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Showing posts with label cagayan de oro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cagayan de oro. Show all posts

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Announcement : Room Assignments for the PRC Real Estate Broker Licensure Exam

Professional Regulation Commission
Here are the room assignments of examinees for the PRC Real Estate Broker Licensure Exam on March 17, 2013 (Sunday) in the following cities : MANILA, ILOILO, CEBU and CAGAYAN DE ORO.

Please click links below for room assignments :

MANILA :
http://www.prc.gov.ph/uploaded/documents/REB0313ra_Manila.pdf

ILOILO :
http://www.prc.gov.ph/uploaded/documents/REB0313ra_Iloilo.pdf

CEBU :
http://www.prc.gov.ph/uploaded/documents/REB0313ra_cebu.pdf

CAGAYAN DE ORO :
http://www.prc.gov.ph/uploaded/documents/REB0313ra_cdo.pdf



Reminder to all examinees :
Please follow examination instructions/rules below accordingly.

  • Examinees should report before 6:30 in the morning every examination day. LATE EXAMINEES WILL NOT BE ADMITTED.
  • Bring the following: Notice of Admission (NOA), Official Receipt, pencils no. 1 or 2,  black ball pens, metered-stamped window mailing envelope, long brown and long plastic envelopes.
  • CELLULAR PHONES AND OTHER ELECTRONIC GADGETS ARE STRICTLY PROHIBITED.
  • Wear the prescribed dress code.



Source :
http://www.prc.gov.ph/licensure/?id=26


Saturday, June 23, 2012

Update : Schedule and Coverage of the PRC Real Estate Appraiser Examination


Here is the schedule and coverage of the PRC Real Estate Appraiser Examination  to be held on July 8, 2012 in Manila, Cebu, Ilo-ilo, Davao, Cagayan de Oro and Baguio cities :

Click documents to enlarge
Schedule and coverage of PRC Real Estate Appraiser Examination

PRC


 Related Link - Click link below to download PDF file :

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Places and Events : Cagayan River, Cagayan de Oro "Before and After" Sendong Photos

Click photo to enlarge

Click photo to enlarge

Click photo to enlarge

Where have all the people gone?

Acknowledgements : 
Photo Source : 
Undersecretary  Naderev SaƱo
For more pictures pls. go to the site below :
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.2664266359259.157070.1033993952&type=1

Monday, December 19, 2011

News Update : As more victims are found, embalmers swamped with rotting bodies

18-Dec-11, 4:50 PM | Cong B. Corrales, InterAksyon.cominterphoto_1324207102.jpg
Rescuers carry the dead body of a boy found in a river bed and a victim of the devastating floods in Cagayan de Oro City in southern island of Midanao on December 18, 2011, a day after Typhoon Washi wrought havoc in the city. Philippine rescuers struggled against mud, fatigue and the stench of death to help the survivors of devastating flash floods that killed more than 650 people. (AFP PHOTO/TED ALJIBE)
CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY--With most parts of this city still without running water and electricity till late Sunday, the funeral parlors where bodies of victims of Saturday’s flashfloods are being delivered face a new challenge besides the sheer congestion: the bodies have started to bloat and show signs of decomposition.
The Bollozos Funeral Homes in barangay Bulua--where most of the flash flood fatalities were brought--is running out of space to lay the dead bodies on, and has been forced to lay them out on a hallway. The stench of the rotting corpses combined with the pungent smell of formaldehyde can be smelled 200 meters from the funeral parlor.
In an interview on Sunday, Bollozos Funeral Homes manager Dexter Lacson said the crisis is aggravated by the fact they are severely undermanned to handle the hundreds of rotting, often mud-covered bodies delivered to them.
“We only have five embalmers and they have been working round-the-clock since the dead bodies started arriving yesterday (Saturday) morning.” He added that no matter how fast or nonstop they work, they simply cannot cope as more bodies are brought in. He surmised it’s because they offer low rates for embalming.
He wondered aloud if it’s possible to just bury bodies directly in order to cut the risk of spreading bacteria.
He said they can only process 10 corpses per day at the maximum of at least four hours per corpse adding: “Even 20 dead bodies in one setting is already a disaster for us.” They have processed 73 fatalities since Saturday, and expect more bodies to arrive as search and retrieval operations enter the third days since Sendong inundated 23 of this city’s 80 barangays.
“Until now, we still do not have running water to wash the dead bodies because most are still covered in mud. We also do not have electricity until now, which means my embalmers are working dead tired with poor lighting,” he said.
Lacson said the Bureau of Fire Protection delivered two firetrucks filled of water but maintains these are not sufficient.
“What we desperately need right now are running water, electricity and additional manpower,” he said.
Another problem, Lacson said, is the shortage of coffins. “So far I have prepared 70 coffins but we lack coffins for children because most of our coffins are for adult corpses,” he said.
Somo Funeral Home in same predicament
Ryan Somo of the family-owned Somo Funeral Homes said, in a phone interview, Sunday, they are experiencing the same predicament Bollozo Funeral Homes is facing.
He said they had to refuse the corpses of two children delivered to their funeral parlor on Sunday morning because they are already swamped as it is.
“We only have four embalmers. We already requested additional embalmers from our branch in Alubijid but they said they could not spare any of their embalmers,” said Somo.
 Both Lacson and Somo are concerned about an impending health hazard as the corpses decompose in their parlors.
Mass burial eyed
For his part, Dr. Joselito Retuya, city epidemiologist and assistant city health officer, said in an interview, Sunday the city government should start considering a “mass burial for the dead bodies to avoid the risk of contamination.”
In a phone interview, city councilor Dante Pajo, chair of the committee on health, supported the suggestion for a mass burial.
“I support the suggestion for a mass burial. We will shoulder the expenses of the burial of the unclaimed bodies. I’m advising the owners of the funeral parlors to coordinate with the City Health Office for the permit so these bodies could be buried and they can also go to our CSWD (City Social Welfare and Development) for financial needs,” said Pajo.
Source  :  

