Monday, November 27, 2006

Destination Ilan

We've just been on the weekends in Ilan, on the Northeast Coast of Taiwan. Beautiful scenery, tasty food, and friendly people....awesome place. Plus, we had a taste of passing through the world's 5th longest tunnel (at 12.5km) on our way back to Taipei. Great weekends!

Now that I'm sober, I realize I haven't made a substantial job in uploading photos from Taichung to TaiwanPinoy site and we have some more on hand. So probably, Ilan will be the the last place we travel to this year. We'll be visiting the South (Chiayi, Tainan, Kaoshiung, Pingtung) once Taiwan's High Speed Rail is in operation, and as we are told, THSRC will start operation at the end of this year! Surely enough, on our way to Ilan when we are in Taipei's Main Train Station, we saw THSRC ticket vending machines, attendant booths, waiting lounges, and guidance signages ready. It's another event to watch out.

Keep your bookmarks, all pics will be in TaiwanPinoy.com very soon!

Monday, November 20, 2006

Misinformed DOLE Official

This news maybe a little late. But I'm just curious how informed our DOLE Officials are. Read the complete news in newsflash.org. What is intriguing is that the news says a DOLE official said:

"After a three-year contract, foreign workers, including Filipinos, are no longer allowed to return for employment in Taiwan"...

Three years? That was so years ago. At present the maximum allowed by Taiwan is 6 years! Do note that the news is dated Oct.10,2006 so we can safely assume that the statement is referring to the present foreign labor environment of Taiwan.

We could question the credibility of this news site, or the labor official who said it. If the latter is true, it's shivery. I assume that whoever is that DOLE Official is, he has an official say on Philippine-Taiwan Labor Relations. Now, how the world is he in that post? This official is not, at all cost, supposed to have a say on anything that affects employment and life of hundred-thousand Filipino. This kind of person is the last kind we need to be in DOLE or POEA or OWWA or any related government institution.

Ignorance is not an excuse...

Destination Taichung, Taiwan

Do you know what a Milefo is? Milefo is simply The Laughing Buddha. You've seen it many times, usually a few inches high. How about a few storeys high?

We've been recently in Taichung, the 3rd largest city of Taiwan (after Taipei and Kaoshiung), and home of the largest Laughing Buddha (sample pic below). Keep tab on taiwanpinoy.com, Taichung photos are coming very soon.

Saturday, November 18, 2006

The Better Side of The Philippines

I have this very interesting file sitting on my hard drive for some months now whose source I can't recall, I figure it's good to share it. I suppose it is not copyrighted, if so I surmise I could be forgiven for posting it in the spirit of keeping the Filipino spirit alive. Read on, feel good, smile....


THE BETTER SIDE OF THE PHILIPPINES

The following was written by INTEL General Manager Robin Martin about the Philippines:
Filipinos (including the press, business people and myself) tend to dwell too much on the negative side, and this affects the perception of foreigners, even the ones who have lived here for a while. The negative perception of the Philippines is way disproportionate to reality when compared to countries like Columbia, Egypt, Middle East, Africa, etc. Let us all help our country by balancing the negative with the positive especially when we talk to foreigners, whether based here or abroad.

Looking back and comparing the Philippines today and 1995 (the year I came back), I was struck by how much our country has progressed physically.

Consider the following:

1. The great telecom infrastructure that we have now did not exist in 1995. 1995 was the year the telecom industry was deregulated. Since then billions of dollars have been invested in both fixed line and cellular networks producing a system with over 5,000 kms of fiber optic backbone at a world competitive cost. From a fixed line capacity of about 900,000 in 1995 we now have over 7 million. Cellular phones practically did not exist in 1995; now we have over 11 million line capacity.

2. The MRT, many of the EDSA flyovers (including the Ayala Avenue flyover), the SKYWAY, Rockwell and Glorietta 4, the Fort, NAIA terminal 2 and most of the new skyscrapers were not yet built in 1995.

3. If you drive to the provinces, you will notice that national roads are now of good quality (international quality asphalt roads). I just went to Iba,Zambales last week and I was impressed that even a not so frequently travelled road was of very good quality.

4. Philippine exports have increased by 600% over the past eight years. There are many, many more examples of progress over the last eight years. Philippine mangoes are now exported to the US and Europe.

Additional tidbits to ponder:

1. INTEL has been in the Philippines for 28 years. The Philippines plant is where Intel's most advanced products are launched, including the Pentium IV. By the end of 2002, Philippine operations are expected to be Intel's biggest assembly and testing operations worldwide.

2. TEXAS INSTRUMENTS has been operating in Baguio for over 20 years. The Baguio plant is the largest producer of DSP chips in the world. DSP chips are the brains behind cellphones. TI's Baguio plant produces the chip that powers 100% of all NOKIA cellphones and 80% of Erickson cellphones in the world.

