Saturday, April 11, 2026

SKILLS TRAINING FOR LOCAL DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION

 SKILLS TRAINING FOR LOCAL DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION

After all my years as a Management Information Systems (MIS) manager, I have concluded that there are always three components of a good system: hardware, software and manpower. I have also learned that hardware and software are relatively easy to procure — but finding good Information and Communications Technology (ICT) people is a different matter altogether.

One irony about good ICT people is that the good ones always get “pirated” — snatched away by better-paying firms, cities or even abroad — while the “not so good” people get left behind. That is actually one problem facing the MIS people of local government units (LGUs). It’s so difficult to recruit good ICT professionals. And if you do find them, their salary expectations are often so high that they may approach or even surpass those of department heads.

Then there is the problem of turnover again. As soon as they acquire good experience and build up a decent resume, they move to cities for better jobs or even go abroad and become overseas Filipino workers (OFWs). Because of this, it is very common to see MIS staff in LGUs who are “square pegs in round holes” — meaning they are not genuine ICT professionals, yet are hired into ICT roles. Many are put into positions not meant for them, and they in turn are asked to perform ICT-related tasks. The result? Chaos. The MIS department suffers.

This situation becomes even more acute when the demand for ICT skills rises — as it has been doing — because LGUs don’t only seek automation and digitization, they are reaching into more advanced innovations: blockchain, artificial intelligence, data governance, and so on. To paraphrase, at risk of sounding simplistic: the solution is to train more people in ICT skills so that no matter how fast turnover happens, the MIS departments can keep up with the demand.

From an economic perspective, it is a simple matter of supply and demand. As long as there is a better supply of well-trained ICT people, it matters less how high the demand goes. Recognizing that need, I teamed up with an ICT company and a TESDA-accredited training institute, to help train many ICT practitioners at the LGU level. The goal: to bolster the manpower base of LGUs, and thereby improve system quality and digital service delivery.

We will begin with courses in foundational courses, but depending on LGU needs, we can expand to other digital transformation modules, including cybersecurity. That is why I am helping the company Sciontech to enter into a joint venture with Clear Vocation Institute — to deliver training for LGU ICT staff and enlarge the pool of competent digital-public officers.

Why this matters

Some recent data underline why this push is timely:

  • The Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) is targeting an increase of some 8 million digital-jobs by 2028, which would bring the total employed in the digital economy to about 19.3 million Filipinos.

  • A World Bank report found that in the Philippines only 25.8% of youth and adults have the basic ICT skill of sending email with file attachments, and fewer than 1 in 10 can use spreadsheets with simple formulas or create electronic presentations.

  • The DICT-led Tech4ED program is building learning hubs in underserved communities: for example, San Carlos City in Negros Occidental established 17 Tech4ED centers since 2015, producing thousands of graduates in basic and intermediate digital skills.

  • The National ICT Month initiative notes that local leaders, ICT offices in LGUs and citizens need capacity-building in digital literacy, e-governance and advanced ICT — not just technologies but skilled users and operators. 


  • A legislative push is underway: for instance, Senate Bill 1943 proposed that each LGU must have an ICT officer with legitimate ICT credentials — which speaks right to the heart of the manpower shortage issue.

My comments and suggestions

  1. Training is necessary but not sufficient: It’s not just about giving people tickets for a course. We must ensure that the training is relevant, that the graduates are employed in real ICT roles in LGUs, and that they are integrated into teams which respect their value. Too often, training graduates still get stuck in mis-allocated jobs or end up leaving anyway.

  2. Competitive remuneration and career paths: If we train people only for them to exit for better offers, the cycle continues. LGUs need to devise retention strategies: clear career paths, market-competitive salaries (within LGU budgets), project-based incentives, recognition of ICT specialists, so they don’t feel they’re doing “extra” work without reward.

  3. Standardizing hiring and roles in LGUs: The absence of credible hiring standards means that ICT roles in LGUs are sometimes filled by generalists or non-ICT persons. The proposed SB 1943 is a good move. LGUs should adopt hiring frameworks: require ICT degree or certification, define job descriptions clearly, and ensure the incumbent is a true ICT professional.

