168,000 fail to enter SUCs amid capacity issues

At least 168,000 students have been denied admission to state universities and colleges amid SUC capacity issues.

Data submitted by 62 of 115 SUCs showed that 32 of the SUCs or 52 percent have exceeded their capacities. Meanwhile, 11 SUCs or 18 percent have reached 100 percent capacity.

As a result, 168,493 students were denied enrollment despite qualifying for admission.

Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian, chairman of the Senate committee on finance, said SUCs should focus on increasing academic capacities.

He also asked the SUCs to submit their capital outlay requirements focused on classrooms and other academics-related needs.

‘The goal here is no more displaced students,’ Gatchalian added.

He noted that the SUCs’ capital outlay decreased from P31 billion in 2024 to P17 billion in 2025.

Ghost beneficiaries

Catholic schools were not involved in the voucher anomaly involving ghost beneficiaries under the Senior High School Voucher Program, the Catholic Association of the Philippines (CEAP) said.

‘They (ghost beneficiaries) do not come from Catholic schools. In fact, the ghost students were discovered by a mechanism we call the Private Education Assistance Committee, PEAC,’ CEAP president Fr. Karel San Juan said.

Education Secretary Sonny Angara has said that the voucher anomaly involving ghost beneficiaries has reached more than P100 million.

‘PEAC assures that government funding is distributed professionally to the rightful recipients. It certifies that schools really exist,’ San Juan added.

San Juan also welcomed initiatives in the House of Representatives and the Senate to expand the voucher program to be able to cover Kindergarten to Grade six.

‘Not only that, we’re pushing for an increase of amount because now, the amount ranges from P9,000 to P13,000 and that is not adequate to fully support the cost of education and they are open to that, especially now, with this controversy of flood control budget, our congressmen are very supportive of all this. We are pushing for the transfer of funds to education,’ San Juan said.

San Juan noted a huge drop in the enrollment in Catholic schools, amid the exodus of learners to public schools.

In three years alone, or from 2019 to 2022, the enrollment went down from 4.3 million to 1.4 million, he said.

He added that because of the difficult economic situation, students would gravitate towards free tuition fees in public schools.

Bomb threat disrupts DLSU classes

Face-to-face classes at all levels at the De La Salle University (DLSU) in Manila were suspended yesterday following a bomb threat.

The University Student Government received the threat through email on Tuesday night, warning DLSU students not to go to school the next day.

After sweeping the campus, the Manila Police District found no bomb.

The DLSU management said in-person classes and on-site work resume today, with tightened security in place.

Manila Mayor Isko Moreno called on the DLSU to look into the bomb threat, saying it could have been a prank.

BINI Aiah to help fellow Cebuano victims of earthquake

Aiah Arceta of the Nation’s Girl Group BINI expressed her devastation after a 6.9 magnitude earthquake struck her home province of Cebu.

In an Instagram story, Aiah shared a news report from ABS-CBN News about the earthquake.

“To my family, friends, and everyone who are in Cebu, I hope you are all safe!!!” Aiah wrote. “I may not be in Cebu right now but my heart goes out for the people who are affected.”

Aiah, together with the other members of BINI, is currently in Cagayan de Oro for their BINIverse and MINIverse shows.

“Our hearts go out to everyone affected by the recent earthquake in Bogo and nearby cities. Many families have lost their homes, livelihoods have been affected, and urgent help is needed.”

“To extend our support, part of the sales from our September 30 release will go to those who are in need,” It’s Arc, Aiah’s cap business, wrote on social media.

“If you’d like to help, please directly message Bryan King Arceta for donation details and coordination. Let’s come together as one community to support our brothers and sisters in this difficult time.”

Ramos sustains charge, Tabuena in the hunt as darkness halts play

Sean Ramos followed up his opening two-under-par 68 with a solid 67 to safely advance to the weekend play of the rain-hit Jakarta International Championship, now being led by Thailand’s Pavit Tangkamolprasert at the Damai Indah Golf PIK Course in Indonesia on Friday.

