Minahang Bayanihan: South Cotabato Small Scale Mining Program

2015 GALING POOK OUTSTANDING LOCAL GOVERNANCE PROGRAM

SOUTH COTABATO

south_cotabato_mapSouth Cotabato is rich in minerals. An estimated 2.5 million tons of copper and gold reserves are present in one municipality alone. But mining has led to a host of socio-economic and environmental problems.

Through its “Minahang Bayanihan” or People’s Small Scale Mining Areas program, the provincial LGU addressed the issues with the help of the affected communities.

All the mining associations and cooperatives were organized into one federation, with a representative in the Provincial Mining Regulatory Board to ensure that issues are efficiently addressed by the mining regulatory and policy making body. The LGU also used new technologies like Global Positioning Systems for geo-hazard assessment and installed CCTV cameras in strategic areas to ensure 24-hour surveillance and monitoring. This resulted in the closure of 10 tunnels situated in high risk areas and about 300 tunnels and 200 ore processing plants without permits.

By overhauling the permit issuance system and conducting a series of dialogues with the identified illegal miners, the LGU gained better compliance to mining regulations.

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By overhauling the permit issuance system and conducting a series of dialogues with the identified illegal miners, the LGU gained better compliance to mining regulations. New safeguards and policies were also estab- lished to ensure that the permitting system remained transparent. The release of mining contracts and Small Scale Mining Identification Cards were contingent on mandatory orientations on environmental laws, disaster risk assessments, mine safety and rules and regulations on small scale mining. A Minahang Bayan Center was also put up for easy access to permits processing and as a center for small scale mining affairs and various trainings. The provincial government also strictly prohibited the registration of minors.

NGOs were tapped to conduct seminars on Environmental Management and Alternative Environment Friendly Technology in mining. These enhanced the knowledge of the participants on the management and preservation of the environment in small-scale mining areas. Through these efforts, miners were able to understand current mining issues, and started to initiate their own corporate social responsibility programs and environmental protection activities like tree planting and clean-up drives.

In the ladderized system of resolving conflicts, tribal leaders and other key figures in the mining community were tapped and involved in resolving issues before it is elevated to the barangay level. This strengthened the capacity of the community to resolve conflicts and issues among themselves.

From only six mining contracts and five processing permits in 2010, there are now 159 legal mining contractors and 105 legal mining processors with a measured compliance rate of 85%. Child labor and mining related accidents have also been reduced by 90%. Moreover, at least 15 hectares of forest land were developed and planted with 7,868 assorted forest and fruit trees by the small scale miners.

As a result of the program, illegal mining activities have been drastically reduced. By involving the community and partnering with different key stakeholders, the provincial government has been able to put in place a program that addresses all the various small scale mining issues. The Minahang Bayanihan Program is now being recognized as one of the most innovative and one of the best practices in small scale mining regulation by various NGOs and LGUs all over the Philippines.

Winners of Outstanding Local Governance Programs

10 LGU winners named at 2015 Gawad Galing Pook

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Galing Pook Foundation cites ten local government units (LGUs) for their outstanding local governance programs during the Galing Pook Awards last September 1, 2015 at the SMX Convention Center. The annual nationwide search for the most outstanding and innovative local governance programs promotes positive results and impact, people’s participation and empowerment, innovation, transferability and sustainability and efficiency of program service delivery in the Philippines.

Dr. Eddie Dorotan, executive director of Galing Pook said, “we recognize the outstanding local governments and citizens who demonstrate program reforms and innovation, deliver public services with efficiency and respect for their constituents, and proclaim honesty and integrity through practice instead of words”.

The foundation acknowledged the outstanding contributions of  Siayan, Zamboanga Del Norte; Taytay, Rizal;  Barangay Amabao, Hinundayan, Southern Leyte; Albay; Barangay Graceville, San Jose Del Monte City, Bulacan; Ilocos Norte; Narra, Palawan; South Cotabato; and Valenzuela City.