  4. Modular skills frameworks: For LGUs, I suggest adopting a modular training framework (for example):

    • Governance & Ethics: transparency, accountability in ICT use, for LGU officials and barangay captains

    • Digital Transformation: e-governance, data systems, cybersecurity, for IT staff and planning officers

    • Community Engagement: participatory planning, feedback systems, for CSOs and youth leaders

    • Circular Design & Livelihood: linking digital tools to local livelihood initiatives (e-commerce, waste-to-resource) for local artisans and cooperatives
      The advantage: this allows LGUs to pick and choose modules according to their specific needs and local context.

  5. Partnerships matter: The public-private-academia partnership is key. The DICT + ILO + Japan collaboration for the first Digital Transformation Centre in Pampanga is a good example. LGUs should be encouraged to partner with accredited training providers — TESDA schools, ICT companies, civil service bodies — to scale skills training locally.

  6. Measure outcomes: Skills training must produce measurable outcomes: number of trained ICT officers in LGUs, reduction in turnover, improved system uptime, lower manual processes, faster permit processing, etc. If the MIS department of an LGU still cannot fill roles or the staff keeps leaving after six months, we have to re-examine the model.

  7. Leverage the national momentum: We are already seeing national-level efforts: the Philippine-Singapore tie-up to improve the digital leadership competencies of 10,000 civil servants. LGUs should tap into such programs, not reinvent the wheel.

In short: if LGUs are serious about digital transformation (and they should be), then focusing on hardware and software alone is insufficient. As I’ve observed over decades: you can buy the latest server or license the smartest software, but if your manpower is not trained, stable and professional, you will have systems that don’t deliver. Training large numbers of competent ICT people in the LGU environment is not optional — it is foundational.

If nothing else, the data show we cannot afford to lag in digital skills. The Philippines has long been behind in basic ICT skills among youth and adults. Unless we invest now in building a resilient, local ICT manpower base — for our cities, municipalities, barangays — we risk having “digital systems” that are really just digital versions of manual chaos.

So yes: let’s train more, train better, make roles real, keep talent local — and then the hardware, software and manpower will actually work in harmony.

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

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/04-12-2026


Friday, April 10, 2026

RECLAMATION DISGUISED AS FLOOD CONTROL PROJECT

RECLAMATION DISGUISED AS FLOOD CONTROL PROJECT

Let’s be frank: something smells fishy in our flood-control machinery. We’re told a grand “flood control” project is underway along the shores of Laguna de Bay. But when the protective veil is lifted, the reality appears to be land reclamation—benefitting private interests more than the public, and threatening the environment more than protecting it.

According to the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), what has been presented as a flood-control initiative along the C6 Road in Laguna de Bay is actually reclamation within the lake. Satellite imagery reportedly reveals new land-fill activity. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the local regulator Laguna Lake Development Authority (LLDA) confirmed that no reclamation permits have been issued since April 2025—yet construction continues. The DENR’s Undersecretary Carlos Primo David even flagged the misrepresentation, warning the so-called flood control project could worsen flooding in lakeside communities.

At first glance this reads like yet another “ghost project” scandal—which we’ve seen before. But it’s even more insidious: rather than a ghost (non-existent) project, this is a “false” project where the title given (“flood control”) masks a completely different reality (real estate reclamation). The proponents may claim they’re protecting us from floods—but in truth, they may be building land for future sale. That’s a double-win for private hands: get funding for “public infrastructure,” reclaim land, then monetize it. Meanwhile, the environment and the public pay the price.

Victims #1: The environment
Every square meters of lake-bed or shallow water reclaimed is lost to nature. The lake is more than a body of water: it performs ecosystem services, houses fisheries, provides a cooling and irrigation source, and offers recreation. The LLDA lists lakeshore fisheries (about 13,000 fishermen rely on Laguna de Bay, producing about 80,000–90,000 metric tons of fish per year) as one of the lake’s primary uses. Reclamation threatens that. The lake has also long served as a flood-detention basin—a critical role under stress as siltation, development and changing rainfall patterns shrink its capacity to absorb runoff. Indeed one technical study shows that the lake’s capacity has dropped, making what used to be floods every 5–7 years now happening annually.

