

DAVAO CITY – It’s only four in the morning but travelers are already streaming into the bus terminal of Nabunturan town in Compostela Valley. In the adjacent public market, vendors opening their shops are also tuning in to their favorite radio stations to catch the early morning local news.
Newspapers from Davao and some dailies from Manila are circulated in Nabunturan but there is not a single community paper carrying local issues. Radio reigns supreme.
That is until one morning in October 2004 when a community journalist named Boy Visitacion dared to …
As the social, political, and economic environment in many local areas throughout the Philippines is dramatically changed by the decentralization of governance as articulated by the Local Government Code of 1991, communities will be facing new burdens and challenges: that of making informed decisions in the face of scarce resources.
In a media environment lorded over by radio stations that have wide audience reach and strong influence on the public pulse, English-language newspapers are trying to survive, their sphere of influence reduced to a fraction of the Iloilo population—professionals, the academe, business community and politicians.
It all started with a four-day lakbay-aral (study tour) to Puerto Princesa, Palawan on environment management and protection in October 1997. Journalists from Region VI, including those from Negros Occidental, saw for themselves the pooled initiativesof the Palawan media, the local government and an environmental nongovernmentalorganization in dealing with issues affecting the environment.
Didi Quimpo recalls one plane ride back home from a business trip abroad five years ago that dramatically altered the course of her advocacy as a social development worker. Comfortably slouched in her seat enjoying the flight, she was momentarily drawn to a news feature flashed on the plane’s video screen.