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.

Accelerating The Net Zero Journey: Nestlé PH Brings Together Industry Partners To Share Best Practices In Sustainability

Nestlé Philippines brings industry partners together to advance sustainability, highlighting how collaboration strengthens the path toward net zero emissions.

Vivant Diversifies Portfolio With Launch Of Water Distribution Venture In Bantayan, Cebu

Vivant expands beyond energy with a strategic move into water distribution, strengthening its role in essential services and long-term sustainability in Bantayan, Cebu.

Sustainability As Reputation Infrastructure

Regulations in the Philippines now mandate structured sustainability disclosures, reinforcing the shift from voluntary initiatives to audited institutional requirements.

Ilocos Norte College Students Receive Livestock For Livelihood

The project gave families in Nueva Era renewed hope, as their children were given resources to directly contribute to household livelihood and agriculture.

Ilocos Norte College Students Receive Livestock For Livelihood

768
768

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

The municipal government of Nueva Era in Ilocos Norte has entrusted heifers, or young female cows, to college students so they could contribute to their families’ livelihood.

“This means so much to us. The cow is not just a livestock, it is a lifeline that can support our education and families,” Angelo Campañano, a nursing student of Northwestern University here, told the Philippine News Agency in a phone interview on Monday.

Campañano and 71 other student-beneficiaries received the heifers, along with livestock vitamins, during a ceremonial distribution at the Nueva Era Municipal Agriculture Office ground over the weekend.

“This is more than just assistance — it is an investment in people, in livelihood and in the future of our community,” Mayor Aldrin Garvida said during the distribution.

The municipal government urged the recipients to use their free time, particularly during weekends, to tend to their livestock.

“With these blessings, we feel seen, valued, and inspired to continue dreaming and striving, not only for ourselves but also for our community,” Campañano said.

Parents of the student-beneficiaries who are rice farmers, meanwhile, received hybrid rice seeds from the Department of Agriculture (DA) Regional Field Office-Ilocos and inbred rice seeds from the Philippine Rice Research Institute during the ceremony.

Yellow corn seeds, along with urea and foliar fertilizer, were distributed by the DA.

Gardening tools and vegetable seeds were handed out to women organizations to enhance the implementation of “Gulayan sa Barangay,” a community garden project that aims to boost food security in the municipality, home of the indigenous peoples group Tingguians.

All these efforts, according to Garvida, is part of the municipality’s “One Professional, One Family” program, which aims to have at least one employed professional in every household and puts premium on education to uplift the lives of Tingguians. (PNA)