Tuesday, June 09, 2026

FRAUD IN DECLARING ALIENABLE AND DISPOSABLE LANDS

FRAUD IN DECLARING ALIENABLE AND DISPOSABLE LANDS

Here we go again—another glaring example of how our public lands system can become a playground for fraud and exploitation. The case in Calaca, Batangas stands out not just for its brazenness, but for what it reveals about systemic weakness.

According to The Manila Times, a sting operation uncovered the acting head of the local Community Environment and Natural Resources Office (CENRO) in Calaca facilitating the conversion of forestlands into “alienable and disposable” (A&D) lands—areas that the State releases for private ownership. What makes this especially chilling is that the official “did it all by himself,” without anyone apparently checking, approving, or even noticing. Is that really how the system works?

The Legal and Factual Skeleton

Under our Constitution and environmental laws:

  • All lands of the public domain belong to the State unless classified otherwise (the Regalian Doctrine).

  • Only lands classified as agricultural may be made A&D.

  • The process requires surveys, maps, and approval by the Secretary of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR). Forest and timber lands are inalienable unless properly reclassified.

In Calaca’s case, forestland was allegedly reclassified as A&D without due process. The Manila Times aptly called it an “environmental time bomb,” because forests act as natural buffers against floods, landslides, and strong winds. Once they’re gone or converted, the risks multiply.

Why This Matters

I once visited a friend in Laguna who lived in a subdivision built within what used to be a forest. I asked myself: “How did this happen?” The implication is clear—Calaca is not an isolated case. Illegal A&D conversion could be quietly happening in other towns, disguised as legitimate development.

If one CENRO official can pull this off alone, imagine the scale if this pattern is repeated nationwide. This is not just about illegal logging anymore—it’s about illegal conversion of forest lands. This could be the new frontier of environmental degradation.

According to the National Mapping and Resource Information Authority (NAMRIA), around 76% of our lands were classified as forestlands as of 1991, with only 24% declared A&D. If vast areas are being converted without proper checks, we risk losing the very forests that shield us from climate disasters.

When a single certification can override national policy, something is seriously wrong. This suggests not just neglect, but possible collusion between CENRO officials and local government units (LGUs).

Some Questions Worth Asking

  • Why was the illegal reclassification in Calaca not detected earlier?

  • How many other municipalities have quietly converted forestlands into A&D without oversight?

  • Are there overlaps—or worse, collusion—between DENR and LGU officials?

  • Given the typhoons and floods we suffer yearly, how many disasters stem from diminished forest cover?

  • Can we correlate A&D conversions with areas prone to flooding and landslides?

What Can Be Done

1. Full Audit: The DENR and the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) should jointly audit all A&D declarations from the past decade, focusing on upland or forest-adjacent areas.

2. Transparency: Land classification maps and CENRO certifications should be made publicly accessible. Hidden records are fertile ground for fraud.

3. Stronger Oversight: Inter-agency coordination must be institutionalized. The Land Management Bureau, LGUs, and anti-corruption agencies should cross-check all reclassifications.

4. Link Land Conversion to Disaster Risk: Any approval of A&D conversion must include an environmental and hazard assessment. If forests are cut down for housing or logging, communities downstream will pay the price.

5. Legal Accountability: Exposés like Calaca must lead to prosecution and conviction—not just administrative slap-on-the-wrist penalties. Malaya recently reported the conviction of a Calaca land inspector for graft and estafa, but not necessarily the official who approved the fraudulent conversion. That gap must be closed.

We must stop treating forest protection, land management, and disaster risk as separate issues—they are deeply interconnected. One fraudulent declaration can create a subdivision where a forest should stand, leading to deforestation, biodiversity loss, and catastrophic flooding.

We should, as the saying goes, nip this in the bud. Because if we let fraudulent A&D conversions grow unchecked, we may soon face an environmental crisis as costly—and as ghostly—as those infamous flood-control projects that never worked.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/06-10-2026


Monday, June 08, 2026

EVACUATION CENTERS CAN FUNCTION AS HOMELESS SHELTERS

EVACUATION CENTERS CAN FUNCTION AS HOMELESS SHELTERS

I’m aware that some government agencies might raise eyebrows at this proposal—perhaps because of “turf issues,” and you know what I mean. But may I humbly ask these agencies to keep an open mind and give this idea a fair chance? It’s simple: many evacuation centers lie idle between disasters. Why not let them serve a dual purpose as homeless shelters during “peacetime”?

