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SENATE President Juan Miguel Zubiri said on Monday, February 26, 2024, that President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. wants the ratification plebiscite for the proposed amendments to the 1987 Constitution to be done during the midterm elections in 2025.Zubiri said the matter was discussed during a meeting between the senators and Marcos in Malacañang.He said Marcos wanted the plebiscite to ratify amendments in the constitution to be conducted simultaneously with the 2025 elections to lessen its funding requirements.“Dahil, napaka-klaro, kung gagawin natin yan, bago mag-eleksyon, gagastos po tayo ng P12 to P14 billion (It is very clear that if we do that before the election, we will spend P12 to P14 billion)," Zubiri said in an interview with reporters."Siya mismo, galing mismo sa kanya, sinabi niya, mas gusto niya, sabay na lang sa halalan ng 2025. So, pagka ganun, hindi po tayo kailangan magmamadali. So, we can take this up after the break, and complete the resolution, and approve the resolution before the sine die break, 'yung aming target date. Baka sabihin nila, nangako na naman ako. Target date po natin, kasi ang gusto po ng ating Pangulo eventually, is to force it to the elections of 2025," he added.(He himself, according to him, prefers it to be done just at the same time as the election of 2025. So, then, we don't need to rush. So, we can take this up after the break, and complete the resolution, and approve the resolution before the sine die break. That’s our target. They might say, I promised again. It's our target date, because what our President wants is to force it to the elections of 2025.)Zubiri said Marcos also reiterated his stand that the Senate and the House of Representatives should vote separately on the constitutional amendments and that it should only cover the economic provisions."As a matter of fact, he wants the House to adopt our version," he said."We had a sense, nung nakita po namin ang sense ng Pangulo, na gusto niya economic provisions lamang, ayaw niya ng gulo, ayaw niya magkaroon ng controversy, trabaho lang (We sensed that the President only wants economic provisions. He doesn't want trouble. He doesn't want controversy, just work), keep our heads low, and then when the time comes to vote on it, vote on it. And then present namin sa House for their adoption," he added.Zubiri earlier filed Resolution of Both Houses (RBH) 6, which seeks to amend Articles 12, 14 and 16 of the Constitution, or the provision on public services, education and advertising industry of the 1987 Constitution by adding the phrase "unless otherwise provided by law."The Senate started its deliberation on RBH 6 in the first week of February.Meanwhile, RBH 7, which is almost an exact reproduction of RBH 6, authored by Senior Deputy Speaker and Pampanga Third District Representative Aurelio "Dong" Gonzales Jr., Deputy Speaker and Quezon Second District Representative David "Jay-jay" Suarez, Majority Leader Manuel Jose Dalipe, and other House leaders was filed at the House of Representatives.The House kicked off its deliberations on RBH 7 on Monday, February 26 where House Speaker Martin Romualdez assured that they will leave the political provisions of the Constitution untouched and will adopt the Senate’s proposed amendments “in toto” to dispel doubts that their efforts are politically motivated."Malinaw po sa ating lahat ang misyon natin ngayon. Baguhin ang ilang economic provisions na pumipigil sa pagpasok ng mga negosyo mula sa ibang bansa. Mga negosyong lilikha ng trabaho at magpapasigla ng ating ekonomiya. Ito lamang ang pakay natin. Ekonomiya, hindi pulitika," he said.(Our mission is clear to all of us now. Change some economic provisions that prevent the entry of businesses from other countries. Businesses that will create jobs and stimulate our economy -- this is our only goal. Economics, not politics.) (TPM/SunStar Philippines) How do you win in fishing? Philippines FORMER Cebu City mayor Tomas “Tommy” Osmeña has challenged the Cebu Provincial Government’s ownership of the lot along Osmeña Blvd. where the Cebu Bus Rapid Transit (CBRT) project is being implemented.During a press conference on Tuesday, March 5, 2024, he warned that if this fiasco continues, he will be forced to exercise his rights and reclaim the ownership of Osmeña Blvd., which had been donated by his late father Sergio “Serging” Osmeña Jr.Osmeña said Osmeña Blvd., which the CBRT traverses, and its surrounding premises used to belong to Cebu Heights Inc.He said his father was its president and principal stockholder.“My father gave the Province properties, in exchange for other properties, which my father did not get. Technically speaking, the deal was not valid,” Osmeña said.However, the Provincial Government under the administration of Gov. Gwendolyn Garcia earlier insisted that it owns portions of Osmeña Blvd. “We will see each other in court,” Osmeña said, referring to the Province’s claims.