3. TOSHIBA laptops are produced in Santa Rosa,Laguna.

4. If you drive a BENZ, BMW, or a VOLVO, there is a good chance that the ABS system in your car was made in the Philippines.

5. TREND-MICRO, makers of one of the top anti virus software PC-Cillin develops its "cures" for viruses right here in Eastwood Libis, Quezon City. When a virus breaks in any computer system in the world, they try to find a solution within 45 minutes of finding the virus.

6. By the end of this year, it is expected that a majority of the top ten U.S. Call Center firms in the U.S. will have set up operations in the Philippines. This is one area in which I believe we are the best in the world in terms of value for money.

7. America Online (AOL) has 1,000 people in Clark answering 90% of AOL's global e-mail inquiries.

8. PROCTER & GAMBLE has over 400 people right here in Makati (average age 23 years) doing back-up office work to their Asian operations including finance, accounting, Human Resources and payments processing.

9. Among many other things it does for its regional operations network in the Asia-Pacific region here in Manila, CITIBANK also does its global ATM programming locally.

10. This is the first year ever that the Philippines will be exporting cars in quantity courtesy of FORD Philippines

11. The government is shedding off graft and corruption slowly but surely. This is the first time in our history that a former president is in jail and facing charges of plunder. Despite all odds, we are still pursuing the ill-gotten wealth of Marcos now enjoyed by his unrepentant heirs.


Next time you travel abroad and meet business associates tell them the good news. A big part of our problem is perception and one of the biggest battles can be won simply by believing and by making others believe.

TaiwanPinoy Take

On the telecom infrastructure of the Philippines:

It is widely known that because of savviness of Pinoys in text messaging, many text messaging applications were conceived in the Philippines. An example of that is a corporate database access via SMS application. Living in "hi-tech Taiwan" slightly ups your bar on tech matters, but this kind of product from the Philippines surely not fail to impress.


On the technological prowess of the Filipino people:

In Taiwan, Filipino is the 2nd biggest group of foreign workers. 1st and 3nd are Thai and Indonesians respectively (see 04/2006 Statistics here ). If you took a close look, 62% of Filipino and 85% of Thai are in the manufacturing sector. But it must be noted that the manufacturing sector accounts all undertakings from traditional (glass, metal, rubber, textile, plastic) to high-tech (electronics, electro-optical, computer, semiconductor) industries.
Filipinoes are mostly employed in more advanced tech companies. Of particular note is the increasing count of Filipinoes in white collar jobs particularly in the engineering field.

This message is shared by good citizens of the Philippines who persevere to hope and work for our country. Pass it on...

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Friday, November 17, 2006

TaiwanPinoy.com Update: Keelung Photos

Keelung Pics now on TaiwanPinoy.com. See it now!

If you want a more specific destination, get it here:
Keelung Harbor, Taiwan's 2nd biggest seaport.
Heping Island Park
Shiandong Cave
Baimiwang Fort
Jungjeng Park

Thursday, November 16, 2006

Fake papers slowing OFW deployment to Taiwan

Good news. A representative of TECO in Manila has confirmed that there is no ban of Filipino workers (OFW/OCW) in Taiwan. The representative said that the delays are caused by fake documents of applicants making verification longer, but will be back to normal once the problems are solved. It is consistent to the recent denial by CLA of the news released by the Philippines' Association of Placement Agencies that Taiwan is banning Pinoys coming to work in Taiwan.

Full story in INQ7.

Bad News to OFWs in Domestic Jobs

Here's a little late news, excerpt from INQ7 today (11/04/06, http://newsinfo.inq7.net/breakingnews/nation/view_article.php?article_id=30445 )

The PASEI (Phil Association of Service Exporters Inc.) is asking POEA to implement a “ladderized” salary system to Filipino domestic workers instead of 100% salary increase from $200 to $400. PASEI proposed $200, $300, $400 salaries depending on skill and occupation. The reason according to PASEI:

Doubling the minimum pay could lead to “massive contract substitution, increase in 'repro' of job orders (fake job orders), airport 'brazo' (immigration and airport officials bypassing legal procedures to allow departure of Filipino with questionable travel documents), and increase in illegal recruitment.”

Instead of outright increase of salaries for Filipinoes in overseas domestic works, they’re going to limit that because they can’t solve other lingering issues.


Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Important Links in TaiwanPinoy.com

Recently we added links to websites that may be of interest to all Pinoys in Taiwan. The list will be updated as we gather more information. For now, TaiwanPinoy.com has links to the sites listed below. Check it out here. If you know any links that may be useful to Pinoys in Taiwan, please email to taiwanpinoy@yahoo.com.

