Quantcast
Channel: Paranaque – Alabang Bulletin
Viewing all 183 articles
Browse latest View live

SM issues statement regarding pricing discrepancies experienced by a Muntinlupa mom; Vows to better their system to avoid similar incidents

$
0
0

In response to our article published two days ago about a Muntinlupa Mom’s experience with erroneous charging in one SM supermarket, SM has released a statement to address the incident.

 

The price she was charged for the coffee but the price on the shelf only showed P219.50

 

Through its social media account SM Markets, they apologized for the “system glitches” that led to the wrong pricing of some of their goods.

They also asked for understanding and explained that they have corrected the errors already.

Some SM personnel also messaged us privately and asked how they could get in touch with Muntinlupa Mom to so that the store manager could give her an update on her concern.

Please read their full statement below:

 

 

We would like to thank SM Markets for noticing the complaint and addressing the “glitches” as well.

Hopefully there will be no similar incidents like the one Muntinlupa Mom (and many other of you, our dear readers) experienced the other day.

We’re also hoping that other establishments follow suit and sync their shelf prices with their cash registers to avoid victimizing shoppers and getting their hard-earned money due to “system glitches”.

 


Meralco announces power interruptions in Muntinlupa and Paranaque; Check here for the schedule and areas affected

$
0
0

Lights off.

Meralco has announced that there will be some power interruptions in some areas in the Metro due to some repairs for them to provide us better service in the future.

 

File photo from Inquirer.

 

Please see below if your area is affected and from when to when.

PARANAQUE

June 29-30

Between 11pm (Friday) to 4am (Saturday)

Portion of Ninoy Aquino Ave. from near Irasan St. to and including Col. E. De Leon St. in Barangays San Dionisio, La Huerta and Sto. Nino.

According to Meralco, this is due to replacement and conversion of facilities as well as the installation of additional lightning protection devices along Ninoy Aquino Ave.

 

 

MUNTINLUPA

June 26 (Tuesday)

Between 9am and 2pm

Portion of Insular Prison Road, Don P. Reyes and Jade avenues from Dona Anastacia to and including New Bilibid Cemetery

Portion of Southville 3 NBP Subd., Victoria Homes-Ruby Park Subd., Victoria Homes-Diamond Park Subd., Victoria Homes-Jade Heights Subd.

Biazon and South Roads

Muntinlupa City Technical Institute (MCTI)–Annex Building

Hospitaler Sisters of Mercy Foundation Center in Barangays Poblacion and Tunasan

This is due to the installation of additional lightning protection devices at various areas in Barangays Poblacion and Tunasan

June 28 (Thursday)

Between 8am and 1pm

Camella Homes Alabang 2 Subd., Camella Homes 2-D, Soldiers Hills Subd. and Mutual Homes Subd. in Barangay Putatan

This will be due to the replacement of poles affected by the DPWH project along Soldiers Hills main road.

 

Please take note and prepare and let your neighbors know as well.

What is leptospirosis and how can you be protected from it?

$
0
0

With the rainy season here for a couple of weeks now and with the Department of Health identifying some Paranaque barangays as hotspots for the dreaded Leptospirosis, we deem it necessary to inform everyone about this infectious disease and enumerate ways on how to prevent you from being a victim of this disease.

What is leptospirosis?

Leptospirosis is a disease spread by animal urine. One can get infected when they come in contact with body fluids of infected animals or with water, soil, or food contaminated with infected urine.

Leptospirosis Graphic by draxe.com

COMMON SYMPTOMS:

Symptoms include fever, headache, chills, muscle aches, vomiting, jaundice (yellow eyes and skin), red eyes, stomach pain, diarrhea, and rarely, a rash. However, some people do not exhibit symptoms.

This disease can be deadly and in the more severe cases can cause kidney or liver failure, meningitis (swelling of the tissue covering the brain), or bleeding in the lungs.

Leptospirosis can be treated with antibiotics, which are most effective when given early during illness.

Leptospirosis Graphic by draxe.com

How to prevent getting leptospirosis

Avoid contact with water or soil that may be contaminated with animal urine (rats, most especially).

Don’t wade, swim in, or swallow floodwaters or water from lakes, rivers, or swamps.

Treat water to make it safe to drink by boiling or using an appropriate chemical treatment, especially if it has been collected from a source that could be exposed to urine from animals or contaminated by floodwater runoff.

Cover any cuts or abrasions and wear protective clothing, especially footwear, if you must wade in floodwaters or other water that might be contaminated.

Bring someone you think is inflicted with leptospirosis to the hospital asap.

 

Villager almost gets victimized by alleged thieves in ATC resto; Warns others to be more careful when dining alone

$
0
0

Here is another reminder to always take care of your belongings and to always be alert of your surroundings when out in public.

