Simpol Beyond The Spotlight: Chef Tatung’s Long Game

Chef Tatung steps back from the spotlight, allowing Simpol to evolve into a collaborative ecosystem built on shared voices, deeper trust, and long-term sustainability beyond a single personality.

Unilever Philippines And General Trias City Government Sign Partnership To Strengthen Community Livelihoods

Unilever Philippines partners with City Government of General Trias to launch GentriAsenso, creating new livelihood opportunities for local communities.

When Algorithms Became Gatekeepers Of Reputation

Algorithmic systems reward consistency and credibility, reinforcing organizations that maintain clear, stable, and trustworthy digital footprints.

How Simpol Became Part Of The Filipino Table

Simpol evolves from simple recipes into shared family traditions, showing how food becomes part of everyday Filipino life and memory through meaningful, accessible cooking guidance.

Iligan Jail First In Northern Mindanao To Get DOLE Livelihood Grant

With the DOLE livelihood grant, Iligan Jail sets the standard as Northern Mindanao’s first facility focused on inmate empowerment and rehabilitation.

Iligan Jail First In Northern Mindanao To Get DOLE Livelihood Grant

1323
1323

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

The male dormitory of the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP) in Iligan City has become the first jail facility in Northern Mindanao to receive a livelihood program grant from the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE).

DOLE 10 (Northern Mindanao) officially turned over a PHP350,000 seed grant for the dormitory’s “Handicrafts Behind Bars” initiative on Wednesday. The project falls under the DOLE Integrated Livelihood Program (DILP).

Jail Officer 2 Walter Mainit Jr., the dormitory’s focal person, said the initiative is a departure from conventional rehabilitation approaches for Persons Deprived of Liberty (PDLs).

“Through the grant, the jail’s registered PDL association ‘Workers Behind Bars’ will serve as lead implementer, managing a suite of creative and sustainable livelihood activities,” he said in a statement.

Elmar Patilan, chair of the Workers Behind Bars, said the DILP represents a shared commitment to breaking cycles of hopelessness through skills training and structured opportunity.

The DILP, also known as the Kabuhayan Program, is a grant-based initiative designed to support marginalized sectors. (PNA)