregulation is announced, oil companies around the world would race to our doorsteps. But our announcements, repeated announcements, have been met by a stony silence. The reason, some say, is that giant oil companies, with their rules of engagement and protocol, would not go after each other’s throat because, as traditional economics always say, genuine competition lowers prices; and lowered mark-up prices reduces profitability. By and large, they share not only the same security and political concerns, but also the same oil wells, pipelines, refineries, transshipment facilities, tankers, borrow each others’ jets, etc. Early on, critics warned that if there would be no new players the size of the Big Three, deregulation is doomed to fail. And there were none.

Another result of deregulation is the removal of Oil Price Stabilization Fund (OPSF). OPSF is an import levy instituted by Marcos and was approximately P1.25/liter in 1997. It was placed on reserve as safety net to fend ill effects of escalating gas prices. When there was sudden jolt in gas prices to soften impact to consumers, government either totally covered (subsidized) the difference in cost, or spread costs over a period of time (credit). Even at the months before deregulation, OPSF mechanism had been working very hard to stabilize unpredictable gas prices. OPSF was typically used for Forward Cost Cover (FCC) that absorbed for consumers the fluctuating price difference three months in advance. Former Energy Secretary Francisco Viray would always complain to the Cabinet how hard it was for OPSF to keep up with increasing world prices. For over three years, I was the energy “expert” on FVR Cabinet minutes. My supervisor, Director Jess Albar from a prominent Roxas City family, knowing my interests, invariably gave me all Cabinet items on energy, until the Cabinet no longer talked any OPSF or FCC.

On top of deregulation, privatization was another scourge to Philippine petroleum industry. Petron, a government petroleum company, was sold to Aramco. At that point, government had fully abdicated its last measure of influence on domestic oil prices.  Ownership of Petron had been good oil price leverage; profitability had been shoved aside in favor of national welfare. Petron saturated market with lower priced gas to upset upward pressure on gas prices. So, losing Petron ownership and having no OPSF safety net, and none of expected downstream competition, government is now left with the last front-end control. To tax or not to tax.

If we are already selling tax-free oil, and China would pay even more money for even more gas supply, we would be in big trouble. How many of us would be willing to pay P90/liter even if it’s tax-free?

Petropolitik, Sapian and China 7

Thursday, May 18th, 2006

Petropolitik, Sapian and China - Seventh in a Continuing Series

Then, an important aspect of this series on Sapian, China, and petropolitik is oil deregulation. In theory, it allowed any company to operate in the downstream oil industry. Of course, we do not have upstream oil industry to speak of. But this paved the way for the organization of 14 new players (e.g., Eastern, Shale Oil, Flying V, etc.) and arrival of French Elf Aquitaine and Total, and American company known as Coastal Petroleum. http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online…es/CC/doc5.html

In addition to being a staff support to regular Cabinet Meetings, I also supported Cabinet Cluster on Energy (Cluster D). Policies on energy, including oil deregulation, price increases, etc., are regularly discussed, before directions are issued to the Energy Regulator Board. My brush with small time oil interests started when our cousin won as mayor of Tangalan, Aklan and came to Manila to explore for projects. We had a small network in the FVR Malacanang partly because former Presidential Counsel Antonio Tirol Carpio’s (now, a Supreme Court Justice) mother is from Tangalan and Boracay, and relative of Nong Liling Tirol of Majanlud and Bilao. FVR’s biographer Jojo Terencio is from Makato, plus the network of retired General Federico Ruiz. In any case, Mayor Francisco, whom I later brought to Toto Wally and Shirley Martinez house in Angkin on one New Year’s Eve on our way home from a rock crusher intended to supply quarry rocks to PhilEstate in Boracay, introduced me to Shell oil barge contractors. He used to work in Shell and had contacts with Shell tanker barge contractors. These contractors are also connected to the late Senator Robert Barbers in many ways. With that group, I saw Nong Richard Jamora, son of Auntie Titay, who is a Manager in Shell Tank Farm in Pandacan. Later, I would draft letters to Nong Richard on behalf of these interests pleading leniency for the petroleum safety violations or delivery shortfalls.

Coastal Petroleum, a Houston, Texas based company, contracted the use of underground petroleum storage in Subic Naval Base. The storage facility has a capacity of 2.4 million barrels, or worth over one week of total national consumption. My friends would later have transport services and distribution/trading contract with Subic Coastal.

Sapian Community Network

Sapian Online has a very limited audience. Web citizens comprise less that 3% of the population. If we want to reach and involve the whole of Sapian, we need to branch out. And if we are to make a difference in the lives of common Sapianons, we need strong branches through organized, independent community network.
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