The municipality of  Siayan, Zamboanga Del Norte provides livelihood opportunities through a chain of merchandise stores, called Pangkabuhayan Centers, which are owned and managed by the community in the 22 barangays in the municipality.  By empowering its people and providing the support they needed, the Siayan LGU has successfully implemented its social entrepreneurship program and is now well on its way to eradicating poverty in the locality.

The Local Garments Industry Institutionalization program of Taytay, Rizal encourages small retailers and garment makers to formalize and register their businesses.  This has given them access to small business incentives such as tax and minimum wage requirements, and priority status in obtaining business loans from banks. The local government of Taytay is continuously enhancing an already business friendly environment.

Barangay Ambao set up a coastal management program called Fish Sanctuary and Marine Reserve Area is offering livelihood alternatives to fisherfolk and their families.  This initiative contributed to the decrease in cyanide and dynamite fishing in Barangay Amabao, Hinundayan, Southern Leyte.

Team Albay Humanitarian Assistance Program, a community-driven quick response disaster-preparedness team has served in 18 humanitarian missions and has helped promote a culture of preparedness within the community.

Mapanagutang Pamamahala: A Model of Barangay Good Governance of the Barangay Graceville, San Jose Del Monte City, Bulacan established a six-point program to address livelihood, education, training, services, good governance and opportunities in the community.  Because of the program, there was a notable rise in volunteerism and residents’ participation in Barangay Graceville since its inception.

Ilocos Norte’s Sirib Express: Involving the Youth in Community Development seeks to harness the power of the youth in local development. The program provides assistance to students, out-of-school youth and those who have just joined the workforce.

The Philippine Cockatoo Conservation Program, a conservation program of Narra, Palawan transformed bird poachers into wildlife protection wardens. This strategy removed the immediate threat to the iconic but endangered cockatoo bird species.  At present, the conservation program has been replicated in other sites and it protects not only cockatoos but other flora and fauna in the site’s ecosystem.

The project of Valenzuela City – Education 360º Investment Program – involves the provision of adequate education facilities and elicited the active participation of parents in educating their children. It also included trainings for teachers and a nutrition or feeding program for 16,667 underweight elementary pupils. To ensure that learning and development starts and continues at home, the teaching skills of parents were built through parenting camps and school workshops.

Minahang Bayanihan: Small Scale Mining Program of South Cotabato is being recognized as the most innovative and one of the best practices in small scale mining regulation by various NGOs and LGUs all over the Philippines.  A host of issues have been addressed by Minahang Bayanihan, including environmental management, legalization of mining contracts, the employment of minors, and conflict resolution among tribal communities.

Likewise, the Provincial Government of South Cotabato entered into a formal agreement with the Mahintana Foundation, Inc. (MFI) to implement the Friendly Drugs: A PPP on Health Plus Project.  Part of the program included a pharmacy in the South Cotabato Provincial Hospital to help ensure a steady supply of safe, quality and affordable medicines for the indigent patients. So far it has served 132,345 patients since 2009.

According to Galing Pook Foundation, there were 153 applications for the 2015 awards. Municipalities are the most represented at 41%, followed by entries from cities at 30%, provinces at 25%, and barangays at 4%.  The applications were judged based on the following criteria: positive results and impact (30%), promotion of people’s participation and empowerment (30%), innovation (15%), transferability and sustainability (15%), and efficiency of program service delivery (10%).  The applications were screened by a 17-member National Selection Committee from different fields of expertise and experience, currently chaired by former Sarangani Governor Miguel Rene Dominguez.  The former governor is also Galing Pook’s first Jesse Robredo Leadership Awardee.

This year also marks the launching of the first Galing Pook Citizenship Award. The program recognizes the initiatives of individuals and civil society organizations who continuously seek to provide a wealth of insights and innovative solutions to produce value for community development and to promote citizen engagement in governance.

The Galing Pook Awards for Ten Outstanding Local Governance Programs and the Citizenship Award signify Galing Pook Foundation’s efforts to promote good governance and encourage citizen participation,” said Dr. Dorotan.

