Built not to last

Finally, a respite from traffic-causing road reblocking – tearing up sections of a damaged concrete pavement, repairing the base layer, and then pouring a fresh concrete surface layer.

Way back in January 2009, the World Bank had debarred seven contractors, three of them Philippine firms and four Chinese, plus one person from bidding for WB-funded road projects.

This was after the multilateral lender established collusive bid-rigging for contracts under phase one of the Philippine National Roads Improvement Program, which was partly funded with a $150-million loan from the World Bank.

The debarments were for periods ranging from four to eight years, but one Philippine firm, Manila-based E.C. de Luna Construction Corp. and its owner Eduardo C. de Luna were permanently debarred. Today the company is still operating in the country, and is still building roads.

For a long time, the World Bank had considered corruption a political problem. It began directly linking corruption to underdevelopment – and a major hindrance to its work – only in the late 1990s, beginning with a speech in 1996 by then WB president James Wolfensohn who described corruption as a ‘cancer.’

Among the WB’s early findings in its studies was that road projects were favorite sources of corruption in the developing world. The quality of the road network, the Bank noted, is often an indicator of the level of corruption in a country.

We can see this in our looted Philippines. For as long as I can remember, I have wondered why our roads are a patchwork quilt of disjointed construction and repair work.

It’s not unusual to see patches of concrete pavement laid side-by-side with asphalt along a five-kilometer road stretch. Potholes and cracks on concrete are also repaired with asphalt, and vice versa.

In several areas, roads are built without curbs. An honest retired city civil engineer told me that this makes the pavement less durable. Asphalt, he said, is also laid at the wrong temperature and with insufficient thickness for the expected vehicular volume.

‘Built to last’ is a favorite product marketing pitch. In the case of Philippine roads, I’ve long suspected that they are designed or repaired deliberately to be short-lived, so that they can melt in the rain and be repaired over and over again. For every repair project, a kickback.

Worse, even when roads still look perfectly fine, they are torn up and repaired, sometimes badly, probably so they will need further touch-ups. I don’t know if it’s just my malicious imagination, but the unnecessary reblockings seem to increase before school opening. Maybe the thieves need tuition for their kids studying in expensive schools overseas.

The road projects also seem to peak during our long Christmas season. Because of public anger over the holiday traffic gridlocks, road diggings were curbed in recent years: no repairs during the peak of the season. But even then, there were always exemptions: big-ticket flagship projects, emergency repairs, and drainage or sidewalk improvements. Of course, many of the projects were classified under the exempted categories, ensuring that the season remained joyful for the thieves.

Apart from the endless patchwork repairs, each project typically displays a billboard with the name and image of the lawmaker taking credit for it. In the flood control scandal, such epal billboards can identify the lawmakers who inserted the projects for funding in the national budget. But the practice appears to have been stopped for major infrastructure projects in Metro Manila, although it continues in many other parts of the country.

Across the country, many roads – including those classified as farm-to-market – have been constructed merely to benefit the resorts, farms, businesses and other properties of the congressional endorsers.

A common practice is for a lawmaker’s family to buy up undeveloped land, and then endorse for public funding and approval road projects that pass through the property. Naturally, the value of the property shoots up once the road is opened.

According to anti-corruption crusaders, it has becoming increasingly common for lawmakers or their families to own not only the companies that bag the contracts for such projects but also those that supply the requirements.

Mayors have lamented that they are not consulted in projects implemented in their jurisdictions by the national government. They say that often, the projects are not in sync with development plans of the local government units. It’s typical in our government: the left hand doesn’t know what the right hand is doing.

Lawmakers get to earmark their pet projects for funding under the National Expenditure Program. Any reform arising from the flood control scandal should draw a clearer line between the legislative power of the purse and executive power.

The Supreme Court had prohibited the allocation of lump sums to lawmakers and allowing them to earmark pet projects for funding with those allocations after the enactment of the national budget.

