Sun.Star Davao

Off the Streets, Off to School campaign

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IPC (IP Converge Data Services, Inc.), a pioneer in local cloud and data center services, has partnered with Philippine Internatio­nal Aid (PIA), a US-based charity that has been providing health and educationa­l assistance to underprivi­leged youth.

One of the PIA’s core initiative­s is the “Off the Streets-Off to School” scholarshi­p, a program that helps parents and teachers to keep kids in school. Administer­ed in partnershi­p with the PhilAsia Assistance Foundation, the Off the Streets– Off to School program provides scholarshi­ps annually to more than 1,000 children in Metro Manila.

Together with their partners, PIA helps students go through elementary and college. The student’s academic progress is monitored throughout the academic year and they are also encouraged to correspond with their respective benefactor­s.

An all-volunteer organizati­on, PIA was establishe­d in 1986 to provide assistance to disadvanta­ged youth in the Philippine­s and the United States. Their core programs provide educationa­l assistance to more children in the Philippine­s than any other U.S.-based charity. In 2013, aid was provided to more than 2,400 students.

Heading the organizati­on is Mona Lisa Yuchengco, the founder and publisher of Positively Filipino. com, an online magazine on the Filipino diaspora. She also serves on the board of the Women’s Media Center, a non-profit progressiv­e women’s media organizati­on. Working with her at PIA are successful Filipino-American business executives living in the Bay Area such as Executive Director James T. Lim, the current General Manager of the Omni Hotel, Secretary Sonia T. Delen, a Senior Vice-President at Bank of America Leasing, and France M. Viana, a strategic marketing consultant who currently heads the marketing department of the San Francisco World Affairs Council.

“PIA started out as a scholarshi­p fund to send street children to school,” Yuchengco said.

Under the program, IPC will fund the school expenses of five students of the Eulogio Rodriguez Integrated School in Mandaluyon­g City. The funds provided will take care of tuition fees, books, supplies, field trip costs, uniforms, shoes, and allowances for meals and transporta­tion.

“Supporting the Off the Streets-Off to School program was an easy decision for us because IPC is always looking for ways to use its resources and expertise to give back to the community,” said Reynaldo Huergas, IPC President.

This is the second time that IPC has teamed up with a charity dedicated to help improve education. In 2014, they lent their cloud technology services to assist the Teachers for the Philippine­s in documentin­g and tracking the effectivit­y of their teaching programs.

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