Ramos, who posted six birdies but was hampered by a double bogey and two bogeys in the first round on Thursday, played more conservatively in the second round. He recorded four birdies against a lone bogey for a five-under 135 total at the par-70 course, placing him in a provisional tie for 18th.

Play was suspended for several groups due to darkness, with some players yet to finish their second rounds.

Ramos showed consistency from tee to green, hitting 12 of 14 fairways and 14 greens in regulation. He needed just 28 putts, including three crucial par saves.

Meanwhile, Miguel Tabuena, who surged into early contention with an impressive 65, continued his strong form in a late afternoon start. He birdied two of the first four holes before giving back-to-back strokes from No. 6. He parred the next eight holes and was grouped with Ramos and eight others when play was halted.

Justin Quiban, on the other hand, carded a second straight 69 for a 138 total, sitting on the projected cut line in a share of 60th place. The final cut, however, could still shift depending on the outcome of the unfinished rounds.

At the top of the leaderboard, Tangkamolprasert lit up the front nine with four straight birdies from No. 4. While his back nine was more turbulent – marked by a birdie-bogey-birdie-bogey stretch from No. 11 – he closed strong with a birdie on 17 for a 129 total.

He held a slim one-shot lead over India’s Gaganjeet Bhullar, who fired a second consecutive 65 for 130. Tanapat Pichaikool of Thailand also made a move with a sizzling 62, highlighted by four consecutive birdies from the opening hole, bringing him to 131 and setting up an intense battle for the third round.

Church bells to ring, prayers set vs corruption

Church bells under the Archdiocese of Manila will be tolled every 8 p.m. to signify the people’s ‘prophetic cry of indignation and outrage’ against widespread corruption, Archbishop Jose Cardinal Advincula said yesterday.

Obligatory prayers or an Oratio Imperata for ‘integrity, truth and justice’ will replace the Prayer of the Faithful during masses.

Advincula’s directive starts tomorrow until lifted.

‘The magnitude of corruption in our country is more and more appalling as we continue to discover its enormity and extent,’ he said, referring to corruption in flood control projects involving government officials.

OFWs in Taiwan getting pay hike

Overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) in Taiwan will get an increase in their monthly minimum wage, the Department of Migrant Workers announced yesterday.

DMW Secretary Hans Cacdac said thousands of OFWs in Taiwan would receive higher salaries starting January 2026.

The government of Taiwan has approved a monthly minimum wage of NT$29,500 and NT$196 per hour, Cacdac said.

‘This is a victory for all workers in Taiwan, including OFWs and their families,’ Cacdac said.

PLDT chases treble; De Guzman out

Creamline will open its title defense without the one player it had hoped would play – Jia de Guzman – as PLDT eyes a third straight title in the forthcoming Premier Volleyball League Reinforced Conference.

‘Management has decided Jia is sitting this one out,’ said Creamline team captain Alyssa Valdez during yesterday’s PVL presser at the Discovery Suites.

No reason was given but De Guzman is apparently focusing on training for the Southeast Asian Games in Thailand in December with Alas Pilipinas where she is the team captain.

De Guzman, who last saw action for the Cool Smashers two years ago, is expected to return to her mother club in next year’s All-Filipino Conference.

Meanwhile, the High Speed Hitters, who have won two titles in a row in the PVL on Tour and Invitational, are hoping the stars would align anew for a shot at a third crown.

Helping the High Speed Hitters in chase of glory is Russian import Anastasia Bavykina.

‘She’s a good fit,’ said PLDT manager Bajjie del Rosario of their reinforcement.

The Reinforced Conference kicks off Tuesday at the Ynares Center in Montalban with ZUS Coffee and Akari pitted in the 4 p.m. curtain-raiser followed by the 6:30 p.m. showdown between Capital1 and Choco Mucho.

Interestingly, Petro Gazz, has appointed husband and wife Gary and Lisa Van Sickle as coach and assistant, respectively.