But the magicians in Congress quickly devised ways of going around the SC prohibition, through unprogrammed appropriations as well as confidential and intelligence funds.

Despite the uproar over the congressional budget insertions, the House of Representatives passed last Monday the 2026 budget bill with P243.2 billion in unprogrammed appropriations intact. Can they ever wean themselves from their pork-laden diet? Even Malacañang can’t live without its own pork.

Road reblocking, which gives the public endless grief, is among the favorite pork barrel projects, providing opportunities for kickbacks.

Public Works Secretary Vince Dizon has indefinitely suspended all reblocking activities, pending a review of whether the projects are necessary.

The review should have been done ages ago, but it’s better late than never. And there must be punishment for the thieves.

IKEA opening new store in Philippines in partnership with Ayala Group

Swedish home furnishing giant IKEA is opening its second official branch in the Philippines in partnership with the Ayala Group.

IKEA will open its first Plan and Order Shop in the Philippines at TriNoma Mall on Oct. 23, bringing its affordable and sustainable design closer to northern Metro Manila residents.

‘We are now getting closer to the many more Filipinos, especially in the north of Manila. This partnership between IKEA and Ayala Malls allow us to create spaces that are accessible, convenient and inspiring,’ IKEA Philippines country retail manager Ricardo Pinheiro said.

‘IKEA Plan and Order Shop is one of the most recent formats we have. It’s actually a shop where customers can order the full IKEA range. It is also a shop where customers can plan their home solutions. It’s also a shop where customers can actually collect their online orders’ he said.

Pinheiro said the Plan and Order Shop format is currently available in other IKEA sites globally like London, Paris, Stockholm, Spain and Portugal.

‘We are opening more and more, but they are not very old. So it’s quite a recent format that we are still testing,’ he said.

The first IKEA Plan and Order Shop in the Philippines will be a 500-square meter store located at the ground level of TriNoma Mall.

Pinheiro said that total investment for the store ranges from P30 million to P35 million.

The shop features small scale store with room vignettes and products that shoppers can purchase in-store and also functions as a free collection point for online orders.

It is also a space for customers to plan their dream kitchens, wardrobe and storage cabinet with the same expert guidance as offered from IKEA’s store in Pasay City.

The IKEA Plan and Order Shop aims to make affordable home furnishing even more accessible to shoppers from every corner of Metro Manila.

‘For now, we are very committed to make this one a success. Based on the success of this one, we will decide if we will open more in different locations or not,’ Pinheiro said.

Ayala Malls chief operating officer Paul Birkett said the opening of the IKEA Plan and Order Shop matches the ongoing refresh being undertaken at TriNoma.

‘It’s really critically important that this first ever Plan and Order point in the Philippines, it’s the new retail format that brings the IKEA brand closer to consumers. It combines the convenience, the access, the innovation, but more importantly, the exceptional products. We give people another reason to visit TriNoma,’ Birkettt said.

Pinheiro said the plan for IKEA Philippines for expansion moving forward is to explore both large store as well as the small scale Plan and Order Shop formats.

‘For IKEA, it’s not one or the other. It’s one and the other. So we are looking to both formats as a way to get closer to the many Filipinos. Our country is so big and its so scattered around so many different islands and cities that we believe we need to explore both options of bigger store like Pasay and smaller Plan and Order shops like in Quezon City,’ he said.

Asked about plans to open an IKEA store in SM Megamall, Pinheiro said: ‘It’s not part of our plans in the near future.’

IKEA opened its first store in the country in 2021 at the Mall of Asia Complex in Pasay, which is currently the biggest IKEA store in the world.

Mendoza closes in on Under-14 chess crown in World Youth Championships

Jemaica Yap Mendoza, a 14-year-old Woman FIDE Master from Sta. Rosa, Laguna, is on the cusp of achieving a rare and historic feat in Philippine chess – become a world champion.