“It’s all part of the Cebu Heights (Inc.) and it’s owned 100 percent by my father. Even the part of the Fuente Osmeña (Circle) is owned by my father. I even have the title for it,” he said.If the Provincial Government insists on stopping the CBRT project citing its ownership of the lot, Osmeña said he will reclaim the property.Administrative Order 253Then President Carlos Garcia signed Administrative Order 253 on Oct. 7, 1957, where he exonerated Serging, who was then governor, and three others for dishonesty and grave misconduct in office allegedly committed in connection with the execution of a deed of exchange involving certain parcels of land by and between the Province and Cebu Heights.Garcia then withheld action on the deed of exchange executed in November 1954.The exchange involved three big lots of the Province and 14 smaller lots of Cebu Heights, which formed part of two national roads in Cebu City.Meanwhile, the former mayor reacted negatively to the two resolutions passed by the Provincial Board (PB) on Monday demanding the stoppage of the CBRT implementation, and the Feb. 21 motion of the Cebu City Council, pushed by City Councilor James Anthony Cuenco, which called for the suspension of scheduled civil works for CBRT Packages 2 and 3.He said the National Government will not heed the call of the PB and City Council to halt the project’s civil works.He said both PB and the council have “no teeth” to stop the project.Osmeña said stopping the project will not solve the problem, but only worsen it.The CBRT was Osmeña’s brainchild. He had pushed for it when he was still mayor and then congressman.During the press con, he said he envisioned the CBRT to alleviate the commuting woes of residents in Barangay Talamban and Bulacao going to and from the downtown area, citing that a dedicated bus lane will be beneficial to Cebuanos who cannot acquire motor vehicles.Discussions on the proposed BRT system started during his term.In 1997, Osmeña visited Curitiba, Brazil, where the first BRT was implemented in 1974.Possible repercussionsIn 2008, the Asian Development Bank, World Bank and Overseas Economic Cooperation Fund of Japan approved the project’s pre-feasibility study, according to Osmeña.He said stopping the CBRT may result in a negative credit rating for the Philippine Government in terms of foreign financing and funding agreements with international financial institutions.“The Philippine Government will never have an international bilateral agreement because if you do that you will be blacklisted from all donors and donations around the world,” Osmeña said. “They will not spoil their international credit rating just because Councilor Cuenco and some crazy Provincial Board members start ego tripping and say we should stop CBRT.”He pointed out that the CBRT was funded not only by the World Bank but also by the French Development Agency and the Philippine Government.The CBRT took 20 years to get off the ground.The entire CBRT system is composed of three packages:Package 1 consists of a 2.38-kilometer segregated bus lane with four bus stations and 1.15 kilometers of pedestrian improvements from the Cebu South Bus Terminal to the Capitol building.Package 2 features a 10.8-kilometer segregated bus lane with 13 bus stations, including a bus terminal at the South Road Properties, a roundabout facility in Cebu IT Park, and a depot in SRP.Package 3 includes the construction of a 22.1-kilometer feeder route, with 76 bus stops including feeder terminals in Barangay Talamban in Cebu City and in Talisay City. / EHP

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FORMER Cebu City mayor Tomas “Tommy” Osmeña has challenged the Cebu Provincial Government’s ownership of the lot along Osmeña Blvd. where the Cebu Bus Rapid Transit (CBRT) project is being implemented.During a press conference on Tuesday, March 5, 2024, he warned that if this fiasco continues, he will be forced to exercise his rights and reclaim the ownership of Osmeña Blvd., which had been donated by his late father Sergio “Serging” Osmeña Jr.Osmeña said Osmeña Blvd., which the CBRT traverses, and its surrounding premises used to belong to Cebu Heights Inc.He said his father was its president and principal stockholder.“My father gave the Province properties, in exchange for other properties, which my father did not get. Technically speaking, the deal was not valid,” Osmeña said.However, the Provincial Government under the administration of Gov. Gwendolyn Garcia earlier insisted that it owns portions of Osmeña Blvd. “We will see each other in court,” Osmeña said, referring to the Province’s claims.“It’s all part of the Cebu Heights (Inc.) and it’s owned 100 percent by my father. Even the part of the Fuente Osmeña (Circle) is owned by my father. I even have the title for it,” he said.If the Provincial Government insists on stopping the CBRT project citing its ownership of the lot, Osmeña said he will reclaim the property.Administrative Order 253Then President Carlos Garcia signed Administrative Order 253 on Oct. 7, 1957, where he exonerated Serging, who was then governor, and three others for dishonesty and grave misconduct in office allegedly committed in connection with the execution of a deed of exchange involving certain parcels of land by and between the Province and Cebu Heights.Garcia then withheld action on the deed of exchange executed in November 1954.The exchange involved three big lots of the Province and 14 smaller lots of Cebu Heights, which formed part of two national roads in Cebu City.Meanwhile, the former mayor reacted negatively to the two resolutions passed by the Provincial Board (PB) on Monday demanding the stoppage of the CBRT implementation, and the Feb. 21 motion of the Cebu City Council, pushed by City Councilor James Anthony Cuenco, which called for the suspension of scheduled civil works for CBRT Packages 2 and 3.He said the National Government will not heed the call of the PB and City Council to halt the project’s civil works.He said both PB and the council have “no teeth” to stop the project.Osmeña said stopping the project will not solve the problem, but only worsen it.The CBRT was Osmeña’s brainchild. He had pushed for it when he was still mayor and then congressman.During the press con, he said he envisioned the CBRT to alleviate the commuting woes of residents in Barangay Talamban and Bulacao going to and from the downtown area, citing that a dedicated bus lane will be beneficial to Cebuanos who cannot acquire motor vehicles.Discussions on the proposed BRT system started during his term.In 1997, Osmeña visited Curitiba, Brazil, where the first BRT was implemented in 1974.Possible repercussionsIn 2008, the Asian Development Bank, World Bank and Overseas Economic Cooperation Fund of Japan approved the project’s pre-feasibility study, according to Osmeña.He said stopping the CBRT may result in a negative credit rating for the Philippine Government in terms of foreign financing and funding agreements with international financial institutions.