Often, evacuation centers are built and then sit empty for long stretches—unused resources in our vulnerable nation. Meanwhile, homelessness persists. According to recent estimates, there are around 4.5 million homeless people in the Philippines, with as many as two-thirds of them in Metro Manila. Homelessness and disaster exposure go hand in hand—but we treat our infrastructure for each as completely separate. That ends up being inefficient.

Here’s how it could work: the same facility that stands ready for typhoons, floods, or fires can also serve as a shelter for individuals or families who have no place to stay overnight—on one condition: no permanent residents. Like in many countries, these shelters would allow only overnight or short-stay accommodation: sleep, a shower, a meal, maybe medical assistance. Come morning, they’d re-set for the next use—or be ready again for a disaster.

Why this safeguard matters: it means the facility remains available as an evacuation center at a moment’s notice. It prevents “mission creep” into a long-term hostel, which could block its primary purpose when calamity strikes.


Why this idea makes sense

  • Evacuation centers and homeless shelters address similar needs—temporary accommodation, sanitation, food, safety.

  • Many local government units (LGUs) already have halls, gyms, or school complexes designated as evacuation spots. With modest retrofitting (partitions, showers, gender-sensitive bathrooms, storage), these could serve both roles.

  • It’s cost-effective. Instead of building separate shelters for the homeless and separate disaster centers, we optimize the infrastructure we already have.

  • Disaster resilience meets social justice. Homelessness and disaster vulnerability often overlap, people with no homes are more exposed when disasters hit. Using the same venue addresses both.


What needs to be in place

For this to work smoothly:

  1. Clear policy & mandate: LGUs must amend ordinances to allow dual use of evacuation centers as homeless shelters in non-disaster periods. The recently signed Republic Act No. 12076 mandates evacuation centers in every city/municipality with minimum standards for location and design. A policy update should reflect the dual-use concept.

  2. Designated management model: The same center must have protocols: e.g., at 6 p.m. it accepts shelter guests; at 6 a.m. all guests leave and it’s prepped for evacuation use. Social-welfare personnel manage it when used for homelessness; disaster-risk staff take over when a calamity hits.

  3. No long-term occupants: This rule prevents the facility from becoming a residence of last resort or chronic relief housing. It remains flexible and ready.

  4. Infrastructure fit for both uses: Showers, toilets for men/women, partitions for privacy, safe WASH (water, sanitation, hygiene) facilities, storage space, and durable design to meet evacuation standards (safe from hazards, reachable, not isolated).

  5. Referrals and services: For the homeless guests, there should be linkage to social services, skills programs, reintegration pathways—not just a bed for the night. For evacuees, the full disaster-response chain must activate.

  6. Exit strategy: Overnight stay should be a steppingstone, not an endpoint. The system must help guests move toward longer-term housing, employment or reintegration.


Will agencies oppose it? Probably. But let’s make a reasoned ask

Some wariness is understandable: disaster-response agencies may think using evacuation centers for non-disaster purposes reduces readiness. Social-welfare agencies may feel homeless shelters should be separate. But: the dual-use model doesn’t weaken readiness—it enhances it by keeping the facility maintained, populated, and visible year-round. An empty building deteriorates; a used building stays serviceable.

To the agencies: I ask you to keep an open mind. Let’s pilot this in one municipality or city—test how the arrangement works, identify bottlenecks. See how it can save money and meet social objectives without sacrificing disaster readiness.


My suggestions to move forward

  • Task the DRRM Office + Social Welfare Department in a city to carry out a feasibility study: which evacuation centers, what shelters nearby, what retrofitting needed.

  • Initiate a public-private partnership: private sector can support hygiene kits, modular beds, solar lights for evening use.

  • Engage CSOs and faith-based groups to manage the overnight shelter shift—they know the homeless community and can bring trust, referrals, monitoring.

  • Build data tracking: number of homeless guests per night, services delivered, average stay, exit outcomes; also make sure the center remains inspection-ready for disaster use.

  • Release a policy brief for other LGUs: “Here’s how we did it, costs saved, lessons learned.” Make it replicable.


My Final thoughts

Yes, disasters are becoming more frequent. Our evacuation centers must be ready. But the space between disasters—the years, months, weeks when the building stands empty—is an opportunity wasted when people are on the streets with nowhere to go.

We have an estimated 4.5 million homeless Filipinos. Meanwhile, the infrastructure for disaster relief stands idle. Let’s rethink conventional boundaries. Let’s merge purpose with flexibility. Let’s build a system that turns idle capacity into social support and retains disaster readiness.

Let's not let “turf issues” or departmental silos block good ideas. This is not just a policy tweak—it’s a systems-thinking leap. It can save government funds, increase resilience, and restore dignity to those without shelter.