Mendoza came tantalizingly close to achieving such a feat after beating Azerbaijan’s Saadat Bashirli to reclaim the solo lead after the 10th and penultimate round of the girls’ Under-14 section of the World Youth Championships in Durres, Albania Tuesday.

The Eastern Asia Youth Championship gold winner outlasted Bashirli in 61 moves of their Ruy Lopez duel despite losing a pawn in the middle game and being threatened with a dangerous queenside passed pawn.

But Mendoza, a protégé of Olympiad veteran Shania Mae Mendoza, miraculously found a way as her Azeri foe wilted under pressure and blundered a piece in the end that allowed the wily Filipina extract the full point.

This put her one step closer to claiming the world title and the distinction as the first to win in this event.

But she has to come through again versus third seed WFM Polina Smirnova, a Russian who represents FIDE, in the final round Wednesday night.

Mendoza currently has 8.5 points, or half a point ahead of Smirnova and Uzbekistan’s Rukiya Olimova.

Mendoza actually held that solo lead after the seventh round but she fell to Serbian WFM Vera Vujovic in the eighth and lost it.

She, however, quickly bounced back from it with two straight wins including this one over Bashirli.

Watsons joins forces with Philippine Dermatological Society to champion skin health at DermSkin event

Skin concerns are getting on you lately? Whether you have a specific skin dilemma or in need of expert advice, Watsons brings back the DermSkin mall activation at the SM Mall of Asia Atrium from October 1 to 5 to help you achieve your healthy skin era.

The most-loved health and beauty retailer in the Philippines is taking its DermSkin category up a notch with a week-long spotlight on skin health awareness and help cater to different types of skin needs, from quenching skin hydration, combating acne and oiliness, or just wanting to simply ensure a tried and tested skincare routine.

In pursuit of making skin health more accessible, Watsons also joined forces with the Philippine Dermatological Society (PDS), the only specialty society recognized by the Philippine Medical Association and the Philippine College of Physicians that specializes in skin, hair and nails, to provide free skin consultations during the event and to share the latest insights on common skincare myths and misconceptions.

Head over to the DermSkin activation and look for the PDS booth to avail of the free consultation services from PDS doctors at the PDS booth in the mall animation. Drop by on October 1 and tune in to the panel discussion featuring skin experts to learn more about proper care for your skin.

The road to healthier skin doesn’t end there-Watsons also began offering free derma consultations every weekend from 12 p.m. to 8 p.m. in select stores in the metro. Be sure to visit SM MOA 7, Robinsons Place Manila, SM North Edsa Grand, SM Grand Central, SM Megamall or SM City Tanza to get direct and accessible skin consultation with an expert.

The DermSkin Activation will also feature a wide range of derma-approved products from brands such as Cetaphil, Celeteque, Aveeno, Neutrogena, Cerave, Target Pro by Watsons, Avene, Physiogel, Bioderma, Uriage, Suu Balm and Dermaction Plus.

MNLF leader, son killed in Maguindanao ambush

A leader of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) and his son were killed in an ambush by unidentified gunmen in Ampatuan, Maguindanao del Sur on Monday.

Abusama Agao and his son, Norodin, were in a tricycle with another family member, Jahara, when the gunmen waylaid them in Barangay Kapinpilan.

Agao and Norodin, kagawad and watchman in the nearby Barangay Matagabong, respectively, died instantly from gunshot wounds in the body.

Jahara was taken to a hospital for treatment.

The assailants fled on separate motorcycles. Probers have yet to determine the motive for the attack.

DepEd warns vs prolonged suspension of onsite classes

The Department of Education (DepEd) on Tuesday cautioned local government units (LGUs) against prolonged suspension of face-to-face classes, warning that it could disrupt students’ learning and development.

The statement came after Laguna Gov. Sol Aragones ordered the suspension of in-person classes in all levels, both public and private, in the province from Oct. 14 to 31 due to the possibility of a strong earthquake.

DepEd chief media relations officer Dennis Legaspi said that while the department respects the authority of LGUs to suspend classes for public safety, such decisions should be made ‘with balance and prudence.’