DOE mulls exclusive auction for nuclear projects

The Marcos administration is considering launching a dedicated auction for nuclear energy projects as the country gears up for its first operational power plant.

The government, through the Department of Energy (DOE), is also open to seeking funding from multilateral agencies to mitigate project risks, according to an energy official.

‘We are studying the possibility of having its (nuclear energy) own auction, but we are looking into the legal framework,’ DOE-Energy Utilization Management Bureau director Patrick Aquino said yesterday on the sidelines of the 2025 Philippine International Nuclear Supply Chain Forum (PINSCF).

Aquino said the Nuclear Energy Program Inter-Agency Committee (NEP-IAC) intends to transition from preparatory activities to implementation-ready frameworks in a bid to achieve the country’s targets.

Under the existing nuclear roadmap, the Philippines wants to have at least 1,200 megawatts of commercially operational power plants by 2032 and to scale this up to 4,800 MW by 2040.

Aquino, who serves as NEP-IAC technical secretariat head, said it is also a ‘very good idea’ to tap the Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the World Bank to help minimize financial risk exposure for nuclear proponents.

‘We’re hopeful that with the push of the United States, multilateral agencies like the World Bank and ADB will revisit their investment direction and instruction when it comes to nuclear because right now, they’re not actively investing in nuclear power projects,’ he said.

With the recent passage of the nuclear safety law and the implementation of energy reforms, Aquino is optimistic that the Philippines’ nuclear ambitions could attract more foreign investments.

The 2025 PINSCF, for instance, drew nuclear technology leaders, policymakers, regulators, industrial partners and development agencies from the US, South Korea, Canada, the United Arab Emirates and Argentina.

These participating countries, he noted, are all interested in supporting the Philippines’ nuclear journey.

‘It was a privilege to learn from these different countries successfully operating resilient nuclear plants and reaping benefits from their safe use,’ Aquino said.

‘We will continue to strengthen the ties we have forged in the two forums as we work toward achieving a clean, reliable and secure energy future for the country,’ he said.

President Marcos recently signed a landmark measure establishing the country’s first independent nuclear regulatory body.

Republic Act 12305 or the Philippine National Nuclear Energy Safety Act provides the legal and institutional groundwork for the safe and peaceful use of nuclear power.

According to Aquino, the law’s implementing rules and regulations are targeted to be issued within this year.

Chamber of Secrets

This week I attended an embassy reception, for the first time in months – not only because I like the ambassador, but also to find out if the Filipino party crowd had thinned since the flood control scandal erupted.

Sure enough, for the first time since I began attending such receptions ages ago, I didn’t spot any senator or prominent congressman in the crowd. No Cabinet secretary or well-known local government official either.

An analyst joked that no one wanted to be caught getting off a Mercedes Benz-Maybach S-Class backed by a security convoy of several identical black Benz SUVs. I actually spotted such a Benz fleet parked outside one house in Forbes Park just last week.

These days, folks avoid being seen strutting in Manolo Blahniks, holding a Hermes clutch while flashing a Patek Philippe wristwatch along with a huge Paraiba tourmaline ring.

If you can’t flaunt those ultra-luxe baubles at parties, why attend?

In the hotel basement parking area I spotted a Maserati and a Lexus. I wondered if those were among the luxury vehicles now being hunted down for seizure by the state.

All is not lost for the conspicuous consumers; they can still use their hard-stolen money to splurge on luxuries under the radar of the envious scrum. A public works employee, for example, has reportedly just plunked a cool P2 million in advance payment for dental implants.

But overall, the fun has been taken out of wealth flaunting by the obscenely rich.

This embarrassment over the ostentatious display of fantabulous wealth has descended on the country practically overnight.

It happened after the systematic looting of public coffers for personal purposes came to light, in the most public way, beginning with that privilege speech by Sen. Panfilo Lacson.