In a Facebook post a couple of days ago, a male customer of Pound by Todd English in Alabang Town Center was eating alone around 8pm when two men approached him.

They claimed they were selling tickets for some charity.

“Since I was alone, the seat in front of me was empty. One of them suddenly sat in front of me while the other sat beside me and suddenly began begging me to buy a ticket from them,” detailed the man who requested for anonymity.

He got suspicious as the two men were just in their “pambahay” clothes and the ticket was just printed on a plain bond paper and without any identifiers of the charity they said they were connected with.

“There were barraging me from both sides with please and requests and forcing me to look at the ticket and away from my food,” he continued.

Already annoyed, he asked the two men to show him their ID’s just so he could verify if they were really connected with the charity they were claiming to be working for.

This then made the two scramble away from him and proceeded to another table of customers to sell the tickets to them.

“As they chatted the two diners up, their hands inched closer to the pockets of the diners,” the man observed.

Just then, the waiters of the restaurant approached the two men and asked them to leave the establishment.

Apparently, the two customers also noticed the men reaching for the original would-be victim’s pockets too before approaching them.

Both parties expressed their gratitude to the alert staff of the restaurant who said that they have heard of this modus happening in nearby establishments in the area as well.

Image from Alabang Town Center’s Facebook Page

The staff had also reported the incident to the mall management.

For their part, Alabang Town Center, with regard to the incident, expressed that they are currently looking into the matter and that their customers’ safety — both in shopping and in dining — are of utmost priority to them.

In an interview with Alabang Bulletin, the would-have-been victim said the guys looked like they were in their early to mid-30s.

“I don’t blame the security of ATC din because it’s really hard to spot these people as they really try their best to blend in with the crowd. Kudos though that they were able to come into quick contact with the resto because by the time I left there were more security personnel near Pound already,” revealed the villager.

So again, please be mindful of your belongings and of other people’s trickery nature as these criminals are really getting bolder and more intelligent (and evil) every day.

 

Motorists Alert: Skyway users from South may now exit up to Java Street, Makati City

$
0
0

From businessmirror.com.ph:

In an effort to help alleviate traffic in Metro Manila, Public Works and Highways Secretary Mark A. Villar on Friday, July 20, 2018 opened the 3-lane, northbound direction of Skyway Stage 3 from Buendia Avenue up to near Java Street in Makati, City.

DPWH Secretary Villar said instead of using Buendia as an off ramp, motorists may now exit a kilometer further along South Super Highway through a temporary ramp constructed near Java Street.

“The section, which spans 1-kilometer, will be temporarily opened until full completion of Phase 1, which ends in President Quirino Avenue in Manila,” said Secretary Villar.

Secretary Villar said the temporary ramp near Java Street is currently one (1) lane passable but will be constructed into two (2) lanes, and eventually four (4) lanes, when the on-ramp and the southbound direction will be opened to the public.

Photo from Business Mirror

The Skyway Stage 3 is a 6-lane, elevated expressway stretched in its entirety over Metro Manila from Buendia, Makati City to Balintawak, Quezon City with a length of about 17.54 kilometers.

The project is divided into five (5) sections namely: 3.76-kilometer Section 1 from Buendia Avenue, Makati City to President Quirino Avenue, Manila City; 0.96-kilometer Section 2A from Pres. Quirino Ave. Manila to Tomas Claudio St., Manila; 3.93-kilometer Section 2B from Tomas Claudio St., Manila to Aurora Blvd., Manila; 2.71-kilometer Section 3 from Aurora Blvd., Manila to Quezon Ave., Quezon City; 4.46-kilometer Section 4 from  Quezon Ave., Quezon City to A. Bonifacio Ave., Quezon City and 1.56-kilometer Section 5: A. Bonifacio, Quezon City To NLEX.

Concessionare Citra Central Expressway Corporation (CCEC) has so far completed about 1-kilometer viaduct and constructed a total of 2.7-kilometer deck slab of Skyway Stage 3 Section 1.

Photo from Philippine Information Agency

Upon completion, Skyway Stage 3 will ease traffic through the eight (8) access ramps/interchanges strategically located as follows: Buendia Avenue, (South Super Highway, Makati City), Pres. Quirino Avenue (Malate, Manila), Plaza Dilao (Paco, Manila), Nagtahan/Aurora Boulevard (Manila), E. Rodriguez Avenue (Quezon City), Quezon Avenue (Quezon City), Sgt. Rivera St. (Quezon City) and NLEX.