‘While caution is important, extended suspensions can disrupt learning and affect students’ development. Every decision should reflect both care for safety and commitment to learning continuity,’ Legaspi said.

He added that DepEd will coordinate with concerned schools division offices to ensure that alternative delivery modes are provided to affected learners.

Legaspi also urged local governments to ‘periodically assess whether the suspension is still necessary for public safety.’

The United Nations Children’s Fund earlier warned of a ‘real and widespread learning crisis’ in the Philippines, noting that a vast majority of students are falling behind in reading and mathematics.

Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) director Teresito Bacolcol reiterated that earthquakes cannot be predicted.

‘We understand the concern for public safety, but Phivolcs would like to clarify that earthquakes cannot be predicted. There is currently no technology anywhere in the world that can determine exactly when or where a quake will occur,’ Bacolcol said.

Amid the 18-day suspension, the University of the Philippines-Los Baños (UPLB) has asked the provincial government to allow the university to continue essential face-to-face academic activities.

In a memorandum, UPLB said that scheduled examinations, laboratory classes, fieldwork, clinical and internship rotations, human kinetics courses, exchange student activities and other tasks that cannot be effectively conducted online or through modules shall proceed as scheduled since they require physical participation.

The university also directed unit heads to strictly implement safety protocols, including building inspections, emergency preparedness measures and compliance with disaster risk reduction guidelines to protect students, faculty and staff.

Flu break in Rizal

Aside from Laguna, Rizal has also suspended face-to-face classes in all levels, both public and private, from Oct. 14 to 17 due to an increase in flu-like illnesses.

‘The purpose of this is to ensure the safety and health of our learners and teachers amid the rise in influenza-like illnesses,’ Rizal Gov. Nina Ynares explained.

Classes will shift to modular distance learning during the suspension period.

Teachers want health break

Meanwhile, the Alliance of Concerned Teachers (ACT) has asked Education Secretary Sonny Angara to declare a health break for public school teachers from Oct. 27 to 30.

In a letter to Angara, ACT chairperson Ruby Bernardo cited overcrowded classrooms, dilapidated facilities, teacher shortages and added workload from the ARAL Program as factors straining teachers’ well-being.

Pointing to the impact of recent floods, typhoons and earthquakes, Bernardo said the proposed break – coinciding with students’ mid-year break – would allow teachers to rest, recover and engage in professional development activities such as learning action cells and in-service training.

She added that the pause would also give local governments and school administrators time to inspect facilities for damage or structural risks caused by recent seismic events.

‘In upholding teachers’ right to rest and well-being, the department reinforces the foundation of inclusive, resilient and quality education,’ Bernardo said.

DepEd partners with Phivolcs

In a related development, DepEd has strengthened its partnership with Phivolcs to ensure that class suspension decisions are guided by scientific data, localized risk assessments and safety standards.

Angara said the collaboration aims to balance learner and personnel protection with the goal of sustaining education amid emergencies.

He emphasized that decisions on suspensions and resumptions should be based on science, not fear.

DepEd is working with the Department of Science and Technology to ensure schools near fault lines are ‘over-engineered’ to withstand strong earthquakes.

Training programs with Phivolcs are also being planned for regional and field offices to assess building integrity and manage response actions.

Angara added that the department is eyeing the establishment of a DepEd command center to monitor disaster response and early warnings.

DepEd and Phivolcs also committed to improving coordination in releasing science-based advisories and information materials to prevent misinformation during crises.

‘Preparedness must go hand in hand with learning continuity,’ Angara stressed.

Under DepEd Order 22, s. 2024, the authority to suspend classes rests with local executives, schools division superintendents and school heads, who must base their decisions on Phivolcs advisories, field conditions and readiness to resume learning.

Preventive suspensions should activate learning continuity plans, such as modular, online or take-home learning, while safety inspections are ongoing.