Let’s try it. Let’s implement the dual-use model. And let’s prove that an evacuation center can be both a safe haven in a storm and a safe place in a calm night for someone who has nowhere to go.

Because the measure of our resilience is not only how we respond to disasters—but how we care for our people when there is no disaster.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/06-09-2026


Sunday, June 07, 2026

WHAT ARE THE SAFEGUARDS AGAINST THE WRONGFUL DETENTION OF JUVENILE SUSPECTS?

WHAT ARE THE SAFEGUARDS AGAINST THE WRONGFUL DETENTION OF JUVENILE SUSPECTS?

When young persons are held in detention, it raises serious questions—not just about laws, but about practice. In the Philippines, juvenile suspects fall under the jurisdiction of the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), not the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP). Yet, despite a specialized justice system for children in conflict with the law (CICL), wrongful detention still occurs. What safeguards exist to prevent this—and are they working?

Legal Safeguards: A Strong Foundation

Republic Act No. 9344 (Juvenile Justice and Welfare Act of 2006), as amended by RA 10630, provides a robust legal framework that prioritizes rehabilitation over punishment. Key protections include:

Minimum Age of Criminal Responsibility (MACR): Children 15 and below are exempt from criminal liability. Those aged 15–18 are only liable if they acted with discernment.

Diversion and Non-Detention: The law favors diversion programs—community service, supervision, counseling—over formal trial or institutionalization.

No Detention with Adults: Juveniles must be placed in youth rehabilitation centers or “Bahay Pag-asa,” not adult jails.

Confidentiality: Proceedings and records involving CICL are protected; media exposure is prohibited.

Legal and Psychological Support: From first contact, children must be assisted by social workers, with parental notification required.

These provisions form a strong legal architecture. But as with any system, implementation is everything.

Coordination and Protocol Gaps

The Juvenile Justice and Welfare Council (JJWC), under DSWD, is tasked with coordinating among agencies—PNP, BJMP, DOJ, local governments, and social welfare offices. Yet, ground-level coordination remains inconsistent.

Critical questions include:

When a child is apprehended, is there immediate handover to DSWD or LSWDO—or are they mistakenly placed in BJMP custody?

How often do juveniles end up in adult jail cells due to confusion or lack of space?

Are BJMP and PNP officers trained on RA 9344 and juvenile protocols?

What corrective mechanisms exist when wrongful detention occurs? Can children invoke habeas corpus? Are administrative complaints enforced?

While RA 9344 outlines remedies—habeas corpus, civil damages, administrative sanctions—their effectiveness depends on inter-agency coordination and enforcement.

Facilities and Training: The Capacity Gap

RA 9344 mandates juvenile-friendly facilities staffed by multidisciplinary teams (social workers, psychologists, doctors, counselors). But do these exist in sufficient numbers?

Are there enough Bahay Pag-asa centers nationwide to prevent children from being placed in adult detention due to lack of space?

Are frontline officers trained in child-rights counseling and trauma-informed care?

Is there a functioning intervention team during arrest—or is the child simply booked and held?

Without adequate infrastructure and trained personnel, legal safeguards remain aspirational.

Recommendations: Turning Policy into Practice

To prevent wrongful detention, we must strengthen implementation through:

Clear MOUs and SOPs: Between PNP, BJMP, and DSWD/LSWDO at municipal and city levels, detailing custody protocols, transfer timelines, and diversion pathways.

Capacity-Building: Training programs for PNP Women & Children Desks, BJMP personnel, and municipal social workers on RA 9344 and child protection.

Facility Mapping: A nationwide audit of Bahay Pag-asa centers and youth facilities, with public access to data on coverage gaps.

Visible Corrective Mechanisms: Track and publish data on juvenile detentions, especially wrongful placements in adult facilities. Enforce administrative sanctions.

Community Awareness: Educate parents, guardians, and communities on juvenile rights to serve as watchdogs.

Regular Coordination Meetings: Inter-agency reviews to ensure no child falls through the cracks—especially during arrest and transfer stages.

Final Thoughts

The safeguards against wrongful detention of juvenile suspects in the Philippines are strong on paper. But gaps in facility capacity, lack of training, and poor coordination allow violations to persist. When a child ends up in an adult cell or is denied diversion, we’re not just ignoring policy—we’re undermining their future.

