Friday, April 17, 2026

COOPERATIVE OWNED COMMUNITY PHARMACIES

 COOPERATIVE OWNED COMMUNITY PHARMACIES

Can a small cooperative-owned community pharmacy compete with a giant drugstore chain? My answer is a resounding yes—and not just as a matter of optimism, but of economic logic and social vision.

For one, cooperatives already have a built-in customer base: their members. That’s an advantage no big corporation can simply buy. A cooperative pharmacy starts with trust—an asset that’s priceless in a sector where people’s health and lives are on the line. Members already have a reason to support their own cooperative, and in return, the cooperative has a duty to provide affordable, safe, and ethical access to medicines.

But here’s another reason: a cooperative can do everything a corporation can do. It can buy, sell, hire, manage, and expand. The only limits are compliance and capital. Yet, if we think collectively, the combined financial strength of over 16,000 registered cooperatives in the Philippines could easily surpass that of the biggest drugstore chain in the country. Imagine if even a fraction of these cooperatives each set up one community pharmacy—what a revolution in health access that would be.

The Legal and Practical Framework

Let’s get the basics right. To operate a cooperative pharmacy in the Philippines, the cooperative must secure a License to Operate (LTO) from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), employ a PRC-licensed pharmacist, register with the Cooperative Development Authority (CDA), and obtain permits from the Local Government Unit (LGU).

In short, a cooperative pharmacy must play by the same rules as a commercial one—but that’s not a disadvantage. Compliance ensures safety and trust. In fact, cooperative pharmacies already exist in small but inspiring numbers:

  • Sta. Monica of Pangasinan Multi-Purpose Cooperative, which runs a pharmacy for members’ health needs;

  • San Dionisio Credit Cooperative (SDCC) in Parañaque, which integrates pharmacy services with insurance and wellness programs;

  • Tagum Cooperative in Davao del Norte, whose community pharmacy supports both members and residents; and

  • Baguio-Benguet Community Credit Cooperative, which combines pharmacy access with preventive health care.

These examples prove the model works. What’s lacking is scale—and public awareness.

Global Lessons, Local Application

We don’t need to reinvent the wheel. Countries like Italy, Spain, Finland, and India have long supported cooperative-owned pharmacies.
In Italy, municipal and consumer cooperatives operate pharmacies to stabilize medicine prices.
In Spain, pharmacist cooperatives like Cofares ensure fair pricing and distribution.
In Finland, community pharmacies are often run by cooperative networks to ensure access even in rural areas.
And in India, states like Kerala and Tamil Nadu promote cooperative drug stores that sell affordable generics—models that blend community ownership with professional standards.

So why not in the Philippines? Why can’t our cooperatives—especially those already involved in agriculture, transport, and credit—add healthcare and pharmaceuticals to their portfolios? If our cooperatives can sell rice, fertilizers, or fuel, why not medicine?

The Digital Edge

Today’s cooperatives are no longer limited to physical stores. New technologies—blockchain for traceability, artificial intelligence for inventory management, and e-commerce for distribution—can make cooperative pharmacies more efficient and transparent. Blockchain, for instance, can help track medicine sources and prevent counterfeiting. Telepharmacy and mobile pharmacy units can extend services to remote barangays where commercial chains never reach.

There’s also room for innovation in packaging, recycling, and cooperative insurance pooling. Imagine a digital cooperative pharmacy network that links small rural branches to urban suppliers under one secure digital ledger. That would not only lower costs but ensure accountability.

Empowering Pharmacists and Communities

A common question arises: can customers own a pharmacy even if they’re not pharmacists? The answer is yes—through a cooperative model. Ownership lies with members, but licensed pharmacists must still handle the professional and regulatory aspects. This division of roles ensures that business decisions remain democratic while healthcare standards remain professional.

For Filipino pharmacists, this opens new opportunities. Instead of working solely for corporate chains, they can work with their communities—earning fair wages, gaining autonomy, and contributing directly to public health.

A Call to Cooperatives

The beauty of the cooperative model is that it aligns business with public good. A cooperative-owned community pharmacy is not just a store; it’s a statement—that access to medicine should not be a privilege, and that profits should serve people, not the other way around.

If even 10% of our 16,000 cooperatives open pharmacies, we could instantly have over 1,600 community-owned health access points across the country. Add telepharmacy and e-commerce, and no barangay would ever be too far from essential medicines again.

Perhaps what’s new is not the idea itself, but the realization that it’s time to act on it. The infrastructure is there. The people are there. The need is urgent.

As for me, I am ready to help any cooperative willing to take this bold step—because good health should never be monopolized, and community empowerment begins when people take control of their own well-being.

