By Gideon C. Corgue
The training
was jointly conducted by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), Department
of Labor and Employment (DOLE), Technical Education Skills and Development
Authority (TESDA), Agricultural Training Institute (ATI), PhilHealth, Social
Security System (SSS) and the municipal government of Josefina.
DTI Senior
Trade and Industry Development Specialist Reynaldo Pintacasi said his agency
led the convergence efforts and convened the above agencies to help rubber
plantation owners and farmers increase their yield and improve the quality of
their produce.
“The market
is very tight and the demand is rising but the rubber production in the
province remains low because of farmers’ lack of knowledge on the technology as
well as the lack of quality planting materials.”
Pintacasi
said the training conducted in Josefina was the first batch, while the second
and third batches are slated to be held next month in the municipalities of
Dumingag and Bayog.
To ensure the
success of the training, Pintacasi said the following agencies provided these
services: DTI conducts free lecture on entrepreneurship; DOLE gives free
starter kits worth 4,000 each; TESDA provides free competency assessment; ATI
provides free skills training; PhilHealth and SSS disseminate universal health
care insurance and social security programs; and the LGU provides free venue,
meals and supplies.
TESDA
Provincial Director Eulalalio Lumactod in his message underscored the
importance of technology in rubber tapping saying that “with the use of
technology, the quality of rubber will be improved giving the farmers better
prices in the market.”
Lucmactod
said his agency’s approach “is to educate stakeholders from rubber industry
based on its available resources.”
“We are
introducing resource-based and market driven technical skills education to
generate employment,” Lumactod explained.
Lumactod
expressed confidence that “with this training, more farmers would venture into
rubber farming and quality rubber will be produced by farmers.”
An
agriculturist from the ATI taught the participants how to do rubber tapping and
how to take care of the rubber tree. He told them not to cut deep so as not to
injure the tree.
Josefina has
232 hectares of land planted with rubber, making it one of the largest-rubber
producing municipalities in the province (PIA9)