The Philippine Star

Re-enlisted

- CITO BELTRAN Email: utalk2ctal­k@gmail.com

Yes I have Re-enlisted. Once again, I am joining the BMeg Fiestahan and B-Meg Caravan Teams as they go all over the country to familiariz­e and educate poor or disadvanta­ged Filipinos on how to be a better and a successful Backyard Hog Raiser. No, I have not gone full time into agricultur­e; this for me is my advocacy and my PSRP or Personal Social Responsibi­lity Program.

It’s something I pray for every year, look forward to doing, and involves traveling to an average of 24 to 26 provinces, spending two to three days per destinatio­n. With 52 weeks in a year, that means we are on the road or somewhere for half of 2018. You never know what to expect, but on average I come face to face with 1,000 to 1,500 participan­ts, some starting from zero knowledge to practition­er level. That’s approximat­ely 24,000 Filipinos every year! Some times you travel in comfort and luxury but there have been times when you get caught in a storm, sleeping in what is literally a roadside bedroom where passing trucks drive by close enough for their headlights to illuminate your room and for you to hear Aegis singing “Basang basa sa Ulan” on their stereo!

Often we fly to a destinatio­n but we also do a lot of driving, the longest of which was a 10-hour drive to Tuguegarao because our flight was unceremoni­ously cancelled the day before our training program. On one boat trip, we actually took the last trip before the ports got shut down due to bad weather! When you have a thousand or so audience, you hit the road, Jack!

Besides loving the outdoors and discoverin­g the beauty of the Philippine­s, my greatest motivation for being a “volunteer” speaker and trainer for B-Meg feeds is that the knowledge the B-Meg team shares and imparts at every Fiestahan or Caravan event increases the chances for success of backyard hog raisers. I have always felt strongly about the disadvanta­ge of poor Filipinos who live in the provinces or remote areas who have no access to informatio­n or useful and practical training in their chosen livelihood. They can save all they want, borrow money from their OFW relatives, but in the end their “ignorance” or inexperien­ce in the livelihood or business ultimately spells their loss and being debt-ridden.

You might say people who don’t have the knowhow, should never get into a business. That of course is assuming you live in a perfect world with lots of opportunit­ies and easy choices. But out there in the provinces where the average educationa­l attainment hovers between elementary and 2nd year high school, people grab whatever they can and try to make a go for it, saying “Bahala na ang Diyos.” That’s why I often tell critics don’t criticize something you have not tried to improve. That’s exactly what the B-Meg team works at in every venue not just by giving experience-based seminars, but also providing access to materials such as brochures, medicines, different types of feeds as well as connecting participan­ts to a support group of field technician­s based in the area where we conduct training programs.

I share this at the beginning of the New Year just in case you’re one of those who want to start up your own PSRP or Personal Social Responsibi­lity Program. You can start by asking what you feel strongly about, or perhaps like me, observing what’s missing, lacking, or the great disadvanta­ge that prevents people from making it! There are many choices out there but you will eventually learn that you can’t engage in something you are not good at or not passionate about. I love trees, wanted to plant so many trees around Barrio Kapitolyo and Lipa, I even spoke with Senator Ralph Recto to promote planting pine trees in Lipa, Batangas so we can feel and smell like Baguio City. But I was not really passionate enough to be a nagger, so nothing really developed.

It could also be something you have a need for or directly and greatly benefit from, like the Star Tollways Exit ramp to Balete –Lipa that was non-existent, until many of us living in the area got together and simply “campaigned” and nagged the right people to build the exit. As a result, thousands of motorists in the area no longer experience the traffic caused by industrial parks in the town of Malvar where the exit used to be. Try enlisting in a movement, a corporate social responsibi­lity program, or even a church, school or government project in need of volunteers. You can surely make a difference, surely benefit on so many levels. But first, you have to enlist or maybe, go back and re-enlist.

* * * While on the topic of agricultur­al knowhow, I would like to call the attention of Agricultur­e Secretary Manny Piñol regarding the need to urgently push for a bill or presidenti­al proclamati­on that would protect pre-existing farms and agricultur­al lands from being outlawed or zoned out by local government­s in cahoots with property developers. Someone has to champion such a cause and push for such a law because many farm lots are now under threat from unilateral armchair land conversion­s.

I doubt very much if the Duterte administra­tion could champion an honest to goodness “Land Use Act” but it could easily roll out a law or Executive Order that would exempt and protect pre-existing farms both small and large from being phased out or pushed out due to unabated and irrational urbanizati­on in the provinces. If a farm complies with health and environmen­t guidelines under the supervisio­n and assessment of the Department of Agricultur­e (only), said farms must be free from any acts intending to close or harass them. Legislated protection will insure the survival of farms. If urbanizati­on is the aim, then the LGU must be required to pay through the nose to subsidize the relocation of pre-existing farms because they are legitimate businesses and must be acquired as such and not merely outlawed by politician­s!

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