End of year Update
Supporting families,
creating futures, building resilient communities.
Report from the chair,
Rendt Gorter, Lagawe, 21 December 2014.
It is a year ago now that we reformed the Trust originally
founded by my father Kayes (using the Anglophone spelling he used here) and
fellow residents from Lagawe, under the new name of ‘Ifugao Community Support Trust’.
We defined our aim as community development and our focus would be on families,
by supporting livelihoods and education.
To get established, gain experience and build a track
record, we had set ourselves three goals for this year: 1. To start a women’s livelihood
group raising pigs at my father’s farm, 2. To support one youth from the Barangay
of Burnay, the district where we are based, into higher education working with
an overseas sponsor, and 3. To make the guest house serviceable again to
accommodate supporters. These we have achieved.
The Trustees divided the supervision of the projects between
each other, we now have good financial systems in place and two staff from my
father’s time in regular employment who have shown responsibility for the
security and maintenance of the property. We are now ready for the next phase
which during the coming year will prepare for expanding educational support and
starting a self-supporting social enterprise by 2016.
The Burnay Women’s Livelihood Project: Supporting families
By the end of 2014,
the Burnay pig growers’ collective has raised 6 piglets. In August the six week
old piglets were bought for 2,500 peso each (~70 NZD) with money given by
supporters from New Zealand. I have been paying for feed since then, and by now
they are eating about $60-100 per week of the pre-mix feeds normally used here:
Hog Starter, Hog Grower, Hog Finisher and Lactating Sow Feed.
To start with, the neglected stables needed to be refurbished
for use again and several working bees with the help of husbands and other
family members completed this.
When the stables were first constructed, Kayes had a thriving
pig farm, with effluent management and organic inputs that in its heyday was
visited by agricultural students from the nearby polytechnic. Designing and
building stabling for stock had been my father’s trade many years ago so he
took his drawings to local steel workers and built custom designed pig pens for
sows and piglets that made feeding and cleaning easy. At the time he wrote and
published a booklet entitled “Organic Farming in Ifugao”. His former partner and
farm manager Lolita Addagna – they had separated a year before his death – now
leads the women’s cooperative and brings along her lifelong 7experience from
raising pigs as well as from working with Kayes.
Today saw a new addition to the stables with a mother pig
inseminated about a month ago, bought for 20,000 pesos (~600 NZD) using the
$450 donated by supporters in New Zealand. A pig has a gestation period of
about 4 months and piglets are weaned at about 6 weeks.
After another month
of fattening, the six piglets will be ready for sale for around 20,000 pesos
each, depending on their actual live weight and market rates at the time. Profits
from the sale of piglets will go to buy another bunch of piglets, plus another
mother sow. By the time two mother pigs farrow in the middle of 2015, the
second lot of piglets will be sold to finance feed of the next generation and
for a first pay out to the group members. After that, the pig project should be
mostly self-supporting and the women will need to fulfil their side of the
bargain and begin to repay our Trust in live piglets.
The aim for 2015 is to develop this project, together with raising
chicken, ducks, Tilapia and compost making into a showcase for how impoverished
rural families can grow their livelihoods, and to be ready for the Trust to
launch a full scale social enterprise buying and selling members produce, offering
profits to members and investors. For Trustee and former deputy mayor Nora
Luglug who works with the members, achieving self-reliance is a critical goal
for these families.
Educational support: Creating futures
The challenge for youth from rural backgrounds, particularly
those from broken families, is to gain entry into professional careers that can
support families of their own and so escape the hand-to-mouth existence of
casual labour. Especially those children coming from landless or impoverished families
have little chance to find an open door.
All of our Trustees themselves are already engaged in sponsoring
or have taken into their home secondary students from remote villages or poorer
families to help with their education.
Connie Lacadin, the Trust’s treasurer, is herself human
resource development officer at the Lagawe municipality and has clear ideas for
building pathways into future careers. She designed the ICST Educational
Assistance Program (EAP) with the Specific Objectives to 1. Provide specific educational cash assistance to poor but deserving
students; and 2. To assist parents of
beneficiaries with guiding, mentoring, counselling selected beneficiaries who
would like to pursue a career through education. The policy clearly
outlines the enrolment procedure and conditions to maintain support, as well as
the respective obligations of the student, the parent or parents, and the ICST,
including the expectation that professionally employed graduates would
eventually pay back the costs of education advanced by the Trust for the
benefit of future students.
To begin with, the
ICST Educational Assistance Program would be offered to one of the children of
an indigent, poor family in Burnay, Lagawe. One young woman from Burnay was
thus selected and found a sponsor in New Zealand. In cooperation with the
children’s home in Solano founded by the American Kay Davidson where the
19-year old had been in residence since her early years, she has now taken up
board in Santiago and begun college studies in Social Welfare. With the support
of the Lagawe officers of the Department of Social Welfare, the woman and her
mother entered into an agreement with the Trust and thus were assisted to start
on this path.
In 2015, and if new sponsors can be found to support college
and boarding costs of at least 15,000 pesos per half-year semester (~500NZD),
more students will be enrolled.
The Guesthouse: The Gorter Mountain Retreat
When Kayes Gorter first started pacing out the 7 bedroom
house on the hill overlooking Burnay Valley, he had a vision for a home for
abandoned children, a guesthouse for their overseas sponsors, and to help
finance that endeavour, by opening a ‘Mountain Retreat’ for visiting hikers and
nature lovers venturing into this iconic region of the Philippines. That idea
lives on and the guesthouse is now ready to accommodate both supporters and
tourists whose contribution will go towards the maintenance costs of the farm.
Critical repairs to the roof, foundations and
termite-damaged flooring were completed this year. Visitors are now welcome,
says Trustee Ben Buyawe, who recently returned home to retire from a life time
career in the United States, and who will be welcoming the guests.
Capacity Development: Empowering community initiatives
The communities of the Ifugao can look back on a long
history of working together to live of the land and solve shared problems. In
modern times this can be seen in the number of community-based groups and local
NGOs as well as local government programmes that promote working together. The
work of the Trust, no little thanks to the professional and personal
involvement of its Trustees, is an integral part of such community wide
efforts. In 2015, the Trust aims to contribute to the capacity development of
civil society with training and access to resources for colleagues from other
organisations. I will draw on my work in consulting in New Zealand and overseas
work experience in development and aid, and recruit further assistance where
possible, to organise training and professional support in areas such as
Project identification and design, Grant application writing, Project
administration and management, Human resource management and development, and
Project evaluation and reporting.
Looking forward: Aims for 2015
With the
pilot projects nearing completion, the Trust is now ready to launch into next
phase, which includes legal incorporation, building showcase projects at the
farm and preparing for the launch of a commercial social enterprise in Burnay
which over time can demonstrate how working together can be profitable for all
involved, attracting investors keen to invest in social good. With that, we
have especially corporate sponsors and expatriate workers from Ifugao in mind.
This is a
critical phase for the Trust. All too often good ideas lose momentum after the
initial startup. By now I have exhausted my credit line with the bank and so we
are appealing to our friends to widen interest in the project and recruit
further supporters to help us find the resources to keep growing this grass
roots initiative. Even if it is just a like on Facebook, your support is
appreciated.