Safeguarding juvenile suspects means insisting on accountability that is age-appropriate, rights-based, and development-oriented. It’s time to turn legal safeguards into live protections. Every child deserves it—and so does our justice system.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877292/06-08-2026


Saturday, June 06, 2026

LET’S NOT GIVE UP ON THE GLOBAL BATTLE FOR OUR COCONUT OIL MARKET SHARE

LET’S NOT GIVE UP ON THE GLOBAL BATTLE FOR OUR COCONUT OIL MARKET SHARE

When I read a recent commentary of Dr. Fermin D. Adriano in The Manila Times titled “Philippine agriculture’s continuing demise”, I felt both concern and resolve. He warns that our agriculture is “at a critical crossroads,” and without reforms, we risk losing not just market share — but livelihoods.

Let’s take one specific pillar: our coconut industry, particularly coconut oil. The Philippines may lose part of the U.S. market to Malaysian palm oil, which now enjoys zero tariffs. But while we might lose a few percentage points, we must not lose everything. We can still fight back — and we must.

The stakes are high

According to the Philippine Coconut Authority (PCA), the country’s coconut-oil exports suffered a 39.5 percent drop in 2022. Globally, the coconut-oil market is projected to grow from USD 5.9 billion in 2022 to USD 7.4 billion by 2027 — but we will not automatically share in that growth.

Palm oil, produced cheaply and efficiently, yields roughly four times more oil per hectare than coconut. That’s a big cost advantage — but not an unbeatable one. As Dr. Adriano points out, agriculture must be anchored on “productivity, efficiency, competitiveness, and sound trade policies.”

How do we fight back?

1. Reframe coconut oil as the healthier choice.
Health-conscious consumers are turning toward plant-based, functional foods. The PCA reports strong growth for virgin coconut oil (VCO) and other coconut-based products. Coconut oil, rich in lauric acid, offers clear nutritional advantages over many generic vegetable oils. We should brand it as a premium health oil, not a mere commodity.

2. Move up the value chain.
Our dependence on exporting crude coconut oil exposes us to global price swings. Instead, we should focus on value-added products — VCO, coconut milk beverages, oleochemicals, and cosmetics. As Dr. Adriano emphasizes, sustainable growth lies in productivity and competitiveness, not in raw commodity exports.

3. Mobilize government and industry.
We need an aggressive marketing campaign led by the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) and Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) to promote Philippine coconut oil worldwide. At the same time, we must defend our farmers through a task force that protects them from dumping, subsidies, and unfair trade practices. “What is missing,” Dr. Adriano says, “are leaders who understand the dynamics of the agricultural economy, both domestic and international.”

4. Create a Coconut Industry War Room.
This is no ordinary trade dispute — it’s a full-scale global marketing war. We need a coordinated task force of the PCA, DTI, DA, cooperatives, and exporters to monitor market shifts, enforce standards, fight dumping, and promote branding. Weak institutions have long held back our agriculture; this is where reform must start.

Questions for policymakers

  • Are we promoting coconut oil as a premium health product, not just a cooking oil?

  • Why do we still rely on crude exports instead of high-margin finished goods?

  • Do we have hard data on how zero tariffs for palm oil affect our farmers and exporters?

  • Are we building enough local capacity to process, refine, and brand coconut products?

  • What concrete steps are in place to shield 3 million Filipino coconut farmers from price swings?

The numbers speak

The Philippines exports about USD 2 billion in coconut products yearly, sustaining roughly 3 million farmers. Yet locally, coconut oil sells for around ₱140 per liter versus palm oil’s ₱99 — a gap that drives consumers toward palm. And while production may rise in 2025–26, exports are expected to remain flat due to higher domestic biodiesel demand and increased palm imports.

Globally, coconut oil accounts for only around 2 percent of total vegetable-oil supply. That makes us vulnerable — but also defines our opportunity. In a world flooded with cheap oil, quality can be our differentiator.

Yes, we might lose some market share, but we must not surrender the coconut-oil market — either globally or locally. We have something our competitors don’t: a long coconut heritage, diverse island production, and a health-conscious niche eager for natural oils.

As Dr. Adriano stresses, “the agriculture sector needs investments in productivity, efficiency, competitiveness.” That’s exactly the mindset our coconut industry needs. Let’s not be complacent. Let’s mobilize the DFA and DTI for global branding, empower farmers through a dedicated task force, and push for high-value coconut products like VCO.

Let’s position coconut oil as the healthier, higher-value alternative to palm oil — because it truly is. If we fight back smartly, we can reclaim and even expand our share of this vital market.

Let’s not give up. Not on our farmers. Not on our coconut heritage. And not on the global battle for our coconut-oil market share.

RAMON IKE V. SENERES

www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.comsenseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/06-07-2026


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