 

Parañaque cop relieved from post for slapping bus driver

$
0
0

Click to see the video here too: https://www.facebook.com/News5Everywhere/videos/1294339537389464/

From pna.gov.ph:

By Benjamin Pulta

 

MANILA — A Parañaque policeman has been relieved from his post after he was caught on video hitting a bus driver in the face in Baclaran.

National Capital Region Office (NCRPO) director Chief Supt. Guillermo Eleazar personally summoned PO1 Edmar Costo, who is assigned at the Police Community Precinct 1 of the Paranaque City Police.

Eleazar said the victim, Joel Mametis, is being contacted so that he can file cases of simple misconduct and slight physical injury against the erring policeman.

In the meantime, Costo has been reassigned to the Regional Headquarters Support Group (RHSG) of the NCRPO.

SCOLDED. NCRPO Director Chief Supt. Guillermo Eleazar (right) reprimands PO1 Edmar Costo of the Parañaque City Police after he was caught on video slapping a bus driver at the corner of Roxas Boulevard and Redemptorist Street. (Photo courtesy: NCRPO Public Information Office)

Around 5:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Costo confronted Mametis, driver of Valisno Express Bus with plate number TXV 220 for causing traffic at the corner of Roxas Boulevard and Redemptorist Street.

Costo went up to the bus to issue a traffic citation ticket to Mametis but the latter allegedly tried to bribe the police officer.

An altercation ensued after Mametis refused to give his driver’s license and yelled at the police officer.

Costo admitted to have slapped the bus driver’s face in anger. (PNA)

 

Have a Friendship Route sticker but entering other parts of BF Homes? You need to get a gate pass.

$
0
0

FYI, Las Pinas Friendship Route sticker holders — you need to get a pass from the BF Homes main gates before you can enter the parts of BF Homes that are not part of the Friendship Route.

One netizen learned this the hard way last week as he tried to enter the Elizalde gate on his way to a dinner appointment in one of the restaurants along Aguirre Ave.

Since he could usually do so before, he passed the Concha Cruz gate to get inside BF Homes from his residence in Pilar Village and did not leave his driver’s license since the guard didn’t stop him because his vehicle had the Friendship Route sticker on it.

Upon encountering the small gate along Elizalde St. leading to Aguirre Ave., he was stopped by the guard since he didn’t have a resident or non-resident sticker.

The guard asked him for his gate pass instead.

Surprised, since he used to be able to pass through both El Grande and Elizalde gates to get to Aguirre and other parts of BF, he asked if he could just leave his license there so he didn’t need to go back to the Concha Cruz gate.

The guards assigned there said they were not authorized to safe-keep the license since they were only there until 10pm and just asked them politely to go back to the Concha gate.

Since he still had time and didn’t want to pay any penalties, the Las Pinas villager complied and went back to the Concha gate to get the gate pass.

So we tried the steps that the villager followed this weekend.

Please see below:

  1. Inform the guard where you are headed inside BF Homes

Talking to the guard.

We told the guard we were having lunch at a restaurant (Inanang — free plugging for you, hehe) in Aguirre Ave. and if we would need to get a gate pass from him or if we could just go there straight.

The guard told us we had to leave our license and get a gate pass.

2. Leave your driver’s license and secure a gate pass

 

Check out the violations and fines behind the gate pass. Needs to be proofread as well, we think.

We gave him our license in exchange for the gate pass.

We were also told not to exit in any of the other gates of BF Homes or we would have to pay a fine of P500 if caught.

3. Show the gate pass to the El Grande or Elizalde gate

Once the guard lowers the beam, just show him your gate pass. He will double-check and ask where you are going so just tell the guard your destination then he will let you pass.

You will again be reminded not to exit in the other gates apart from where you entered.

4. Surrender gate pass and get your driver’s license back upon exit

Exit only at the gate you entered in.

 

There you go.

Just so you don’t have to drive back to the gate where you entered.

Remember, non-resident vehicles caught without sticker or gate pass will be fined P1,000.

Drive safely, everyone and follow all traffic rules and regulations.

 

MMDA clarifies “crossing” on Alabang-Zapote Road with regard to Number Coding scheme

$
0
0

“Crossing” in AZ Road means just that…crossing.

Following an apprehension by MMDA personnel of an Alabang villager last week for crossing Alabang-Zapote Road, Alabang Bulletin sought to clarify what “crossing” meant in the Unified Vehicle Volume Reduction Program or Number Coding scheme.

Not allowed, according to the MMDA.

It can be recalled that an Inter-Agency Council on Traffic or i-ACT was formed with representation from the Department of Transportation (DOTr), MMDA, Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board, Land Transportation Office, Philippine National Police-Highway Patrol Group and the Metro Manila Council.