“The Philippine Government will never have an international bilateral agreement because if you do that you will be blacklisted from all donors and donations around the world,” Osmeña said. “They will not spoil their international credit rating just because Councilor Cuenco and some crazy Provincial Board members start ego tripping and say we should stop CBRT.”He pointed out that the CBRT was funded not only by the World Bank but also by the French Development Agency and the Philippine Government.The CBRT took 20 years to get off the ground.The entire CBRT system is composed of three packages:Package 1 consists of a 2.38-kilometer segregated bus lane with four bus stations and 1.15 kilometers of pedestrian improvements from the Cebu South Bus Terminal to the Capitol building.Package 2 features a 10.8-kilometer segregated bus lane with 13 bus stations, including a bus terminal at the South Road Properties, a roundabout facility in Cebu IT Park, and a depot in SRP.Package 3 includes the construction of a 22.1-kilometer feeder route, with 76 bus stops including feeder terminals in Barangay Talamban in Cebu City and in Talisay City. / EHP Is there a game that pays real money? THE Commission on Elections (Comelec) attracted 691 voter registrants in its pilot implementation of the Register Anywhere Program (RAP) in Central Visayas on Feb. 27-28, 2024.Comelec started at the University of San Carlos (USC) Talamban Campus in Cebu City on Feb. 27, registering 210 individuals, including students, faculty and staff. The following day, Feb. 28, Comelec served 481 registrants at the Cebu Doctors’ University (CDU) in Mandaue City.The Comelec Central Office also held separate voter education seminars for USC and CDU, covering topics such as voter rights, responsibilities and candidate information.RAP at USC Comelec Cebu spokesperson Omar Sharif Mamalinta said that through RAP, individuals are no longer confined to their local Comelec offices for registration. He said designated sites across the country will host Comelec facilities serving as convenient hubs for voter registration.He said participants can register regardless of their current residence.Aside from accommodating first-time voters, other RAP services cover individuals who are relocating, returning from overseas, needing to correct information, and reactivating deactivated registration at any RAP site.For first-year computer science student Shawn Clifford Veloso, 20, the event proved to be convenient for students to register. Hailing from Tacloban City in Leyte, Veloso said the event made the registration “easier and more accessible” for would-be first-time voters like himself. He was joined by three of his classmates in the registration.Adrian Auman, 18, a first-year industrial engineering student, echoed Veloso’s sentiments. He said registering was easy for them because the event took place inside the campus, particularly at the School of Architecture, Fine Arts and Design building. Voter’s educationMeanwhile, the voter’s education seminar held at the university’s Michael Richartz Center was led by Emmalyn Masongsong of the Comelec Central Office’s Education Information Department.Among the topics discussed were rules on electoral campaign.Mamalinta said: “If they will have sufficient or enough knowledge on voter’s education, they will be able to vote wisely... We want to educate them on who to vote or who not to vote.”Mamalinta added that other institutions may request their office to conduct satellite registration, including RAP, in different areas, such as malls, universities and barangays. However, he specified that there must be at least 200 registrants.RAP at CDUThe registrants from CDU included 110 applicants from Lapu-Lapu City, 111 from Cebu City First District, 141 from Cebu City Second District and 119 from Mandaue City.Mamalinta said the pilot tests were carried out in an orderly manner at the USC and CDU, as the Comelec personnel did not face any technical difficulties during the program’s implementation.A voter’s education seminar was also held at CDU. It was attended by 1,300 National Service Training Program students of the university. Other RAP schedulesMamalinta said neighboring provinces in Central Visayas will have their respective RAP pilot tests throughout the year. Negros Oriental will have its RAP pilot test in April, Siquijor in May, Cebu Province in June and Bohol in July.The nationwide implementation of RAP aims to provide more options and opportunities for voter registration in areas with higher concentrations of foot traffic and gatherings of individuals eligible to vote. / KJF, HIC

