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Friday, June 29, 2012

SEA-K changing lives, improving homes


by Franklin P. Gumapon

SIBUTAD, Zamboanga del Norte - - Definitely shanties are no decent homes by any standard. But these are common sights in the countryside.

Social Welfare and Development Team (SWADT) leader Alex Sabal brought the Philippine Information Agency (PIA) recently to the Department of Social Welfare and Development’s (DSWD) Self-Employment Assistance-Kabuhayan (SEA-K) project at Minlasag, Sibutad Zamboanga del Norte to see how the recipients have benefited from it.

Negotiating the rough roads to this interior town, the PIA staff came to interview some SEA-K beneficiaries especially those who had received financial assistance under the basic shelter component of the program.

Upon reaching the place, Thelma Montano, the former president of the Minlasag SEA-K Association, met and ushered the group to the Sari-Sari store put up and managed by the association since 1994. Right there the interview between the beneficiaries and PIA staff was held.

It all started with the question, “What prompted them to form an association and put up a sari-sari store?” Montano and her colleagues bluntly told the PIA: “We were all plain housewives and jobless.”

A lively interaction ensued covering a variety of information – related and unrelated ones interspersed with laughter and sober talks.

Tita Garcia, the current president of the association, said the Minlasag SEA-K Association is composed of housewives belonging to the poorest of the poor. The group started its sari-sari store business in 1994 with a seed capital of P20 thousand loaned from the municipal government of Sibutad. In 1996, the DSWD also extended a loan assistance ofP150 thousand to augment the association’s working capital.

Individual members, on the other hand, have also availed themselves of some loan assistance called “seed capital” payable within two years for their livelihood projects. Those who were able to manage well their seed capital funds with some savings from their earning would be qualified to apply for another loan assistance under the SEA-Kabayan in the amount of P35 thousand of which P25 thousand would be used for home improvement and P10 thousand for livelihood projects.

Four of the 21 members of the Minlasag SEA-K Association have already built decent homes and one of them was Hermocilia Andog, 63, who together with her family was once living in a dilapidated one-room nipa hut that served as their living, dining and sleeping room.

With the help of SEA-K, Andog is now living in a two-bedroom concrete house complete with kitchen and comfort room.

A hardworking Andog is engaged in camote (sweet potato) farming and her produce is more than enough to pay for her loan and to answer her basic needs.

Thelma Montano, on the other hand, also expressed her gratitude for the SEA-Kabayan project that enabled her to improve her abode. Besides, she also got to finish her education degree through SEA-K’s livelihood assistance. She is now an elementary teacher of Minlasag Elementary School.

Today, the Minlasag SEA-K Association continues to operate its sari-sari store and a copra buying business with a working capital of more than P1 million. All of its 21 members also continue tending their respective livelihood ventures knowing that nobody can best help them but themselves. (FPG/PIA-Zamboanga del Norte)