Group questions BARMM poll postponement

Election watchdog Legal Network for Truthful Elections or LENTE has questioned a decision of the Supreme Court (SC) resetting the first-ever parliamentary election in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) to March 2026.

LENTE described the SC decision as ‘interference’ in the date set for an election by a valid law.

‘This decision also sets a dangerous precedent, one that risks opening the floodgates for malicious actors to use judicial intervention to justify the postponement despite the validity of a law setting the date of the election,’ LENTE said in a statement.

The poll watchdog said that such actions could erode public confidence in the electoral process, weaken democratic institutions and stifle the people’s right to suffrage and self-determination.

LENTE urged the high court to reassess its role in setting the date of elections, noting that this is a legislative prerogative that must be exercised through a valid law.

It urged the Bangsamoro Transition Authority (BTA) to immediately pass a new redistricting law before Oct. 30 to prevent another deferral of the Bangsamoro people’s right to choose their representatives.

The BTA wants Congress to pass a law setting the date of the BARMM elections.

Rex Laudiangco, spokesman for the Commission on Elections (Comelec), said that members of the Bangsamoro Parliament want to work with Congress for the passage of a law fixing the date of the BARMM electoral exercise.

Comelec Chairman George Garcia said the poll body would abide by the decision of the high tribunal.

He said the Comelec is waiting for the passage of the new redistricting law.

Garcia assured the Bang-samoro people that the election would push through.

He said the postponement would give the Comelec more time to better prepare for the BARMM parliamentary election.

ICI asks DOJ to issue lookout order on 19 individuals

The Independent Commission on Infrastructure (ICI) has requested the issuance of an Immigration Lookout Bulletin Order (ILBO) against 19 individuals.

The commission leading the flood control probe sent the request for an ILBO to the Department of Justice on Monday, October 13.

The ICI has requested that the Justice Department issue an ILBO on the following:

Former Rep. Mary Mitzi “Mitch” Cajayon-Uy

Arturo “Art” Atayde

Alvin Tan

Bong Marasigan

Elmer de Leon

Ed Fuentebella

Johnny Santos

John Mary Vianney Parago

Alvin Mariano

Ryan Uy

Darryl Recio

Nestor Venturina

Benjie Tocol

Romeo “Bogs” Magalong Jr.

District Engr. Ramon Devanadera

District Engr. Johnny Protesta Jr.

District Engr. Aristotle Ramos

District Engr. Michael P. Rosaria

Engr. Angelita Garucha

Three people in the new ICI request, particularly Magalong, Devanadera and Protesta, have already been issued an ILBO on October 8.

An ILBO is a directive to immigration authorities to monitor individuals from leaving the country, typically those who are subjects of ongoing investigations or legal cases.

It differs from a hold departure order, which is a court-issued directive preventing an individual from leaving the country.

Thirty-three officials were initially issued an ILBO on October 8 due to their alleged involvement in corruption in flood control projects.

According to the ICI, the individuals, who include more than a dozen lawmakers and former Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) officials, are ‘subjects in a relevant position that operates to make them an inevitable personality during the fact-finding process.’

On Tuesday, October 14, former House Speaker Martin Romualdez, who is included in the initial ILBO list, appeared before the commission.

He was asked by the commission to testify concerning questioned insertions in the national budget and his involvement in DPWH flood control projects when he was still the Speaker.

Meanwhile, former Ako Bicol party-list Rep. Zaldy Co, who was placed on the lookout bulletin on September 25, was also summoned for his role as House appropriations panel chief in previous years.

OCTA: 60% of Pinoys outraged over infrastructure corruption

Most Filipinos were angry and outraged over issues of corruption in government infrastructure projects, according to a recent survey conducted by the OCTA Research group.

Results of the Sept. 25 to 30 survey released yesterday showed that 60 percent of the respondents selected anger or outrage as the primary emotion that best described their reaction to the issue.

Another 30 percent said they were fearful or anxious, while nine percent selected sadness or sorrow.

