Monday, September 29, 2008
PUNO ALARMED OVER MILF ATTACKS ON CIVILIANS AND PLANTING OF BOMBS IN MINDANAO SCHOOLS
DILG SEEKING CONGRESS APPROVAL OF P1.1-B OUTLAY FOR BFP TO MODERNIZE DILAPIDATED EQUIPMENT

DILG Secretary Ronaldo Puno said the proposed P1.1 billion capital outlay of the BFP for next year will be used to procure 100 units of 1,000-gallon capacity fire trucks, 500 sets of personnel protective equipment, and 632 units of breathing apparatus.
The DILG has proposed an allocation of P900 million to procure these 100 fire trucks; another P34.86 million for personnel protective equipment that includes fire suits, gloves, helmets and boots; and P170.88 million for breathing apparatus with refillers.
Puno said the fire trucks would be distributed nationwide to replace dilapidated and decommissioned units, while the breathing apparatus and personnel protective equipment will be distributed among fire stations in Metro Manila.
This year, the BFP has procured 14 units of fire trucks worth a combined total of P135 million, while another P100 million from congressional initiatives is now being readied to buy additional units, according to DILG data.
Besides fire trucks, the BFP is also in the process of procuring P23.77 million worth of breathing apparatus and hiring 500 fire officers to augment the shortage of fire fighters in the bureau.
Underscoring the urgent need to modernize the BFP, Puno noted that although fire protection is a basic frontline service, only 827 or 55.35% of the country’s 1,494 municipalities have fire protection capability.
If the BFP were to comply with the minimum requirements under the law of establishing one fire station with adequate firefighting equipment and personnel in each municipality, it would immediately need at least 667 fire trucks, Puno said.
However, the BFP has an existing fleet of only 1,741 fire trucks, of which only 74% are operational. The Bureau’s existing fleet is actually short of 1,926 units, considering that for an estimated population of 90 million Filipinos in 2008, it needs 3,214 units to bring down the fire truck-to-population ratio to one fire truck for every 28,000 people.
To date, the actual truck-to-population ratio is one fire truck for every 69,626 persons.
Worse, he said, only 2,285 sets of personnel protective equipment, such as fire-retardant coats and boots, are available for use by the BFP’s 12,814 firefighters, which means only 17.83% of them are protected when they are exposed to chemicals and other hazards during fire-suppression operations.
The BFP also has a shortfall of 16,406 firefighters, and a grave shortage of fire inspectors, considering that the bureau only has 1,620 of them in relation to the number of establishments to be checked, which is estimated at 835,000 structures nationwide. This does not yet take into consideration the construction of new buildings, which averages 103,000 units each year.
FTD INSPECTS GROCERIES IN THE BINONDO AREA TO CHECK FOR CHINESE MILK PRODUCTS

Thursday, September 25, 2008
China Contaminated Milk Scandal Widens
China's Health Minister Chen Zhu on Wednesday said there are now 6,244 reported cases of infants made sick and, among those, three have died from drinking tainted milk formula.
Speaking at a news briefing broadcast live on national television, he said the numbers could go up as more parents take their children to hospitals.
Chen says there are now 1,327 infant patients in the hospital. He says 158 are suffering from acute kidney failure.
The scandal over tainted milk powder surfaced after large numbers of babies were hospitalized suffering from kidney stones. All had been fed formula made with powdered milk.
China's largest powdered milk producer, Sanlu Dairy, was found to be using milk laced with melamine, an industrial chemical that can make food appear higher in protein.
Chinese officials said an investigation of 109 powdered milk producers found that 20 percent of them added melamine to their products, including China's largest milk producer Mengniu.
Li Changjiang, head of China's quality watchdog., says starting today they will station 1,400 inspection teams amounting to nearly 5,000 people at all dairy producing enterprises. He says they will make on-the-spot inspections and conduct strict and effective oversight.
Li says his department has ordered a recall of all suspect products, including goods from two companies that exported to Bangladesh, Yemen, Burma, Gabon, and Burundi.
The New Zealand dairy company Fonterra is part-owner of Sanlu and says it raised concerns about tainted milk weeks ago but Sanlu was slow to respond.
New Zealand's prime minister says the Chinese government began investigating only after she raised the issue through official channels.
The manager of Sanlu and four local officials in Hebei, where Sanlu is based, have been fired over the scandal.
Chinese officials have vowed to inspect all dairy products in the country and say they may for the first time begin regular testing for illegal additives such as melamine.
This is not the first time milk powder has killed babies in China. In 2004 at least 12 infants died from drinking fake milk powder.
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