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THE Commission on Elections (Comelec) attracted 691 voter registrants in its pilot implementation of the Register Anywhere Program (RAP) in Central Visayas on Feb. 27-28, 2024.Comelec started at the University of San Carlos (USC) Talamban Campus in Cebu City on Feb. 27, registering 210 individuals, including students, faculty and staff. The following day, Feb. 28, Comelec served 481 registrants at the Cebu Doctors’ University (CDU) in Mandaue City.The Comelec Central Office also held separate voter education seminars for USC and CDU, covering topics such as voter rights, responsibilities and candidate information.RAP at USC Comelec Cebu spokesperson Omar Sharif Mamalinta said that through RAP, individuals are no longer confined to their local Comelec offices for registration. He said designated sites across the country will host Comelec facilities serving as convenient hubs for voter registration.He said participants can register regardless of their current residence.Aside from accommodating first-time voters, other RAP services cover individuals who are relocating, returning from overseas, needing to correct information, and reactivating deactivated registration at any RAP site.For first-year computer science student Shawn Clifford Veloso, 20, the event proved to be convenient for students to register. Hailing from Tacloban City in Leyte, Veloso said the event made the registration “easier and more accessible” for would-be first-time voters like himself. He was joined by three of his classmates in the registration.Adrian Auman, 18, a first-year industrial engineering student, echoed Veloso’s sentiments. He said registering was easy for them because the event took place inside the campus, particularly at the School of Architecture, Fine Arts and Design building. Voter’s educationMeanwhile, the voter’s education seminar held at the university’s Michael Richartz Center was led by Emmalyn Masongsong of the Comelec Central Office’s Education Information Department.Among the topics discussed were rules on electoral campaign.Mamalinta said: “If they will have sufficient or enough knowledge on voter’s education, they will be able to vote wisely... We want to educate them on who to vote or who not to vote.”Mamalinta added that other institutions may request their office to conduct satellite registration, including RAP, in different areas, such as malls, universities and barangays. However, he specified that there must be at least 200 registrants.RAP at CDUThe registrants from CDU included 110 applicants from Lapu-Lapu City, 111 from Cebu City First District, 141 from Cebu City Second District and 119 from Mandaue City.Mamalinta said the pilot tests were carried out in an orderly manner at the USC and CDU, as the Comelec personnel did not face any technical difficulties during the program’s implementation.A voter’s education seminar was also held at CDU. It was attended by 1,300 National Service Training Program students of the university. Other RAP schedulesMamalinta said neighboring provinces in Central Visayas will have their respective RAP pilot tests throughout the year. Negros Oriental will have its RAP pilot test in April, Siquijor in May, Cebu Province in June and Bohol in July.The nationwide implementation of RAP aims to provide more options and opportunities for voter registration in areas with higher concentrations of foot traffic and gatherings of individuals eligible to vote. / KJF, HIC Is there a game that pays real money? SENATE President Juan Miguel Zubiri said on Monday, February 26, 2024, that President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. wants the ratification plebiscite for the proposed amendments to the 1987 Constitution to be done during the midterm elections in 2025.Zubiri said the matter was discussed during a meeting between the senators and Marcos in Malacañang.He said Marcos wanted the plebiscite to ratify amendments in the constitution to be conducted simultaneously with the 2025 elections to lessen its funding requirements.“Dahil, napaka-klaro, kung gagawin natin yan, bago mag-eleksyon, gagastos po tayo ng P12 to P14 billion (It is very clear that if we do that before the election, we will spend P12 to P14 billion)," Zubiri said in an interview with reporters."Siya mismo, galing mismo sa kanya, sinabi niya, mas gusto niya, sabay na lang sa halalan ng 2025. So, pagka ganun, hindi po tayo kailangan magmamadali. So, we can take this up after the break, and complete the resolution, and approve the resolution before the sine die break, 'yung aming target date. Baka sabihin nila, nangako na naman ako. Target date po natin, kasi ang gusto po ng ating Pangulo eventually, is to force it to the elections of 2025," he added.(He himself, according to him, prefers it to be done just at the same time as the election of 2025. So, then, we don't need to rush. So, we can take this up after the break, and complete the resolution, and approve the resolution before the sine die break. That’s our target. They might say, I promised again. It's our target date, because what our President wants is to force it to the elections of 2025.)Zubiri said Marcos also reiterated his stand that the Senate and the House of Representatives should vote separately on the constitutional amendments and that it should only cover the economic provisions."As a matter of fact, he wants the House to adopt our version," he said."We had a sense, nung nakita po namin ang sense ng Pangulo, na gusto niya economic provisions lamang, ayaw niya ng gulo, ayaw niya magkaroon ng controversy, trabaho lang (We sensed that the President only wants economic provisions. He doesn't want trouble. He doesn't want controversy, just work), keep our heads low, and then when the time comes to vote on it, vote on it. And then present namin sa House for their adoption," he