Sunday, December 18, 2011

News Update : 'Sendong' death toll rises to more than 650: Red Cross

'Sendong' death toll rises to more than 650: Red Cross

Posted at 12/18/2011 10:37 AM | Updated as of 12/18/2011 6:54 PM
MANILA, Philippines – (4th UPDATE) The death toll from the mammoth floods unleashed in the Philippines by tropical storm "Sendong" (international name: Washi) has climbed to more than 650, the Philippine National Red Cross (PNRC) said Sunday.
Data from its official Twitter account shows the death toll as of 6:00 p.m. is already at 652.
This is higher than government figures. As of 12:00 p.m., the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) reported 332 dead.
PNRC Secretary General Gwendolyn Pang told ANC at least 8,000 families have been affected, with Cagayan de Oro and Iligan City accounting for most of the numbers.
"The affected area is so wide and huge and I believe they have not really gone to all areas to do a search. Also... many of the houses were washed out so that means the houses and the bodies were displaced," Pang said in a separate Agence France Presse (AFP) article.
"We are only counting the actual dead bodies that were sent to funeral parlors," she told AFP, warning many more bodies could still be found.
"This thing happened so fast, it was very overwhelming. It happened in the evening when people were sleeping," said Pang.
"People were saying they were really unprepared. They didn't know it would hit them to this extent," she said.
Fortunately, the waters receded quickly, in contrast to floods in the northern Philippines, which can last for weeks or even months, said Pang.
Diseases
Almost 35,000 people remained huddled in evacuation centers after the storm, the NDRRMC said.
Rescue and relief efforts were hampered by power outages in many areas as well as by damaged and destroyed bridges, the council added.
Pang fears health risks in the aftermath of the storm, especially affecting those in the evacuation centers. The residents may be prone to common colds, cough and diarrhea, she added.
She said water filtration systems will be set up in Cagayan de Oro and Iligan, through the help of the Department of Social Welfare and Development.
An average of 20 storms and typhoons, many of them deadly, hit the Philippines annually.
However, most of the storms strike the northern regions. The southern areas are usually spared so people in the south were unprepared for Sendong's fury, government relief officials said.
Sendong, which crossed Mindanao and some central islands on Saturday, hit the westernisland of Palawan before dawn Sunday and has continued moving west into the South China Sea, the government weather station said. – with reports from Agence France Presse

Source :     ABS-CBNnews.com
 ABS-CBN News | Latest Philippine Headlines, Breaking News, Video, Analysis, Features