Victims #2: The lakeside communities
If the project is truly flood-control, then heavy rain and runoff should lessen in affected towns. But if instead it is reclamation that reduces the lake’s free volume, we’re inviting disaster: flood‐waters have less place to go and are more likely to inundate shallow areas—or persist for longer. According to a 2018 JICA study on the basin, when water levels exceed the 12 meter datum, inundation depths in residential areas can reach 1.5 to 2 meters, lasting months in some cases. The communities—fisherfolk, barangay households, small businesses—stand to lose first.

Why this matters
We are not dumpster-diving for gossip. This is about governance and accountability. The mis-labelling of infrastructure projects erodes transparency. When flood-control budgets are used for land-grab reclamation, the public cannot trust what is being done in its name. And the stakes are high: one report shows that 15 contractors have cornered about ₱100 billion worth of “flood control” contracts since 2022. Moreover, the science is clear: the catchment area of Laguna de Bay is about 4,522 km² with the lake itself about 871 km² and average depth a mere 2.8 m. Each reclamation hectare chips away at that containment and storage capacity, making floods worse, not better.

Questions we should demand answers to

  • Who is behind this “flood control” project—what private interests, what government-connected companies?

  • What is the detailed scope and design of the project: how much area is being reclaimed, what permits were submitted (if any) and who signed them?

  • Has there been a proper Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) or hydrologic modelling to show the flood‐risk before/after the project?

  • Are lakeside communities informed, consulted, compensated if at all? Fisherfolk made to move? Is restoration of ecology in the plan?

  • Finally, do we have independent monitoring of the lake’s water levels, siltation trends, flooding incidents—and is that data made public?

Suggestions for action
The following modular response can be pursued by LGUs (local government units), civil society organizations (CSOs), watchdog groups and the public:

  • Transparency Audit: Review flood-control budgets, procurement records, land and fill permits, and overlay with satellite imagery (Google Earth, Sentinel) to detect where actual land filling is happening.

  • Community Briefings: Lakeshore barangays must be educated on their rights, the real risks, and what to watch out for (e.g., loss of shoreline, unexpected flooding after the project).

  • Legal Mobilization: File complaints with LLDA/DENR, ask for investigations of permit irregularities, challenge projects that lack proper EIA, invoke citizen suit provisions under Philippine environmental law.

  • Policy Advocacy: Push for stronger oversight of “flood control” projects—not just approving engineering drawings—but ensuring the project is scientifically sound, ecologically safe, socially just. Congress and oversight committees need to treat these like infrastructure + environment. For example, include in future budgets specific funding for lake dredging, siltation removal, and restoration rather than reclamation disguised as flood control.

    The agenda may be clear: sell the idea of flood-control, get the money, reclaim the land, monetize it — all while the lake shrinks, the flood threat grows, and the poor fishers and barangays bear the cost. But the twist is this: once more honest actors—within government, CSOs, media—are inspecting the ledger and the aerial imagery, we may be entering a phase where these practices are exposed. The question is: will we allow them to continue unchecked, or will we hold the system accountable? The lake, the communities and the future will judge.

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

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/04-11-2026


Thursday, April 09, 2026

WHY THE LONG WAIT IN PUBLIC HOSPITALS?

WHY THE LONG WAIT IN PUBLIC HOSPITALS?

I watched a video about patients waiting to be admitted to a public hospital. It was about 3:00 a.m., and outside the hospital people lay on the sidewalks, already asleep while they waited for admission. How could something like that happen in our country?

I know the feeling— months ago, I found myself in the emergency room of a private hospital, waiting hours before a bed became available. If that’s the experience in a private hospital, how much worse must it be in a public one?

The Root of the Problem

We often hear: “long waiting times in public hospitals—because there aren’t enough beds.” And yes, beds are part of the issue. But I’m convinced the problem runs deeper: the lack of rooms. You can buy beds. But you cannot magically create hospital wings without spaces, infrastructure or rooms. So when hospitals say they have long queues, it may not just be beds—they may simply have nowhere to put new patients.