added.Zubiri earlier filed Resolution of Both Houses (RBH) 6, which seeks to amend Articles 12, 14 and 16 of the Constitution, or the provision on public services, education and advertising industry of the 1987 Constitution by adding the phrase "unless otherwise provided by law."The Senate started its deliberation on RBH 6 in the first week of February.Meanwhile, RBH 7, which is almost an exact reproduction of RBH 6, authored by Senior Deputy Speaker and Pampanga Third District Representative Aurelio "Dong" Gonzales Jr., Deputy Speaker and Quezon Second District Representative David "Jay-jay" Suarez, Majority Leader Manuel Jose Dalipe, and other House leaders was filed at the House of Representatives.The House kicked off its deliberations on RBH 7 on Monday, February 26 where House Speaker Martin Romualdez assured that they will leave the political provisions of the Constitution untouched and will adopt the Senate’s proposed amendments “in toto” to dispel doubts that their efforts are politically motivated."Malinaw po sa ating lahat ang misyon natin ngayon. Baguhin ang ilang economic provisions na pumipigil sa pagpasok ng mga negosyo mula sa ibang bansa. Mga negosyong lilikha ng trabaho at magpapasigla ng ating ekonomiya. Ito lamang ang pakay natin. Ekonomiya, hindi pulitika," he said.(Our mission is clear to all of us now. Change some economic provisions that prevent the entry of businesses from other countries. Businesses that will create jobs and stimulate our economy -- this is our only goal. Economics, not politics.) (TPM/SunStar Philippines)

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SENATE President Juan Miguel Zubiri said on Monday, February 26, 2024, that President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. wants the ratification plebiscite for the proposed amendments to the 1987 Constitution to be done during the midterm elections in 2025.Zubiri said the matter was discussed during a meeting between the senators and Marcos in Malacañang.He said Marcos wanted the plebiscite to ratify amendments in the constitution to be conducted simultaneously with the 2025 elections to lessen its funding requirements.“Dahil, napaka-klaro, kung gagawin natin yan, bago mag-eleksyon, gagastos po tayo ng P12 to P14 billion (It is very clear that if we do that before the election, we will spend P12 to P14 billion)," Zubiri said in an interview with reporters."Siya mismo, galing mismo sa kanya, sinabi niya, mas gusto niya, sabay na lang sa halalan ng 2025. So, pagka ganun, hindi po tayo kailangan magmamadali. So, we can take this up after the break, and complete the resolution, and approve the resolution before the sine die break, 'yung aming target date. Baka sabihin nila, nangako na naman ako. Target date po natin, kasi ang gusto po ng ating Pangulo eventually, is to force it to the elections of 2025," he added.(He himself, according to him, prefers it to be done just at the same time as the election of 2025. So, then, we don't need to rush. So, we can take this up after the break, and complete the resolution, and approve the resolution before the sine die break. That’s our target. They might say, I promised again. It's our target date, because what our President wants is to force it to the elections of 2025.)Zubiri said Marcos also reiterated his stand that the Senate and the House of Representatives should vote separately on the constitutional amendments and that it should only cover the economic provisions."As a matter of fact, he wants the House to adopt our version," he said."We had a sense, nung nakita po namin ang sense ng Pangulo, na gusto niya economic provisions lamang, ayaw niya ng gulo, ayaw niya magkaroon ng controversy, trabaho lang (We sensed that the President only wants economic provisions. He doesn't want trouble. He doesn't want controversy, just work), keep our heads low, and then when the time comes to vote on it, vote on it. And then present namin sa House for their adoption," he added.Zubiri earlier filed Resolution of Both Houses (RBH) 6, which seeks to amend Articles 12, 14 and 16 of the Constitution, or the provision on public services, education and advertising industry of the 1987 Constitution by adding the phrase "unless otherwise provided by law."The Senate started its deliberation on RBH 6 in the first week of February.Meanwhile, RBH 7, which is almost an exact reproduction of RBH 6, authored by Senior Deputy Speaker and Pampanga Third District Representative Aurelio "Dong" Gonzales Jr., Deputy Speaker and Quezon Second District Representative David "Jay-jay" Suarez, Majority Leader Manuel Jose Dalipe, and other House leaders was filed at the House of Representatives.The House kicked off its deliberations on RBH 7 on Monday, February 26 where House Speaker Martin Romualdez assured that they will leave the political provisions of the Constitution untouched and will adopt the Senate’s proposed amendments “in toto” to dispel doubts that their efforts are politically motivated."Malinaw po sa ating lahat ang misyon natin ngayon. Baguhin ang ilang economic provisions na pumipigil sa pagpasok ng mga negosyo mula sa ibang bansa. Mga negosyong lilikha ng trabaho at magpapasigla ng ating ekonomiya. Ito lamang ang pakay natin. Ekonomiya, hindi pulitika," he said.(Our mission is clear to all of us now. Change some economic provisions that prevent the entry of businesses from other countries. Businesses that will create jobs and stimulate our economy -- this is our only goal. Economics, not politics.) (TPM/SunStar Philippines), check the following table to see what categories most online casinos in the Philippines fit in.