This agency, sensing no improvements on vehicular traffic in the metro, extended the Number Coding scheme from 7am to 7pm to 7am to 8pm with some roads (those with heavier volume and traffic) not implementing window hours.

Alabang-Zapote Road was one of those roads.

Alabang-Zapote Road traverses from Las Pinas to Muntinlupa.

Las Pinas employs the Number Coding scheme while Muntinlupa does not — now, except for Alabang-Zapote Road (and Commerce Ave. as implemented by Barangay Ayala Alabang).

Part of the announcement of this new time coverage was that “crossing” the road was allowed.

So since the incident of the said villager happened in Muntinlupa, Alabang Bulletin reached out to the Muntinlupa Traffic and Management Bureau.

They informed us that since they do not implement Number Coding in all Muntinlupa roads (again, except for Commerce Ave. — which, again, is under the jurisdiction of Barangay Ayala Alabang), they do not apprehend violators as well — even on Alabang-Zapote Road.

So we contacted MMDA and here was how the conversation went:

 

So this statement by the MMDA should clarify it.

Only straight crossing (BF Resort to Casimiro in Las Pinas, for example) is allowed.

As mentioned by the MMDA, even traversing less than five meters is already a violation and not considered “crossing”.

Las Pinas City also does not have window hours, by the way.

Some groups are now seeking an audience with MMDA to see if there can be some exemptions to this “Crossing Rule”.

Let us all stay tuned.

 


CAVITEX partially opens new flyover

$
0
0

Reduce travel time by 15 to 20 minutes!

This is the mission of the two newly-opened lanes of the Manila-Cavite Expressway as the Department of Public Works and Highways launched them last Aug. 1.

Photo from the CAVITEX website.

Imagine, there are some 145,000 cars that pass CAVITEX daily so the two new lanes will definitely help.

According to DPWH Secretary Mark Villar, the new southbound flyover as well as the road widening from Manila International Airport Authority to Zapote make up the Phase 1 of the project and is expected to be complete within the month.

Phase 2 construction will begin by September.

This will comprise of the widening of three CAVITEX bridges in Wawa, Las Pinas and Paranaque.

There are plans to connect CAVITEX with the proposed C5-Southlink (which spans the cities of Taguig, Las Pinas and Paranaque) and the Cavite-Laguna Expressways until Mamplasan, Binan.

Imagine that!

 

DPWH drainage project in Parañaque ‘unnecessary, overpriced, delayed’

$
0
0

From inquirer.net: (by Matthew Reysio-Cruz)

 

On President’s Avenue which cuts through Barangay BF Homes in Parañaque City, a drainage project on a 220-meter stretch of the busy road has been giving motorists and business owners a headache since it began in March.

But its most glaring effects — unprecedented gridlock and impassable storefront driveways—may be the least of the problems posed by the project.

The head of a group that monitors public works spending said the P8.8-million drainage system was “unnecessary, obscenely overpriced and excessively delayed.”

According to Citizens Infrastructure Integrity Watchdog (Infrawatch), President’s Avenue, which is both a residential and commercial hub in the city’s largest village, already has existing drainage systems on both sides of the two-lane road.

Photo from Inquirer.net

Flood-control project

A signboard in the area indicated that the project, described as a form of “flood control,” was being implemented by the Metro Manila 2nd District Engineering Office of the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), with L.M. Canlas Construction as contractor.

In an interview, Parañaque Mayor Edwin Olivarez said he was “monitoring” the project.

Although an initiative of the DPWH, there should have been a building permit from the City Engineer’s Office for construction to begin, he added.

 

 

 

Drainage system no. 3

Olivarez said the DPWH had informed him that the two existing drainage systems “could not handle the volume of water” being dumped by strong rains on President’s Avenue.

Reached for comment, District Engineer Arleen Beltran referred the Inquirer to Flor Catuday, the project engineer for the drainage system who in turn said that, as the implementing party, she was not privy to the project’s rationale.

However, the executive director of Infrawatch, Ricardo Ramos, was incredulous.

A resident for seven years of Tahanan Village where the entrance is on President’s Avenue, Ramos told the Inquirer that he could not recall any flooding issues since 2012, when the second drainage was installed.

He also argued that if it was true that the two existing drains were not working, it would mean that Olivarez and the city government had been remiss in their duties.

Ramos, who previously chaired Task Force Boracay for the Department of Tourism in 1988, also took note of the cost of the third drainage system—a whopping P8,821,225.

The simplest way to understand how overpriced it was, he said, was to compare it to the cost of building a two-lane road at a width of 3.35 meters per lane, the DPWH standard.

The drainage project, at P8.8 million for 220 meters, comes down to P40 million per kilometer. By comparison, the going price of a two-lane road was only P20 million per kilometer, he said.