In fact, the Department of Health (DOH) has acknowledged the bed shortage: the average in the Philippines is about 0.5 beds per 1,000 people—far below the targeted 1.5 per 1,000. A think-tank study found 27 provinces with less than 0.5 beds per 1,000 people.

So yes, we need more beds—but more fundamentally, we need more rooms, wings, facilities to place those beds. That requires budget allocation, construction, design, planning.

Why Hasn’t the Government Responded More Vigorously?

Here’s where I ask the tough questions.

  1. Budget trade-offs: Why hasn’t more budget gone into hospital room construction? There’s a recent news item: Risa Hontiveros urged that funds earmarked for flood-control projects be redirected to hospital beds and infrastructure, because public hospitals reportedly only have 28,153 beds though the requirement is 118,528. If this is true—why is the choice between flood control and health infrastructure even one of debate? We should be doing both—but perhaps the balance has skewed.

  2. Structural inertia: Building classrooms seems almost simpler than building hospital rooms. Prefabricated materials, modular hospitals—they’re feasible. Yet why are so many hospitals still operating beyond capacity? The walk-in culture, lack of triage, manual systems also play a role.

  3. Standards and accountability: I understand policies exist—there are supposed standards for beds per population and rooms. But what’s the timeline? If the DOH is targeting reducing ER wait times (12–24 hours) to under 4 hours, this implies large structural reform ahead. Shouldn’t the government set a concrete deadline—“By year X we will have built Y rooms/hospital wings”? Without deadlines, we must ask: where is the political will?

  4. Resource allocation vs need: In a country prone to disasters, flooding, and climate shocks, we recognise the importance of flood-control projects. But is there proportionality in how we allocate funds between environment/infrastructure and health infrastructure? Because what’s the use of flood control if health systems collapse under strain?

What Can We Suggest?

Here are a few ideas:

  • Modular hospital wings: Prefabricated or modular hospital units (rooms + beds) can be erected relatively quickly. This could be a short-term bridge while permanent structures are built.

  • Decentralize more care: If tertiary public hospitals are overwhelmed, strengthen barangay health units, satellite clinics, even tele-medicine for non-critical cases—so fewer people arrive at the ER needing admission.

  • Referral systems and triage: Improve how patients are managed—minor ailments should not clog emergency rooms. Encourage earlier care so that only those truly needing beds go to hospitals.

  • Clear budget timelines: The DOH, Congress, and local governments should commit to realistic but firm milestones for increasing hospital room and bed capacity—e.g., “We will build X new rooms by 2027.”

  • Transparency and tracking: Let us know how many rooms are added, where, which hospitals. Monitoring will build public pressure and accountability.

When I saw those people sleeping on the sidewalks at 3 a.m., I saw more than waiting—they were victims of a system stretched beyond its capacity. At some point, compassion and infrastructure must meet. Waiting hours (or days) for admission isn’t just an inconvenience—it’s a health risk, dignity lost, potential life cut short.

So yes—why the long wait? Because too many of our public hospitals are operating like bottlenecks in a pipeline that needs to be widened. Because beds alone are not enough when rooms are missing. Because the infrastructure investment hasn’t kept pace with our population, our disease burdens, our expectations.

And as citizens, we deserve better. We should ask not only for more beds—but for more rooms, more systems, and a more responsive healthcare infrastructure. We should expect a government that sees emergency rooms and public hospitals not as stop-gaps but as worthy pillars of a mature system.

Because health isn’t optional—it’s foundational. And when we build for health, we build for dignity, for justice, for a country where no one sleeps on a sidewalk waiting for care.

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

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877292/04-10-2026


Wednesday, April 08, 2026

FIGHTING POVERTY WITH BLOCKCHAIN TECHNOLOGY

 FIGHTING POVERTY WITH BLOCKCHAIN TECHNOLOGY

Poverty. The word itself carries a heavy weight. And yet, in the world of policymaking it’s often treated as a single problem—when in fact, it isn’t. Too many government officials speak of “poverty alleviation” and “poverty reduction” as though they are interchangeable. They’re not. If we want to unlock real change, we need to treat them as two distinct challenges—with distinct solutions. And here’s where digital innovation, specifically Blockchain technology, is beginning to offer something radically different.