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FORMER Cebu City mayor Tomas “Tommy” Osmeña has challenged the Cebu Provincial Government’s ownership of the lot along Osmeña Blvd. where the Cebu Bus Rapid Transit (CBRT) project is being implemented.During a press conference on Tuesday, March 5, 2024, he warned that if this fiasco continues, he will be forced to exercise his rights and reclaim the ownership of Osmeña Blvd., which had been donated by his late father Sergio “Serging” Osmeña Jr.Osmeña said Osmeña Blvd., which the CBRT traverses, and its surrounding premises used to belong to Cebu Heights Inc.He said his father was its president and principal stockholder.“My father gave the Province properties, in exchange for other properties, which my father did not get. Technically speaking, the deal was not valid,” Osmeña said.However, the Provincial Government under the administration of Gov. Gwendolyn Garcia earlier insisted that it owns portions of Osmeña Blvd. “We will see each other in court,” Osmeña said, referring to the Province’s claims.“It’s all part of the Cebu Heights (Inc.) and it’s owned 100 percent by my father. Even the part of the Fuente Osmeña (Circle) is owned by my father. I even have the title for it,” he said.If the Provincial Government insists on stopping the CBRT project citing its ownership of the lot, Osmeña said he will reclaim the property.Administrative Order 253Then President Carlos Garcia signed Administrative Order 253 on Oct. 7, 1957, where he exonerated Serging, who was then governor, and three others for dishonesty and grave misconduct in office allegedly committed in connection with the execution of a deed of exchange involving certain parcels of land by and between the Province and Cebu Heights.Garcia then withheld action on the deed of exchange executed in November 1954.The exchange involved three big lots of the Province and 14 smaller lots of Cebu Heights, which formed part of two national roads in Cebu City.Meanwhile, the former mayor reacted negatively to the two resolutions passed by the Provincial Board (PB) on Monday demanding the stoppage of the CBRT implementation, and the Feb. 21 motion of the Cebu City Council, pushed by City Councilor James Anthony Cuenco, which called for the suspension of scheduled civil works for CBRT Packages 2 and 3.He said the National Government will not heed the call of the PB and City Council to halt the project’s civil works.He said both PB and the council have “no teeth” to stop the project.Osmeña said stopping the project will not solve the problem, but only worsen it.The CBRT was Osmeña’s brainchild. He had pushed for it when he was still mayor and then congressman.During the press con, he said he envisioned the CBRT to alleviate the commuting woes of residents in Barangay Talamban and Bulacao going to and from the downtown area, citing that a dedicated bus lane will be beneficial to Cebuanos who cannot acquire motor vehicles.Discussions on the proposed BRT system started during his term.In 1997, Osmeña visited Curitiba, Brazil, where the first BRT was implemented in 1974.Possible repercussionsIn 2008, the Asian Development Bank, World Bank and Overseas Economic Cooperation Fund of Japan approved the project’s pre-feasibility study, according to Osmeña.He said stopping the CBRT may result in a negative credit rating for the Philippine Government in terms of foreign financing and funding agreements with international financial institutions.“The Philippine Government will never have an international bilateral agreement because if you do that you will be blacklisted from all donors and donations around the world,” Osmeña said. “They will not spoil their international credit rating just because Councilor Cuenco and some crazy Provincial Board members start ego tripping and say we should stop CBRT.”He pointed out that the CBRT was funded not only by the World Bank but also by the French Development Agency and the Philippine Government.The CBRT took 20 years to get off the ground.The entire CBRT system is composed of three packages:Package 1 consists of a 2.38-kilometer segregated bus lane with four bus stations and 1.15 kilometers of pedestrian improvements from the Cebu South Bus Terminal to the Capitol building.Package 2 features a 10.8-kilometer segregated bus lane with 13 bus stations, including a bus terminal at the South Road Properties, a roundabout facility in Cebu IT Park, and a depot in SRP.Package 3 includes the construction of a 22.1-kilometer feeder route, with 76 bus stops including feeder terminals in Barangay Talamban in Cebu City and in Talisay City. / EHP How do you win in fishing? . BK8 Cashback ✔️ Live Casino & Slot Machines & Poker & Fishing Great Selection for Real Money. Online Gambling in the Philippines. here is how to register at an online casino site in the Philippines:

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SENATE President Juan Miguel Zubiri said on Monday, February 26, 2024, that President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. wants the ratification plebiscite for the proposed amendments to the 1987 Constitution to be done during the midterm elections in 2025.Zubiri said the matter was discussed during a meeting between the senators and Marcos in Malacañang.He said Marcos wanted the plebiscite to ratify amendments in the constitution to be conducted simultaneously with the 2025 elections to lessen its funding requirements.