Farmers' involvement
in supplementary
feeding program pushed
Farmers play a key role in the government's
supplementary feeding and school feeding initiatives, Cabinet Secretary Karlo
Nograles said Wednesday.
He made
this statement as he urged agrarian reform beneficiary organizations (ARBOs),
irrigators associations (IAs), and farmers associations to heighten their
involvement in government programs, particularly the Enhanced Partnership
Against Hunger and Poverty (EPAHP) program.
“Through
EPAHP, you will have easy access to a market because the government will buy
your produce. Market and network access are vital during this Covid-19
pandemic. This will create jobs, and establish link-ups, freeing you to focus
on production,” Nograles said in a statement.
Nograles,
chair of the Task Force Zero Hunger, emphasized the need to be “creative” in
ways to implement the government’s various feeding programs during the Covid-19
pandemic, especially those targeted at schools and schoolchildren.
Currently,
Nograles said he is working the mechanics out with the Department of Education
(DepEd) and the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) to find
ways to continue carrying out the program.
Nograles
reiterated the need for the more active involvement of local chief executives.
"The
national government hopes that our local officials fully support and get
involved in these initiatives,” he said.
According
to Nograles, local governments with their community feeding and nutrition
programs can align them with the EPAHP for a more comprehensive approach to
combatting hunger.
“Unity
and cooperation are important in providing life-saving assistance to those who
most need it, especially during this ongoing health crisis,” he said.
For their
part, the ARBOs and IAs expressed gratitude at the other partner organizations
from the government for easing the way to smoother business transactions and
removing the "middleman" who eats up profits and hinders the selling
of farm produce.
"We
will now have greater access to consumers. We can directly sell our products to
those who need them," said Ronald Diaz, head of the Magsaysay Agrarian
Reform Beneficiaries Cooperative from Zamboanga del Sur.
ARBOs and
IAs, meanwhile, expressed gratitude allowing smoother business transactions by
removing the "middleman" who eats up profits and hinders the selling
of farm produce.
EPAHP,
which traces its origins to successful programs of the Department of Agrarian
Reform, Department of Social Welfare and Development, and Department of
Agriculture, is tied to the Sustainable Development Goals and the Philippine
Development Plan 2017-2022.
President
Rodrigo Duterte has made this initiative a priority in his administration's
poverty reduction efforts.
A key
element of EPAHP is credit support for food production, processing, and
marketing for community-based organizations through the Land Bank and other
agencies
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