“So this one-lane drainage project is more expensive than a two-lane national road? I’m being conservative [when I] say that [the drainage system] could be done for P5 million. It could actually be done for half the price,” Ramos said.

He added that the DPWH was using reinforced concrete pipes (RCPs) to channel the water into a nearby creek when high-density polyethylene pipes, which are being used in Boracay, could serve the same purpose and were at least 50-percent cheaper.

Ramos also took note of the “huge” 36-inch diameter of the RCPs, when a 24-inch diameter would have been more appropriate given the short length of the drainage and the existence of two others on the same road.

Four-month delay

But perhaps the most glaring detail on the project’s signboard is one that could be easily missed. It listed the project’s target date of completion as Nov. 16, 2017, although construction started four months after the supposed completion date.

Menoy Gimenez, the owner of Tito Chef, one of the restaurants affected by the project, said their guard had recorded on a logbook that work on the road began only on March 17 this year.

“We’re just exasperated,” Gimenez said. “I try not to make it the centerpiece of my day but of course, it’s a cause for concern.”

Catuday told the Inquirer that construction should have started in May last year, but there were delays due to the difficulty of obtaining a clearance from the village.

She also cited a Metropolitan Manila Development Authority-initiated moratorium on excavations and complaints from affected store owners.

“Just one small move and objections started to erupt,” Catuday said.

Even so, Ramos maintained that the six months allotted by the DPWH to complete the project was too long.

Ramos said he himself built a 300-square-meter, four-bedroom house at Ayala Alabang Village in 1987 in the same amount of time the DPWH had set aside for the drainage project.

He outlined the process of building a drainage system—which includes excavating the road, laying down the concrete pipes, compacting and pouring concrete—which “could be finished in one month, even factoring in all the possible delays.”

Glacial-paced work

“This is a job that can be done in one month that they cannot even finish in five,” said Ramos, who noted that workers were rarely onsite and had moved at a “glacial pace” after accomplishing partial concreting on top of the RCPs weeks ago.

“The mayor should have gone ballistic already,” added Ramos, who contended that Beltran, the district engineer, should be fired by President Duterte, who was supposedly “concerned about the slow pace of implementation of DPWH projects.”

Although small in comparison to the agency’s most ambitious projects under the administration’s “Build, Build, Build” program, Ramos said the drainage system was a microcosm of the ills that pervaded the DPWH from top to bottom.

If it could not be trusted with minor projects, “what more with the multibillion flagship projects under Build, Build, Build?” he asked.

 

The Village Square Alabang releases destinations and schedules for shuttle service

$
0
0

The Village Square Alabang finally released more information about its shuttle services offering for the people in the south.

Please see graphics below:

 

The prescribed pick-up location is near Entrance 3 of the mall along Concha Cruz Drive.

The mall also clarified that the “shuttle service only picks up from the mall and does not offer round trip” or does not have terminals in other areas.

This was what residents were asking before.

So to all those asking — no, they only offer pick-ups from the mall.

Hopefully the guards now know about the shuttle service too as there were several residents who complained that the guards didn’t know about any shuttle services when they asked a couple of weeks ago.

Some villagers also told us about their experience of waiting in line for a couple of hours before a van showed up.

Hopefully this has been addressed as well.

Efforts to reach The Village Square Alabang officials via Facebook and Instagram have been unsuccessful as well but we will update everyone once they reply.

We are asking them about a statement of one resident saying the BGC route needing to drop off passengers in Makati first before heading to Taguig.

We will clarify as soon as they reply or as soon as someone who has taken the route can confirm.

Please feel free to message us or comment here how this particular shuttle service is going.

Ride safe, southies!

 

Paranaque reveals latest recipients of housing program

$
0
0

From Manila Standard:

 

Two hundred more homeless Parañaque City residents will benefit from the social housing project of the city government as it identified the latest beneficiaries who will receive their respective certificates of ownership early next year.

This developed yesterday after Mayor Edwin Olivarez disclosed the city will be allocating P15 million in next year’s city budget for the housing project dubbed “Bagong Parañaque Homes III” in C-5 Extension in Barangay La Huerta.

According to Olivarez, the identified beneficiaries are hundreds of families mostly residing near the runway of Ninoy Aquino International Airport and Airport Village in Barangay Moonwalk.The remaining beneficiaries are long-time informal settlers whose shanties are located in danger zones, riverbanks, creeks, and those with court demolition orders in several barangays in District I.

During his birthday last week, Olivarez also turned over 204 housing units to beneficiaries of “Bagong Parañaque Homes II” located in the same housing project in Barangay La Huerta.