The 2015 Galing Pook Good Governance Fair is supported by the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG), Local Government Academy (LGA), Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), Department of Budget and Management (DBM), Union of Local Authorities of the Philippines (ULAP), League of Cities of the Philippines (LCP), League of Provinces of the Philippines (LPP), League of Municipalities of the Philippines (LMP), and Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA). This activity is also held in partnership with The World Bank, Government of Australia-Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Land Bank of the Philippines, Philippine Postal Corporation, Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (FES), LGSP‐LED/Canada, UNICEF, SEAOIL Foundation, Microsoft, CODE-NGO, Synergeia Foundation and the ABS‐CBN News Channel (ANC).

Winners of 1st Citizenship Award

Concerned Citizens of Abra for Good Governance, Balay Mindanaw and Tagum Cooperative Shine at the Galing Pook Awards Night

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This year Galing Pook recognizes the initiatives of individuals and civil society organizations that continuously seek to provide a wealth of insights and innovative solutions to produce value for community development and to promote citizen engagement. The Galing Pook Citizenship Award complements Galing Pook Foundation’s efforts to promote good governance and encourage meaningful citizen participation.

Dr. Eddie Dorotan, executive director of Galing Pook said, “this year, our focus is on citizen engagement. Citizens are at the heart of good governance, and governments are genuinely more effective when they listen to and work with citizens, to solve developmental challenges especially in local governance.” Galing Pook is behind the pioneering Galing Pook Awards for Outstanding Local Governance Program, the annual nationwide search for the ten most innovative and excellent local governance programs.

The Galing Pook 1st Citizenship Award winners exhibit exceptional participation in promoting the results- oriented exercising of citizenship to engage the government and make it actually work specially at the local levels. Balay Mindanaw Foundation, Inc. (BMFI) is among the civil society organizations that have been pursuing efforts to put an end to armed conflict through peace building and development programs. BMFI, believing in community-based, barangay focused approach, operates in more than 40 conflict-affected or disaster-affected communities throughout Mindanao and implements integrated and participatory programs at the barangay level. Because of BMFI’s efforts, communities and their leaders have shifted from thinking of peace as merely a security issue to peace as a development issue in which they have a role to play.

The community-based monitoring of government programs and services of the Concerned Citizens of Abra for Good Government, Inc. (CCAGG) has continued to undertake constructive engagement with government to secure information that is essential to monitoring public works projects and pushing the needed reforms. Among the programs that CCAGG monitored is the Conditional Cash Transfer Program (CCTP) or the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4P). Likewise, Tagum Cooperative through its educational and various community development, scholarships, nutrition and health programs, and a host of other supports services, including savings and insurance facilities.

The Awarding Ceremony was the culmination of the first ever Galing Pook Governance Fair dubbed as Mamamayan, Mamamayani!. The 3-day event, promoting good governance and citizenship, was made possible through the partnership of Galing Pook, the private sector, local and national government units and civil society organizations. “Our good governance campaign aims to instill in the hearts and minds of local chief executives, officers, and the general public the importance of shared responsibility and accountability toward achieving sustainable and inclusive development. Furthermore, it will inspire the local government units and its people to continuously think and create the best innovative reform agenda carrying out the values of transparency, accountability, participation and effective governance,” says Dr. Dorotan.

Partners and sponsors joining the governance fair believe that good governance is essential in fostering a conducive investment climate and creating much needed employment for the poor. Sustaining these practices is also seen to improve the delivery of basic social services to the public.

The 2015 Galing Pook Good Governance Fair is supported by the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG), Local Government Academy (LGA), Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), Department of Budget and Management (DBM), Union of Local Authorities of the Philippines (ULAP), League of Cities of the Philippines (LCP), League of Provinces of the Philippines (LPP), League of Municipalities of the Philippines (LMP), and Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA). This activity is also held in partnership with The World Bank, Government of Australia-Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Land Bank of the Philippines, Philippine Postal Corporation, Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (FES), LGSP‐LED/Canada, UNICEF, SEAOIL Foundation, Microsoft, CODE-NGO, Synergeia Foundatio, and the ABS‐CBN News Channel (ANC).