Fund Raising


Goal for 2010: $23,500
Donations collected 2009 in: $37,073
Archdiocese of Denver Mission Appeal, OCD Friars $27,104.49
Total Collected in 2010: $90,000


Donors 2010

Those in bold are recent General Fund donors

Colleen Smith
Mark & Mila Glodava
Melecia Garcia
Our Sunday Visitor
Alvarez Foundation
Romy and Julie Coronacion
St. Thomas More R.E.
St. Thomas More Youth
Cavan Corporation

Gabaldon Fund Campaign
Total pledges (7/31/10): $90,685
Total cash (7/31/10): $26,678
Those in bold are recent donors

A Taste of Italy
A Filipino Night to Remember
Alvarez Foundation
Anonymous
Rudy & Nenetto Arizala
Dolly Banzon
Church of the Risen Christ
Pol & Sally Derilo
E.M. Weckbaugh Foundation
Filipino Night to Remember
Melecia Garcia
Mark & Mila Glodava
Golden Press
Very Rev. Andrew Kemberling, V.F.
Miscellaneous
Imelda Orantia
Rev. Darryl Schaffer
St. Mary Catholic Church and School
St. Rose of Lima
St. Thomas More Catholic Church
St. Vincent de Paul Society
STM Student Council
Victorian Tea Party

St. Thomas More $15,000 Matching Gift
Those in bold have made recent pledges or payments

Total pledges and payments (8/31/10): $5,000
Still needs: $10,000
Infantahins must match the challenge gift dollar for dollar to receive this gift. Infantahins who have made a payment before this matching gift are listed above.

California
Rudy & Bennie Garcia
Maricar Knize

Colorado
Mark & Mila Glodava

Middle East
Tony Vera Cruz
Venchito Gucon

Maryland and Washington, D.C.
Pablo & Esther Atienza
Elena Bautista
Geral & Nida Curran
Marites Espiritu
Melecia Garcia
Nony & Emmie Garcia and Famiily
Ann Krietsch
Araceli Reyes
Antonio & Aurora Rivera
Junlo Tena & Rowena and Family
Leo & Bernadette Weston
Thelma Rapatan
Mario & Tita Espiritu
Catherine Manasala
Lucia Silecchia
Manilena Payos

Links

Metro Infanta Links
Click above to register to various alumni registries.
Prelature of Infanta
Quezon Province
Infanta, Quezon

For news about the Philippines:

Philippine Star
Philippine Daily Inquirer
Philippine News
Site by
Juice Box

9-day march vs. Laiban Dam set

QUEZON CITY -- Barely two weeks after the devastating floods and controversial dam releases of Typhoon Pepeng, various groups from Metro Manila, Quezon, and Rizal are bracing themselves for
their own battle against the construction of yet another giant dam.

In a press conference held today, various groups headed by the Save Sierra Madre Network (SSMN) called on President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to issue an executive order scrapping the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage Services' (MWSS) proposed 113-meter high Laiban Dam Project.

In the same press conference co-organized with the Freedom from Debt Coalition (FDC) and Pambansang Kilusan ng Samahang Magsasaka (PAKISAMA), the group revealed their plans for a nine-day march to dramatize their protest and to gather support from policy makers and the public against the dam project..

The protest march, which will run from Nov.4 to Nov.12, has been dubbed “Lakad Laban sa Laiban Dam,” and will involve a grueling 148-km march from General Nakar in Quezon Province to Malacañang. One hundred marchers are set to complete the entire length of the march, consisting of representatives from the indigenous peoples, farmers, women, rural workers, youth and religious sector. Among the scheduled stops is the MWSS office in Balara, Quezon City.

The groups stressed that the proposed dam project is anti-environment, anti-development and anti-human rights.

The dam reservoir of 28,000 hectares is set to displace 4,413 families from seven barangays. Legally-protected rainforest areas housing endemic and endangered species are set to be buried underwater as part of the dam reservoir area, along with areas being claimed as ancestral lands by the Dumagats and Remontados.

In addition, the groups underscored that should the dam break or be made to release sudden bursts of large water volumes, a repeat of the destructive flood in Northern Quezon in November 2004 can result to unimaginable catastrophes. These fears are said to be further aggravated by the dam site's proximity to the active Marikina fault zone.

According to the group, Metro Manila's consumers would bear the brunt of the costs for the project, which is presently the most expensive water supply project of the MWSS to date. The hefty price tag of $1B is also expected to hike up to almost $2B due to delays and huge cost over-runs, which are typical of large dam construction.

Better alternatives to the Laiban Dam do exist, the groups claimed.
They added that one of the most viable alternatives is to restore denuded forests in Angat, Ipo and La Mesa watersheds. In addition, the government must intensify the anti-logging campaign and rehabilitate existing watershed such as the Wawa Watershed to increase water flow. Furthermore, another simple and economical option is to reduce the demand for water coupled with improvement of the efficiency of the Manila Water and Maynilad by reducing their non-revenue water levels which translate to water wastage.

The groups
said that the destruction that inundated the Northern and Central Luzon because of large dams must convince the government and the public that it is both necessary and possible to put an end to the construction of destructive large dams.

Since large dams have proven to be disastrous to the communities and the environment, all plans of the government to construct monstrous dams must be abandoned immediately, said the group. -30-