The mayor also unveiled three other major projects of his administration―the new Materials Recovery Facility, the City Motorpool, and the Animal Shelter, all located near the housing project.

The housing units are given free to the beneficiaries, who will only pay the city government the cost of the land on easy installment terms.

The city’s socialized housing project are two-story condominiums to optimize the use of scarce and costly land in Parañaque.

It sits on three hectares of land owned by the city government which, when fully developed, can accommodate about 1,000 housing units, PIO chief Mar Jimenez announced.

He said among the beneficiaries since the project started in 2015 are families from Bacass, Hotiveros in Barangay San Antonio; Balicanta in Barangay Don Bosco, and Icarna in Moonwalk.

Last April 2015, the local government also turned over 144 housing units to beneficiaries of “Bagong Parañaque Homes I.”

The construction of the housing units was realized through the initiative of the city government with the help from Department of Interior and Local Government, Rotary International District 3830 Rotary Homes Foundation Inc., and Couples for Christ-ANCOP Tekton Foundation Inc.

It was also implemented by Habitat for Humanity Phils. and South Metro Manila iHome Foundation Inc., a National Housing Authority-accredited NGO implementing builder.

 

PNP, pinag-iingat ang publiko sa bagong telecom modus na “robocalls”

$
0
0

From msn.com:

By Kurtney Reyes

 

May bagong telecommunication scam naman ngayon ang kumakalat ayon sa Philippine National Police Anti-Cybercrime Group (PNP-ACG). Ang modus na ito ay tinatawag na “robocalls” o tokhang telecom fraud.

Nalaman ng KAMI na sa fraud scam na ito ay makakatanggap ng tawag ang isang tao at may maririnig na voice recording ng isang babae na magsasabing nasangkot ang may-ari ng phone sa ilegal na droga.

“Paalala: Ito ang departamento ng pulisya ng lungsod para sa iyong kaalaman na kasalukuyang nasangkot ka sa isang nakabinbing kaso ng ilegal na droga.”

Ayon naman kay Chief Inspector Joseph Villaran, i-re-redirect daw ang tawag sa isang police officer at ipapasa muli sa isa pang police officer para sabihing totoo diumano ang tawag.

Base sa report ng ABS-CBN News, nagbigay ng babala ang PNP-ACG sa publiko at pinatawang ang telco companies na Smart, Globe at PLDT upang makipagtulungan sa modus na ito.

Naniniwala naman ang telco companies na random ang pagpili ng mga sindikato kung sino ang tatawagan. Ayo sa Head ng Sector Relation ng Globe Telecom na si Robert Bobby Aquino, siya mismo ay nakatanggap ng tawag na may recording nga ng babae at nagsabing sangkot siya sa kaso ng ilegal na droga.

May mga paalala rin ang PNP-ACG, kapag nakatanggap ng ganitong tawag ay huwag na ituloy ang pakikipag-usap at ibaba na ang tawag. I-screenshot ang text message o ang call log. At saka naman magreport sa pinakamalapit na police station.

Noong November last year ay nakipagtulungan ang Chinese police sa PNP dahil sa diumano modus ng mga Chinese at Taiwanese na ang IP address ay nasa Pilipinas. Sa modus na ito ay nagpapanggap sila bilang pulis, prosecutor o judge para sa mga biktima nila sa China.

Sasabihin sa modus na sangkot ang isang tao sa kasong involved diumano ang cellphone number nila kaya naman upang matulungan raw ay kailangan nila magbukas ng bagong account. Kapag nabukas naman ng account at matapos mag transfer ay diretsong mata-transfer na ito sa account ng mga sindikato.

Passport on Wheels and NBI Clearance processing for BF Homes residents on-going!

$
0
0

For those having a difficult time in securing passport renewal/application appointments, please see below:

 

 

For those wanting to renew their NBI Clearances:

Paranaque Integrated Terminal Exchange (PITX) now 96% complete!

$
0
0

Good news for commuters from the south!

Malapit na!

One of three intermodal terminals being launched by the Department of Transportation, PITX “will serve as the transfer point for provincial an in-city transportation, covering busy thoroughfares in the EDSA, Baclaran and Taft areas.”

Poised as a one-stop terminal for different transport modes and services, PITX is almost done!

According to DOTr, the final touches include the online ticketing and booking system and the RFID tagging of buses. Wow!

“PITX aims to provide seamless interconnectivity of the different modes for transportation from the neighboring provinces south of Metro Manila to ensure a safe, convenient and hassle-free travel experience for the commuting public,” according to DOTr.

The state-of-the-art bus terminal is located between Macapagal Boulevard and CAVITEX.

Additional information gathered by Alabang Bulletin revealed that the terminal will be the ultimate converging point of jeepneys, buses, taxis, trains and other public utility vehicles.