That kind of public shaming could not have happened if the offenses imputed on thieves had been kept under wraps, with the plunderers invoking presumption of innocence and presumption of regularity in their official acts.

This is another reason why public hearings are so important.

The bicameral conference in the previous 19th Congress has been dubbed the Chamber of Secrets, where magical things happened to the national budget that would put to shame Voldemort, the villain ‘who must not be named’ in the Harry Potter series.

It turns out that there were several Chambers of Secrets in the budget process, among them the House ‘small committee’ where no minutes were kept. The chair of the Senate finance committee at the time, Grace Poe, says she did not take part in any small committee for the budget. She did disclose that P26 billion was inserted for AKAP or the Ayuda sa Kapos ang Kita Program, with the Senate agreeing after P5 billion was allotted to its members and P21 billion went to the House.

Poe faced the Independent Commission for Infrastructure a week ago. But the ICI session with her was closed to the public, although she answered questions from the media afterward. The Discayas also faced the ICI and gave a ‘tell all, plus plus’ (as per the couple’s lawyer).

We may never know the full details of what Poe, the Discayas or sacked public works undersecretary Roberto Bernardo told the ICI. The commission is starting to be seen (unfairly, according to its defenders) as the latest addition to the Chambers of Secrets.

Another chamber is the Supreme Court, which did not bother holding oral arguments on a case so vital as the impeachment of the vice president of the republic. The SC, whose members probably believe they are indeed gods unaccountable to no one, were in such an admirable rush to resolve that case it even used among its premises for its decision a non-existent news report. Our country faces a plague of ghosts.

The record of the judiciary in resolving cases is one of the reasons why there is such dismay over the decision of the ICI to hold its hearings behind closed doors.

Defenders of the ICI want critics to give the commission a chance, saying its method is similar to Special Counsel investigations in the US. But all along, legal illiterates like me thought it would be patterned after the Philippines’ Agrava Fact-Finding Board on the assassination of Ninoy Aquino, whose hearings were open to the public. Perhaps President Marcos should have clarified this matter when he organized the ICI with the promise of promoting transparency.

The ICI wants the nation to wait for its findings to be known as the details are processed through the usual legal channels.

It’s a reasonable request, if only our legal system wasn’t in such a mess. Those who want ICI sessions to be opened to the public don’t want to wait for months or even years to find out how we lost trillions in tax money to thieves. As the cases crawl along at the usual glacial pace in the judicial mill, the looters will be demanding (as is their right) presumption of innocence. They will be working to unfreeze their assets to finance their legal battles, and possibly buy their way back to politics. They could employ delaying tactics in court, after which they can move to have the case dismissed for inordinate delay, or else claim advanced age and cognitive decline to end their prosecution.

As we have seen, that’s a ginormous amount of money we’re talking about here, which can be deployed for magical political comebacks.

The various Chambers of Secrets could be perceived, unfairly or not, to be complicit in this.

We can wait for the new minority in the Senate to present another witness, even without Lacson’s by-your-leave, against the guy Senator Chiz refers to as he who must not be named.

Escudero must also be a Harry Potter fan. He might want to amplify calls for open hearings by the ICI. But it can’t be a selective call, covering only he who must not be named. Open hearings will be the quickest way for Escudero to refute the accusations against him, hit back at his critics and bolster claims of innocence.

The gods of Padre Faura – and their retired colleague in the ICI – may want to take inspiration from God’s order: let there be light.

Team North strikes in four-ball

Team North flexed its muscles and seized control with eight wins out of 12 matches in the opening Four-ball format of the ICTSI North vs South Elite Junior Championship at The Country Club yesterday.

Team North established a commanding 8-4 lead – an emphatic opening statement in the season-ending showdown of a year-long junior golf tour that featured seven tournaments in each region.

Team North captain Francis Talion attributed their strong Day 1 performance to careful planning.

‘Basically, we started by making critical projections on how the other team might compose their roster for Day 1 – that’s what we based our own lineup on,’ said Talion