“Dahil, napaka-klaro, kung gagawin natin yan, bago mag-eleksyon, gagastos po tayo ng P12 to P14 billion (It is very clear that if we do that before the election, we will spend P12 to P14 billion)," Zubiri said in an interview with reporters."Siya mismo, galing mismo sa kanya, sinabi niya, mas gusto niya, sabay na lang sa halalan ng 2025. So, pagka ganun, hindi po tayo kailangan magmamadali. So, we can take this up after the break, and complete the resolution, and approve the resolution before the sine die break, 'yung aming target date. Baka sabihin nila, nangako na naman ako. Target date po natin, kasi ang gusto po ng ating Pangulo eventually, is to force it to the elections of 2025," he added.(He himself, according to him, prefers it to be done just at the same time as the election of 2025. So, then, we don't need to rush. So, we can take this up after the break, and complete the resolution, and approve the resolution before the sine die break. That’s our target. They might say, I promised again. It's our target date, because what our President wants is to force it to the elections of 2025.)Zubiri said Marcos also reiterated his stand that the Senate and the House of Representatives should vote separately on the constitutional amendments and that it should only cover the economic provisions."As a matter of fact, he wants the House to adopt our version," he said."We had a sense, nung nakita po namin ang sense ng Pangulo, na gusto niya economic provisions lamang, ayaw niya ng gulo, ayaw niya magkaroon ng controversy, trabaho lang (We sensed that the President only wants economic provisions. He doesn't want trouble. He doesn't want controversy, just work), keep our heads low, and then when the time comes to vote on it, vote on it. And then present namin sa House for their adoption," he added.Zubiri earlier filed Resolution of Both Houses (RBH) 6, which seeks to amend Articles 12, 14 and 16 of the Constitution, or the provision on public services, education and advertising industry of the 1987 Constitution by adding the phrase "unless otherwise provided by law."The Senate started its deliberation on RBH 6 in the first week of February.Meanwhile, RBH 7, which is almost an exact reproduction of RBH 6, authored by Senior Deputy Speaker and Pampanga Third District Representative Aurelio "Dong" Gonzales Jr., Deputy Speaker and Quezon Second District Representative David "Jay-jay" Suarez, Majority Leader Manuel Jose Dalipe, and other House leaders was filed at the House of Representatives.The House kicked off its deliberations on RBH 7 on Monday, February 26 where House Speaker Martin Romualdez assured that they will leave the political provisions of the Constitution untouched and will adopt the Senate’s proposed amendments “in toto” to dispel doubts that their efforts are politically motivated."Malinaw po sa ating lahat ang misyon natin ngayon. Baguhin ang ilang economic provisions na pumipigil sa pagpasok ng mga negosyo mula sa ibang bansa. Mga negosyong lilikha ng trabaho at magpapasigla ng ating ekonomiya. Ito lamang ang pakay natin. Ekonomiya, hindi pulitika," he said.(Our mission is clear to all of us now. Change some economic provisions that prevent the entry of businesses from other countries. Businesses that will create jobs and stimulate our economy -- this is our only goal. Economics, not politics.) (TPM/SunStar Philippines) Is there a game that pays real money? . It’s always a good idea to take your time and make sure you’ve found the best online casino in the Philippines on the online gambling market that can give you what you want.

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FORMER Cebu City mayor Tomas “Tommy” Osmeña has challenged the Cebu Provincial Government’s ownership of the lot along Osmeña Blvd. where the Cebu Bus Rapid Transit (CBRT) project is being implemented.During a press conference on Tuesday, March 5, 2024, he warned that if this fiasco continues, he will be forced to exercise his rights and reclaim the ownership of Osmeña Blvd., which had been donated by his late father Sergio “Serging” Osmeña Jr.Osmeña said Osmeña Blvd., which the CBRT traverses, and its surrounding premises used to belong to Cebu Heights Inc.He said his father was its president and principal stockholder.“My father gave the Province properties, in exchange for other properties, which my father did not get. Technically speaking, the deal was not valid,” Osmeña said.However, the Provincial Government under the administration of Gov. Gwendolyn Garcia earlier insisted that it owns portions of Osmeña Blvd. “We will see each other in court,” Osmeña said, referring to the Province’s claims.“It’s all part of the Cebu Heights (Inc.) and it’s owned 100 percent by my father. Even the part of the Fuente Osmeña (Circle) is owned by my father. I even have the title for it,” he said.If the Provincial Government insists on stopping the CBRT project citing its ownership of the lot, Osmeña said he will reclaim the property.Administrative Order 253Then President Carlos Garcia signed Administrative Order 253 on Oct. 7, 1957, where he exonerated Serging, who was then governor, and three others for dishonesty and grave misconduct in office allegedly committed in connection with the execution of a deed of exchange involving certain parcels of land by and between the Province and Cebu Heights.Garcia then withheld action on the deed of exchange executed in November 1954.The exchange involved three big lots of the Province and 14 smaller lots of Cebu Heights, which formed part of two national roads in Cebu City.Meanwhile, the former mayor reacted negatively to the two resolutions passed by the Provincial Board (PB) on Monday demanding the stoppage of the CBRT implementation, and the Feb. 21 motion of the Cebu City Council, pushed by City Councilor James Anthony Cuenco, which called for the suspension of scheduled civil works for CBRT Packages 2 and 3.He said the National Government will not heed the call of the PB and City Council to halt