Only one percent said they felt hope or optimism as various government agencies start their investigation on the alleged anomalies involving ranking government officials.

In an interview with ‘Storycon’ on One News, OCTA president Ranjit Rye said the findings showed a ‘clear, uncompromising public mandate for justice, accountability and institutional reform.’

‘People are angry and expect real action. They want corrupt officials and contractors jailed and public funds recovered,’ he said.

Rye noted that the strongest anger came from Gen Z and millennial respondents, who make up a large portion of the voting population.

‘Outrage and anger are powerful emotions, and this could accelerate the development of strong social movements,’ he said, adding that the sentiment could influence the country’s political landscape in 2028. Rye emphasized that the public expects ‘serious, not performative’ action.

‘The President started this. People appreciate it, but he must go full force and follow through with reforms and accountability,’ he said.

He also warned that failure to act decisively could deepen public distrust in government, saying that ‘if nobody is jailed, distrust for government will rise and that will affect its legitimacy.’

Rye said corruption ranked among the top five national issues for the first time in four years, alongside inflation, wages, food access, jobs and poverty. ‘We’re at a critical juncture. People are demanding real change,’ he said.

Palace: Calm down

Malacañang, for its part, has urged the public to remain calm in demanding accountability.

‘Calm down. This cannot be done hastily,’ Presidential Communications Undersecretary Claire Castro said at a press briefing when asked to comment on public demand for accountability, based on the OCTA poll.

Castro urged Filipinos to allow the Independent Commission for Infrastructure (ICI) to complete its work.

Based on the OCTA survey, 83 percent of the respondents agreed to President Marcos’ decision to publicly expose corruption in infrastructure projects.

Only three percent disagreed with his move, while 13 percent were undecided on the issue.

The respondents were also asked which institutions or groups they feel is in the best position to conduct the investigation.

Almost half or 46 percent said it should be an independent commission composed of individuals from the private sector, such as the ICI created by the President.

Twenty-three percent of the respondents backed the Senate investigation, while 13 percent selected the one undertaken by the House of Representatives. Another eight percent said it’s the Department of Public Works and Highways that should conduct an investigation.

Most respondents expect accountability, jail time and institutional reform as the outcome of the flood control investigations.

The top five preferred outcomes, OCTA said, are holding corrupt officials and contractors accountable (68 percent), recovery of lost or misused public funds (58 percent), imprisonment of those proven guilty (58 percent), ensuring efficient implementation of quality flood control projects (41 percent) and strengthening transparency and monitoring of government infrastructure projects (34 percent).

The total exceeded 100 percent as the respondents were allowed to select multiple responses.

Other desired outcomes were faster completion of government infrastructure projects (27 percent), restoration of public trust in the government (24 percent) and reform in bidding and procurement processes (13 percent).

The survey had 1,200 respondents and a margin of error of plus/minus three percent.

Shake, shake, Shake Away on GCash’s birthday and win exciting prizes every day

When GCash celebrates its birthday, everyone’s invited to the party. Starting October 15, the country’s leading finance super app is set to unveil exciting surprises to celebrate with everyone through a Surprise Birthday Shake Away.

GCash users will be surprised with chances to win exciting rewards and surprises every day from October 15 to 31. Big prizes include GCash credits, gift certificates, a home appliance showcase, an iPhone 16, a motorcycle, and even the all-new BYD Seal 5 DM-i Dynamic hybrid car.

Joining is easy. Simply log in to the GCash app, tap the promo banner, and shake your phone to earn a raffle entry. The more GCash services you use, such as Send Money, Buy Load, or Pay Bills, the bigger the prizes you can win.

The surprise does not stop there, as you shake your phone for a chance to win, PPop’s Female Alpha, G22, turns up the birthday energy with the GCash Surprise Birthday Shake Away jingle and dance craze, inviting everyone to move, groove, and celebrate the GCash way.

Users and fans alike can share, dance, and post their birthday moves on social media to celebrate the nationwide birthday fever of fun, music, and surprises.