It will also have a link to LRT 1 South Extension.

PITX also boasts of a Centralized Ticketing System so passengers can book in advance and print tickets online. Cash and credit / debit card payments will also be honored.

 


Alabang to Terminal 3 and back? Please check the schedule here.

$
0
0

Running for a few months now, the HM Airport Loop Bus Terminal is located beside Starmall Alabang (where the bus to Lawton is, near BPI).

The fare is P60.

For the schedule, please see below:

Alabang to Terminal 3:

Monday to Friday
First Trip – 6:10am
Second Trip – 7:10am
Third Trip – 8:10am
Fourth Trip – 9:10am
Fifth Trip – P10:30am
Sixth Trip – 12 noon
Last Trip – 1:00pm
Saturday
First Trip – 6:30am
Second Trip – 7:30am
Third Trip – 8:30am
Fourth Trip – 9:30am
Last Trip – 11:00am
Sunday
First Trip – 6:30am
Second Trip – 7:30am
Third Trip – 8:30am

The bus terminal for Terminal 3 to Alabang can be found after Bay 12 where the other bus/shuttle services are.

They also make a stop in Alabang Market.

Terminal 3 to Alabang:

Monday to Friday
First Trip – 7:45am
Second Trip – 9:10am
Third Trip – 10:30am
Fourth Trip- 11:30am
Fifth Trip – 5:15pm
Sixth Trip – 6:30pm
Last Trip – 8:10pm
Saturday
First Trip – 7:30am
Second Trip – 8:30am
Third Trip – 5:15pm
Fourth Trip – 6:30pm
Last Trip – 8:10pm
Sunday
First Trip – 5:15pm
Second Trip – 6:30pm
Last Trip – 8:10pm

But…be don’t be too happy.

Sometimes the buses don’t follow their schedules.

When we went to the bus terminal to go to Terminal 3 at around 1:15pm for the 2:30pm departure, alas, the bus wasn’t there.

The guard said the bus left at around 12:30pm since the driver decided that no passengers would be showing up anymore.

Yey but still be wary.

Happy Trip, everyone!

But wait, there’s more! You can now go to the airport via Alabang Town Center too!

$
0
0

Not only can us southies take a P2P bus from Starmall Alabang to Terminal 3 but now we can also get to the airport from Alabang Town Center!

Launched last week, the UBE Express service will let us go to not only Terminal 3 but also Terminals 1, 2 and 4.

Photo by Ditas Arambulo Antenor from Facebook

According to a flyer distributed around the area last week, there will be daily trips starting 6:30am until 9:00pm — to and from!

Fare will be P110 per passenger.

According to netizen Ditas Arambulo Antenor, the route is as follows:

NORTHBOUND:

First stop will be NAIA Terminal 3 (Arrival area Bay 10) then NAIA Terminal 1 then NAIA Terminal 2 then with NAIA Terminal 4 as the last stop.

The bus will then head back to NAIA Terminal 3 (Bay 10) to pick up passengers to go back to Alabang Town Center.

UBE Express will also pick up southbound passengers in Terminal 1 and 2 but will not stay for a long time.
SOUTHBOUND:

The buses will go straight to Alabang Town Center from Terminal 3.

For more details, you may contact them at the following numbers:

09156546115
09254411957
234-3439

You can also reach them via their Facebook Page.

 

Again, happy travels, everyone!

DILG orders mayors to rid nat’l highways of pedicabs, tricycles

$
0
0

From ptvnews.ph:

 

MANILA — The Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) is reiterating its call to all city and municipal mayors to ban pedicabs and tricycles along national highways, whether in Metro Manila or in the provinces.

“For safety reasons, no tricycle or pedicab should operate on national highways utilized by four-wheel vehicles greater than four tons and where normal speed exceeds 40 kilometers per hour,” DILG officer-in-charge, Secretary Eduardo M. Año said in a news release Tuesday.

From The Philippine Star

Año said while the government recognizes that tricycle and pedicab operations provide livelihood and income to Filipinos, both in the urban center and rural areas, “allowing them on main thoroughfares poses hazards to other motor vehicles, the riding public, and even to the drivers themselves.”

“The regulation of tricycles and pedicabs on national highways is, therefore, to the best interest of everyone,” he said.

He said vehicles may only be allowed by concerned Sangguniang Panlungsod (city council) or Sangguniang Bayan (municipal council) to traverse main highways if there is no other alternative route.

Photo from The Philippine Daily Inquirer

Año reiterated the Department’s directive after receiving reports from its field offices regarding the unregulated operation of tricycles and pedicabs along main thoroughfares which poses serious hazards to the passengers, drivers, and other vehicles.