Taiwan Information Links

  • Government Information Office, Taiwan
  • Information for Foreigners
  • Council of Labor Affairs (CLA)
  • Bureau of Consular Affairs (BOCA), Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA)
  • Travel Information Travel Information Service

Philippines Information Links

  • Official Website of The Republic of the Philippines
  • Manila Economic and Cultural Office (MECO)
  • Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA)
  • Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA)
  • Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA)

Pinoys are not banned in Taiwan says Phil's Dept. Of Labor

Here's another news from a Philippine online news that hopefully put to rest the rumors that Filipinoes are banned in Taiwan.


DOLE Sec. Arturo Brion released a statement that Taiwan's Council Labor of Affairs (CLA) confirmed that there is no imposed ban to Overseas Filipino Workers (OFW).


Read the full news excerpt here ( in Tagalog ): http://www.abante.com.ph/issue/nov1206/ba2.htm

By all means it's clear, Filipinoes are not banned in Taiwan.

Our take on the rumored ban of Pinoys in Taiwan

The two conflicting news elicits disconcerting feeling about what the agency in the Philippines are up to. The CLA got nothing to lose should they not bother denying, and CLA's question is only about the legitimacy of documentations of Fil workers which does not take much to comply to.

If the news is a reaction from CLA's recent move to impose tighter control on visa approvals, it sounds like an over-reaction. Is this not a prelude to another ploy to squeeze more from our brothers and sisters coming to Taiwan? Something like: spread the news that Filipinoes are banned for Taiwan, let all the corners of the Phils know, then comes this ill-informed applicant, and an agency could promptly ask a higher fee like "You know, Filipinoes are banned in Taiwan. But we have a way to deploy you to a job, though it won't be easy. If you are really interested, we could help you but you'd have to pay bigger placement fee". **cough** Hope not. Hope we're just thinking too much.

To be fair, the placement agencies has done good job deploying Pinoys to work overseas. But the crooks still abound. 'Di lahat malinis, and chances somebody somewhere out there in the corners of the Philippines will get cheated "tanghaling tapat".

Godspeed, Pinoy!

Rumor of Filipino-workers ban denied

(please read previous post "Taiwan shuts doors on Filipino workers" if you haven't done so).

Which is which now? Here's another news excerpt contradicting published ban of Fil workers by Taiwan CLA (Council Of Labor Affairs). Also note that few days ago, TaiwanPinoy posted news about some changes of Taiwan's rule regarding acceptance of Fil workers -- particular interest is the change of visa approval from 2 wks to 42 days-- the news here confirmed just that.

Another interesting thing to note: the Ban is published by Phils' ABS-CBN, and the Denial is published by Taiwan's TaiwanNews. Pointing fingers eh? Whatever it may be, looks like the Phils' agencies should shut up instead of provoking Taiwan's CLA to really impose a ban.

The Council of Labor Affairs yesterday refuted rumors that the government planned to halt the import of workers from the Philippines beginning next year. "That rumor is pure fabrication," said Tsai Meng-liang, the head of the council's foreign labor department. He denied that the CLA had announced on its Web site that the quota of foreign workers for next year will exclude Filipino workers, as a labor brokers' association in the Philippines has claimed. Cheng Yi-min, director of the Bureau of Employment and Vocational Training under the CLA further reiterated that the CLA is not considering "freezing, limiting or banning" the import of Filipino workers. The rumor, spread by some Philippine brokers, is absolutely not true, Chen said. There have been speculations that the rumors were started by Filipino brokers in response to a CLA decision to extend the review process for applicants from the Philippines seeking to enter Taiwan for work. The CLA last month extended the process by one month, from 12 to 42 days, after it was found that some Filipino brokers were colluding with applicants to forge documents related to the workers' personal information.

Now that sounds a better news to all OFW planning to come, or comeback, Taiwan.
Yet again, please read the full text in this link: http://www.taiwannews.com.tw/etn/news_content.php?id=308305〈=eng_news&cate_img=49.jpg&cate_rss=news_Society_TAIWAN

Monday, November 13, 2006

Taiwan shuts doors on Filipino workers

Got this news last week via email from a friend. It is published in ABS-CBN News website. Please read the complete news in the URL provided. Can't post the whole content here for fear of website plagiarism or copyright infringement and the like.

Filipino domestic helpers and other skilled workers will be barred from working in Taiwan starting next year. Last week, Taiwan’s Council of Labor Affairs (CLA) announced plans to exclude the Philippines from the 80,000 quota for migrant workers, according to Jackson Gan, president of the Filipino Manpower Agencies Accredited to Taiwan.....

Not a good news. Read full text here:
http://uw.abs-cbnnews.com/storypage.aspx?StoryID=55641