Alleviation vs. Reduction: Not the Same Thing
Poverty alleviation is about easing the burden of poverty—making life a little less hard today for people who are struggling. It means services, support systems, safety-nets. Poverty reduction, on the other hand, is about giving people the means to climb above the poverty line—sustainable income, opportunity, change in status. Two databases, I suggest, should be built: one to map who needs immediate alleviation, the other to identify who is capable of reduction—who can move up, if given the right tools.

Why separate? Because the metrics differ, the interventions differ, the outcomes differ. But both need the same starting point: baseline data—clean, reliable, targeted. And that’s where blockchain enters the conversation.

The Promise of Blockchain
Blockchain offers a secure, transparent ledger: a way of recording data that cannot be easily manipulated, duplicated or hidden. For governments or aid agencies trying to figure out who needs help, what type of help, how much, it is game-changing.

Here are some of the ways blockchain is already being used:

  • Economic identity for the unbanked. Over 2.5 billion people globally lack access to formal banking. Blockchain enables digital identities and wallets even for those outside the banking system.

  • Transparent aid distribution. When aid flows go through blockchain‐enabled systems, it becomes far harder for corruption, leakages or duplication to creep in. For example, the World Food Programme’s “Building Blocks” project has processed over US$550 million of cash-based transfers via blockchain, saved millions in bank fees, and prevented overlap of assistance programmes. 

  • Microfinance, peer-to-peer lending. By removing expensive intermediaries, blockchain platforms help small-entrepreneurs and farmers who were previously excluded.

  • Land and asset ownership. Blockchain can record property rights in a tamper-proof way—critical in places where informal tenure and displacement are the norm.

  • Fair-trade and supply-chain transparency. Farmers and artisans can use blockchain to prove where their product came from, get fair compensation, and access new markets. The enterprise BanQu is a teeming example in this space.

Real-World Success Stories
Consider BanQu: men and women in extreme poverty, unbanked, without credit history, now get an “economic passport” via blockchain. They prove they exist, they collect transparent payments, and they begin to enter formal supply chains.

Or take Building Blocks by WFP: in Jordan, Bangladesh and Ukraine this system allowed refugees and needy households to access cash-based assistance via blockchain wallets, coordinating support from multiple agencies and significantly reducing duplication and cost. 

These are not theoretical. They are working models.

Questions and Suggestions for the Philippines
If we are serious about building a Philippines that tackles both alleviation and reduction of poverty, here are some thoughts:

  • Do we have reliable baseline data today? If not, build the two distinct databases mentioned above—one for immediate support (alleviation), one for longer-term uplift (reduction).

  • Could blockchain be integrated into those databases so that duplications of aid are removed, transparency is increased, and trust is built between citizens and institutions?

  • How can we ensure the unbanked in remote provinces or informal settlements gain “economic identity” so they can participate in micro-finance, savings systems or wage incomes?

  • What legislation, regulatory frameworks and capacity-building must be put in place so that blockchain platforms are secure, inclusive (especially of women and marginalised groups), and cheap enough not to exclude the neediest?

  • Finally: how do we move from pilot schemes to national scale—so that blockchain becomes not just an experiment but part of the infrastructure of our social welfare system?

Caveats and Realism
Blockchain is not a magic wand. As one analysis pointed out: while the technology offers new opportunities, it is sometimes over‐hyped and unsuited if implemented without attention to local context, infrastructure, digital literacy and cost-effectiveness. 

It must complement—not replace—good policy, sound institutions, investment in education and healthcare. Poverty reduction is structural. Technology can be an enabler but not a saviour.


The fight against poverty demands both compassion and innovation. In the Philippines, we cannot remain content simply to maintain safety nets (alleviation). We must aim for uplift (reduction). Blockchain offers one potent tool for the task: securing data, cutting waste, giving identity, opening access.

But at the end of the day: the question will be not just whether we can deploy technology—but whether we deploy it wisely, inclusively, and as part of a broader strategy to build human dignity, opportunity and national renewal.

If we dare that ambition, then the cries from the margins will begin to be met not with pity—but with power.

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

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/04-09-2026


Philippines Best of Blogs Link With Us - Web Directory OnlineWide Web Directory