He said under the Local Government Code, city and municipal mayors, through their respective sanggunians, are authorized to regulate the operation of tricycles within their territorial jurisdiction, subject to the guidelines prescribed by the Department of Transportation.

He also urged local authorities to strictly adhere to the standards and guidelines provided by Memorandum Circular 2007-01, which contains the basic considerations in the preparation of city or municipal tricycle and pedicab franchise and regulatory ordinance or code.

Said guidelines include banning of tricycle and pedicab operations along national highways; prohibiting said vehicles to carry more passengers and goods than what they are designed for, or more than what is authorized in the franchise, among others. (DILG PR/PNA)

 

Parañaque City councilors face complaint over gambling permits

$
0
0

From Manila Bulletin by Czarina Nicole Ong:

 

Parañaque City Councilors John Ryan Yllana and Edwin Benzon and two others are facing a graft and breach of conduct complaint before the Office of the Ombudsman due to the reportedly anomalous issuance of the Letter of No Objection (LONO) on several gambling businesses, including the controversial Nayong Pilipino project.

Executive Assistant III Rick Villanueva from Yllana’s office is likewise included in the complaint for violations of R.A. 3019 or the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act, R.A. 6713 or the Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for Public Officials.

Councilor Brillante Inciong, the complainant, accused Yllana, Benzon and Villanueva yesterday of “excessive corruption” involving the issuance of the LONO – something that businesses wishing to operate a State-regulated and licensed gambling establishment must first seek from the Sangguniang Panlungsod.

Councilor Ryan Yllana

Because of Parañaque’s strategic location for foreign investors, there has been an upswing on the number of gambling businesses being established such as off-shore, off-track betting, online casinos, and integrated resort and casino operations, among many others.

The LONO is a pre-requisite before the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation (PAGCOR) or Philippine Chairty Sweepstakes Office (PCSO) issues a license or franchise to gambling businesses.

Unfortunately, Inciong said this became an opportunity for unscrupulous city officials to take advantage of their positions.

During the 6th Council from 2013 to 2016, resolutions with the nature of LONO were approved undergoing normal parliamentary procedure – filing of the draft resolution, endorsement to the appropriate committee, submission of a committee report, then finally approval by the Sangguniang.

Councilor Edwin Benzon

However, there had been several instances where an approval did not undergo the proper procedure and was approved through the “Suspended Rules,” said Inciong.

This was made possible by Yllana, as majority floor leader, by waiving the committee meetings and submission of committee reports concerning LONO applications. As a result, gambling operations managed to expedite their applications and bypass the games and amusement committee being chaired by Inciong.

In one instance on April 12, 11 LONO resolutions were waived and Inciong had an argument with Yllana about it. He was placated by fellow councilors Bengzon and Wahoo Sotto, but the remaining councilors still moved for the passage of the LONO resolutions.

On April 19, Inciong claimed that he was approached by Villanueva, who tried giving him a paper bag supposedly containing an unspecified amount of money. Villanueva said these came from “Boss Ryan” and was intended for the “LONOs before.”

Inciong informed Villanueva after the conversation that he was being recorded. Since he refused the money, another attempt was reportedly made by Bengzon and another councilor, Pablo Gabriel Jr., on April 26 in the legislative building and at Crabiz restaurant. They were not successful.

During a hearing held that same day, the Sangguniang Panlungsod interposed “no objection” LONO to the NayonLanding project of the Nayong Pilipino Foundation.

On October 5, 2017, Yllana even name-dropped Ombudsman Special Prosecutor Edilberto Sandoval as the owner of YRB Solutions Inc. and Genx Sports and Media Production Inc. in the hopes of convincing Inciong to waive the committee report.

Sandoval reportedly wanted a “swift and smooth passage of the LONO,” said Inciong, but when he asked Sandoval about it, he denied having any business interest in the off-shore businesses.

Inciong also cited TV personality Erwin Tulfo as the owner of Genx Sports and Media Productions Inc., who reportedly wanted Inciong to “participate in the proceedings” for the immediate passage of the LONO. Once again, he objected.

Inciong stressed that he had been subjected to several bribery attempts, but he never received any single peso. Because of his refusal to cooperate with other councilors, he was stripped off his chairmanship of games and amusement by Yllana on June 21, 2018.

It was only his committee that had a change in chairmanship, whereas the other committees remained intact.

“With all these being said, it can only be inferred that there is a paper mill in the Sangguniang Panlungsod of Parañaque particularly for the issuance of LONO resolutions favoring companies that promise and give grease money,” the complaint read.

 

VIDEO: Woman gang raped in Paranaque; Suspects captured

Viewing all 183 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>