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Saturday, November 19, 2011

November Spring

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Labels: Armed Forces of the Philippines, Bukluran, Communist Party, Lucio Tan, MalacaƱang, MILF, November Spring, Noynoy Aquino, outsourcing, PAL, PALEA, Partido Manggagawa, Peping Cojuangco, retrenchment
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Rescue Olympics - rules of the game

August 6, 2014


The Honorable Joseph A. Main
Assistant Secretary of Labor for Mine Safety and Health
Office of the Assistant Secretary
Mine Safety and Health Administration
Department of Labor


Dear Assistant Secretary Main:

For the last five years, the Rotary Club Manila East has been actively sponsoring the holding of a limited national capital region - Metropolitan Manila Philippines fire rescue contest at the Rizal Park in the City of Manila.

Our group in the Philippines, the Resource Recovery Movement (RRM) organized by the Center Humanes Societas Inc., has determined to hold an event of national scale similar to the Mine Rescue Contest of the MSHA of the United States. We would like permission to publish the adaptation of your rules into our contest rules for our targeted publics to be aware of them.

In this connection, we would like to utilize all of the salient points of the Mine Rescue Contest for the contest rules of the Rescue competitions that we will be organizing - hopefully in cooperation with the Rotary Club of the Philippines - under the Urban Rescue category.

Thank you so very much and we hope if you and your people have got the time to write us, kindly send us any useful suggestions on how to make our rescue competition event a real success.

Shown below is the draft of the rules as we adapted them that could still stand a number of corrections.

More power to MSHA!

Very truly yours,


Centre Humanes Societas Inc.
Philippines

Power Sector, Calamities

Forecasts and Power Shortage Prevention

Focus on Power Sector Concerns I - Philippines. July 13, 2014 - publication prepared before the onset of Typhoon Rammasun ( Glenda ).
Download pdf file.

Focus on Power Sector Concerns II - Philippines. August 4, 2014 - publication prepared after Typhoon Rammasun - Glenda and during the period of Typhoon Halong ( Jose ) incorporating short publication on the immediate post-Typhoon Glenda period.
Download pdf file.

Thank You UN, ICRC, Supporting Countries and Relief Groups!

Thank you ICRC and Philippine Red Cross for all your efforts after #Yolanda in the affected Regions of the Philippines! More power to you! Godspeed and God bless you!

Thank you United Nations and United Nations OCHA (Director Khalikov), United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Risk Reduction (Secretary Margareta Wahlstrom) for relief and recovery assistance, for your Flash Appeal world wide and to Excellency Ban Ki Moon for taking the time off his very busy schedule to visit Tacloban City! May God bless all of you and more power to you!

A very warm Merry Christmas and Happy New Year greetings to all your people, officers and workers all over the world!!! We love you all together with all those kind and generous ones from a myriad of countries and relief organizations that shared time, resources, blood sweat and tears for the victims of recent Philippine disaster!

Support the Geohazards Mapping Summit 2014 in Manila

Conference Agenda

Agenda


Conference Schedule

Program

Download Conference Schedule


Summit Agenda

Forecasting with more confidence

Reiterating call for new paradigms

Hyogo Framework on Disaster Risk Reduction


Web Sites

Google +: Hazards Mapping and Environment Summit

Google +: One Festival

Facebook.com: Hazards Mapping and Environment Summit

Facebook.com: One Festival

Communique to United Nations


2010 HMES References

2010 Briefing Paper


Contact Us

Write to:

info@qualitychange.org

hazmapping@gmail.com

hazmappingsummit@gmail.com

saferecover@msn.com

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Post-Disaster


Reconstruction and Recovery


The World Bank says thattimely reconstruction will help lessen the impact of super typhoon Yolanda. Before we digest these words, it is also significant to look back into the past.

There was a time in fairly recent past when NBC news anchor Brian Williamssounded like a broken record repeating the words over and over again that: Aviation in the United States of America is dying.

This is now true with Philippine air line companies and selected several other businesses in the Philippines right at this very moment.

During the post-Yolanda period, only at least one air line company that very enterprisingly lowered its passenger rates (presumably including for cargo) per seat-mile, notwithstanding that the Philippine government ordered that a number of fees and charges being levied in the aviation sector will be waived, among other behests in order to lessen the burden for victims of the calamity and those that had to fly to ground zero to participate in disaster relief and recovery operations. It is not difficult to hear a wisecrack such as: this suddenly successful air line company must have entered into a conspiracy with Yolanda just to boost its sales. More > >

Fighting Climate Change Distracts Governments

After the 2005 Hyogo Conference, scientists urged the United Nations to consider that the various conflicting issues surrounding Climate Change is "distracting governments" from providing solutions to threats of disasters worldwide.
"The current UN focus on "fighting climate change," as illustrated in the Nov. 27 UN Development Programme's Human Development Report, is distracting governments from adapting to the threat of inevitable natural climate changes, whatever forms they may take. National and international planning for such changes is needed, with a focus on helping our most vulnerable citizens adapt to conditions that lie ahead. Attempts to prevent global climate change from occurring are ultimately futile, and constitute a tragic misallocation of resources that would be better spent on humanity's real and pressing problems."
A letter written to UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon ventilated sentiments of scientists and technology experts on the issue of focusing deeper into finding means to adapt to the threat of climate change.

HMES

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