Affordable medicine, ethical access, and community ownership—these are not just dreams. They are possibilities waiting for cooperatives to turn them into reality.

Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/04-18-2026


Thursday, April 16, 2026

A CAMPAIGN FOR CHEMICAL FREE FOOD WINS IN NEW ZEALAND

A CAMPAIGN FOR CHEMICAL FREE FOOD WINS IN NEW ZEALAND

Just when the fight for clean food and healthy soil seemed like a losing battle — now comes this victory. The win in New Zealand for food sovereignty is real, and it has lessons for us here in the Philippines.

The New Zealand Moment

In New Zealand, the government agency New Zealand Food Safety (operating under Ministry for Primary Industries, MPI) had proposed to dramatically raise the maximum residue level (MRL) of herbicides in staple cereals – from the default of 0.1 mg/kg up to 10 mg/kg for wheat, barley and oats, and 6 mg/kg for peas. Many consumer-environment-farm advocates said NO WAY. Over 3,100 public submissions poured in. The result: the herbicide entry in the MRL notice remained unchanged. 

This is a powerful moment for grassroots advocacy and food sovereignty. The decision to maintain low herbicide residue limits (and at least to keep the entry unchanged while consultation is ongoing) reflects a major win for public health, soil protection, and democratic engagement.

What this victory represents

  • Community-led resistance: The fact that more than 3,100 submissions were lodged shows that when everyday people, farmers, activists and consumers join together, policy can shift.

  • Precautionary principle upheld: By rejecting the proposal to increase chemical residues by up to 100‐fold, the decision signals that long-term health and ecological integrity matter more than short-term convenience.

  • Momentum for clean food systems: This sets a precedent. If New Zealand can hold the line, other countries may follow.

So… could we duplicate that win here in the Philippines?

Yes — and I believe we must try. Here are the questions we need to ask ourselves:

  • Is there hope that this could happen here? Yes — hope exists when people speak out.

  • Could our government here listen if enough people speak out? It’s possible. The New Zealand example shows that public submissions work.

  • Or will we just give up, thinking: “We are not like the New Zealanders; we can’t do what they have done”? That would be a mistake. We are able to organize, engage, petition, and raise public awareness.

  • Is the Philippine government even aware of the need to set low herbicide limits? Probably not fully, or at least it doesn’t appear to be a major public policy fight yet.

What should we watch and do?

Given our interest in circular design, community restoration and chemical-free systems, here are strategic implications:

  • Barangay-level food safety modules: Local government units and farmers’ groups should be educated on chemical-free practices and soil health.

  • Policy-mapping for agrochemical regulation: Compare Philippine thresholds for herbicides and other agrichemicals with the New Zealand precedent. Ask: do we have default limits? Are they being reviewed?

  • Community petition frameworks: Use petitions, public submissions, social media, local government resolutions. The New Zealand case shows the power of public voice.

Caveats & realities

  • We should be cautious about presenting the New Zealand story as already done. The consultation was concluded with over 3,100 submissions; but the final decision on herbicide MRLs remains under consideration.

  • The proposed increase in New Zealand was controversial because many believe the testing regime was weak, and that the very practice of pre-harvest desiccation (spraying herbicide to dry crops before harvest) is questionable. 

  • The Philippines’ context is different: climate, cropping systems, trade-markets, regulatory capacity all differ. We must adapt, not just copy.

My take and suggestions

I strongly suggest that we in the Philippines begin a campaign for “herbicide-tight” food production, rooted in the following points:

  1. Raise awareness: Many consumers may not know what herbicides are nor what residue limits mean. Education matters.

  2. Mobilize a coalition: Farmers practicing regenerative agriculture, civil society, consumer groups, health advocates can join forces.

  3. Engage LGUs: Local governments, barangays, provinces can pass resolutions or local ordinances favoring low-chemical or chemical-free grains and legumes.

  4. Use public consultation processes: Insist that any change to pesticide/chemical/residue regulation must go through open consultation with submissions.

  5. Benchmark: Use New Zealand’s current default of 0.1 mg/kg for certain cereals as a reference. Ask: what is our current limit in the Philippines? Is it being reviewed?

  6. Push for transparency: Make sure that residue surveys, testing of food, regulatory decisions are public. One of the objections in New Zealand was lack of updated testing. 

Final thought

This New Zealand “small win” is more than symbolic. It is a beacon for those of us in the Philippines who believe in food sovereignty, healthy soil, dignified farming systems. We should not assume “we are not like New Zealand”; rather, we should learn from it, adapt it, and apply it. If 3,100+ voices in New Zealand made a difference, imagine what a coalition of thousands in the Philippines could achieve.

Let us treat this as our invitation to action – to speak, mobilize, petition, collaborate. The government can listen – if enough of us make our voices clear. And in doing so, we honor the farmers, the soil, and the future of Philippine food.

Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/04-17-2026


Wednesday, April 15, 2026

HOW TO USE BLOCKCHAIN FOR EDUCATION

 HOW TO USE BLOCKCHAIN FOR EDUCATION

When we hear the word blockchain, most of us immediately think of cryptocurrency, Bitcoin, or online scams. But blockchain, at its core, is not about money—it’s about trust. It’s a technology that allows data to be stored securely, shared transparently, and verified without manipulation. And that, my friends, is exactly what our education system needs right now.

If corruption, inefficiency, and forgery are the chronic diseases of our bureaucracy, then blockchain may very well be the cure. Imagine if every student’s record, diploma, scholarship, and even attendance were recorded in a tamper-proof digital ledger. No more fake diplomas, no more “lost” records, and no more funding leakages.

Let’s start with the basics. Blockchain is a decentralized database—meaning it isn’t owned or controlled by any single entity. Each record (or “block”) is connected to the next in a chain, making it virtually impossible to alter without leaving a trace. Every participant in the network has a copy, ensuring transparency and accountability.

Now, how can this technology be applied to our schools, universities, and education agencies? Here’s a practical breakdown.


1. Secure Academic Records

Diplomas, transcripts, and certificates can be stored permanently on blockchain ledgers. This prevents forgery and ensures lifelong access to one’s academic history. Platforms like Blockcerts already allow digital diplomas that employers can verify instantly.


Why can’t we have the same system here? The Department of Education (DepEd) or CHED could build a permissioned blockchain, accessible to schools and government offices. That would mean no more missing Form 137s or unverified transcripts—a huge relief to students and registrars alike.


2. Credential Portability & Micro-Certification

Not all learning happens inside the classroom. Farm schools, trade workshops, and barangay training centers produce skilled people who rarely get official recognition. Through blockchain-based micro-credentials or digital badges, these informal learning experiences can be formally validated.
Imagine scanning a QR code on your ID card and instantly showing verifiable skills—whether it’s welding, organic farming, or caregiving. This could transform the job market, making learning truly lifelong and inclusive.


3. Transparent Funding & Scholarship Tracking

This one is close to my heart. Every year, billions are allocated to scholarships, grants, and school improvement projects. Yet, much of it never reaches its intended beneficiaries. Through smart contracts—self-executing agreements built on blockchain—we could ensure that funds are automatically released only when certain conditions are met.
For instance, when a student meets attendance requirements, tuition payments could be triggered instantly and recorded publicly. No middlemen, no ghost scholars. The DICT and civic tech organizations could easily pilot this system with LGUs.


4. Decentralized Learning Records

In an archipelagic country like ours, many learners are displaced—by poverty, disasters, or migration. Blockchain can help them carry their learning histories wherever they go. A blockchain “learning wallet” could store modules, grades, or credentials that can be accessed even without a physical school.
This would make Alternative Learning Systems (ALS) and community-based education more sustainable and equitable.


5. Teacher Licensing & Performance Logs

Teachers are the backbone of our education system, but tracking their professional growth is often messy and politicized. If licenses, evaluations, and training histories were logged on blockchain, transparency would be guaranteed. Promotions would be based on merit, not patronage. DepEd and LGUs could link this to their Human Resource Information Systems to ensure integrity in hiring and deployment.


6. Community-Based Education Governance

What if barangay residents could vote—securely and transparently—on local education projects or curriculum adjustments? With a blockchain-based voting platform, we could achieve participatory governance without fear of manipulation.
Schools could use it for decision-making, grievance handling, or even budget consultations. A permissioned ledger accessible through mobile phones would make this practical even in remote areas.


7. Intellectual Property Protection

Teachers, researchers, and indigenous communities often lose credit for their creative works and traditional knowledge. Blockchain timestamps can certify ownership of teaching materials or cultural research, ensuring proper recognition and benefit-sharing.


So, where do we begin? We don’t have to reinvent the wheel. Pilot projects can start small—perhaps one state university, one city scholarship office, or one barangay school board. The technology already exists; what we need is the political will to use it.

Of course, implementing blockchain requires compliance with the Data Privacy Act (RA 10173) and E-Commerce Act (RA 8792), ensuring that students’ personal data is secure and transactions are legally valid. But these are manageable challenges compared to the potential benefits.

As we digitize our government systems under the e-Governance Act of 2023, education should be at the forefront. Transparency, accountability, and inclusivity—these are not just buzzwords; they are promises that blockchain can help fulfill.

The real question is: Will our education leaders take the first step?

After all, in an era when fake diplomas and ghost students still exist, maybe it’s time we let the blockchain tell the truth.

Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/04-16-2026


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