the project’s civil works.He said both PB and the council have “no teeth” to stop the project.Osmeña said stopping the project will not solve the problem, but only worsen it.The CBRT was Osmeña’s brainchild. He had pushed for it when he was still mayor and then congressman.During the press con, he said he envisioned the CBRT to alleviate the commuting woes of residents in Barangay Talamban and Bulacao going to and from the downtown area, citing that a dedicated bus lane will be beneficial to Cebuanos who cannot acquire motor vehicles.Discussions on the proposed BRT system started during his term.In 1997, Osmeña visited Curitiba, Brazil, where the first BRT was implemented in 1974.Possible repercussionsIn 2008, the Asian Development Bank, World Bank and Overseas Economic Cooperation Fund of Japan approved the project’s pre-feasibility study, according to Osmeña.He said stopping the CBRT may result in a negative credit rating for the Philippine Government in terms of foreign financing and funding agreements with international financial institutions.“The Philippine Government will never have an international bilateral agreement because if you do that you will be blacklisted from all donors and donations around the world,” Osmeña said. “They will not spoil their international credit rating just because Councilor Cuenco and some crazy Provincial Board members start ego tripping and say we should stop CBRT.”He pointed out that the CBRT was funded not only by the World Bank but also by the French Development Agency and the Philippine Government.The CBRT took 20 years to get off the ground.The entire CBRT system is composed of three packages:Package 1 consists of a 2.38-kilometer segregated bus lane with four bus stations and 1.15 kilometers of pedestrian improvements from the Cebu South Bus Terminal to the Capitol building.Package 2 features a 10.8-kilometer segregated bus lane with 13 bus stations, including a bus terminal at the South Road Properties, a roundabout facility in Cebu IT Park, and a depot in SRP.Package 3 includes the construction of a 22.1-kilometer feeder route, with 76 bus stops including feeder terminals in Barangay Talamban in Cebu City and in Talisay City. / EHP licensed online casinos THE Commission on Elections (Comelec) attracted 691 voter registrants in its pilot implementation of the Register Anywhere Program (RAP) in Central Visayas on Feb. 27-28, 2024.Comelec started at the University of San Carlos (USC) Talamban Campus in Cebu City on Feb. 27, registering 210 individuals, including students, faculty and staff. The following day, Feb. 28, Comelec served 481 registrants at the Cebu Doctors’ University (CDU) in Mandaue City.The Comelec Central Office also held separate voter education seminars for USC and CDU, covering topics such as voter rights, responsibilities and candidate information.RAP at USC Comelec Cebu spokesperson Omar Sharif Mamalinta said that through RAP, individuals are no longer confined to their local Comelec offices for registration. He said designated sites across the country will host Comelec facilities serving as convenient hubs for voter registration.He said participants can register regardless of their current residence.Aside from accommodating first-time voters, other RAP services cover individuals who are relocating, returning from overseas, needing to correct information, and reactivating deactivated registration at any RAP site.For first-year computer science student Shawn Clifford Veloso, 20, the event proved to be convenient for students to register. Hailing from Tacloban City in Leyte, Veloso said the event made the registration “easier and more accessible” for would-be first-time voters like himself. He was joined by three of his classmates in the registration.Adrian Auman, 18, a first-year industrial engineering student, echoed Veloso’s sentiments. He said registering was easy for them because the event took place inside the campus, particularly at the School of Architecture, Fine Arts and Design building. Voter’s educationMeanwhile, the voter’s education seminar held at the university’s Michael Richartz Center was led by Emmalyn Masongsong of the Comelec Central Office’s Education Information Department.Among the topics discussed were rules on electoral campaign.Mamalinta said: “If they will have sufficient or enough knowledge on voter’s education, they will be able to vote wisely... We want to educate them on who to vote or who not to vote.”Mamalinta added that other institutions may request their office to conduct satellite registration, including RAP, in different areas, such as malls, universities and barangays. However, he specified that there must be at least 200 registrants.RAP at CDUThe registrants from CDU included 110 applicants from Lapu-Lapu City, 111 from Cebu City First District, 141 from Cebu City Second District and 119 from Mandaue City.Mamalinta said the pilot tests were carried out in an orderly manner at the USC and CDU, as the Comelec personnel did not face any technical difficulties during the program’s implementation.A voter’s education seminar was also held at CDU. It was attended by 1,300 National Service Training Program students of the university. Other RAP schedulesMamalinta said neighboring provinces in Central Visayas will have their respective RAP pilot tests throughout the year. Negros Oriental will have its RAP pilot test in April, Siquijor in May, Cebu Province in June and Bohol in July.The nationwide implementation of RAP aims to provide more options and opportunities for voter registration in areas with higher concentrations of foot traffic and gatherings of individuals eligible to vote. / KJF, HIC

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