House Panel Approves Establishment of Eastern Samar State University Campuses in Balangiga and Arteche

Spread the love

by Miriam G.Desacada

Tacloban City–The House committee on higher and technical education, comprising 70 members, has approved two priority bills to establish full-fledged Eastern Samar State University (ESSU) campuses in Balangiga and Arteche municipalities.

House Bill No. 3135 (authored by Rep. Christopher Sheen Gonzales) proposes establishing ESSU–Balangiga Campus, while House Bill No. 3136 seeks to convert the existing ESSU–Arteche extension unit into a full‑fledged campus. Both bills are co‑authored by House Minority Leader Rep. Marcelino “Nonoy” Libanan. Rep. Gonzales noted that the approval of these measures marks a critical step toward expanding access to higher education across Eastern Samar.

These campuses will bring quality tertiary education within reach for thousands of families. No student should be forced to leave home just to obtain a college degree,” he said.

He emphasized that education is the most lasting engine of development, saying, “By bringing ESSU closer to the communities of Balangiga and Arteche, we strengthen the province’s human capital and prepare our youth to drive Eastern Samar’s long‑term progress.”

The approved proposals authorize the new campuses to offer technical‑vocational, undergraduate, and graduate programs in line with ESSU’s mandate, and to undertake research, extension services, and community‑development initiatives aimed at spurring growth in Eastern Samar and the rest of Region VIII.

Gonzales noted that the new campuses will reduce financial burdens on families who cannot afford to send their children to schools outside the province, while building a local pool of skilled professionals to meet regional development needs.

ESSU, Eastern Samar’s lone state university, currently serves nearly 25,000 students supported by 721 faculty members. Aside from its main campus in Borongan City, ESSU operates campuses in Can-avid, Guiuan, Maydolong, and Salcedo, as well as extension units in Balangiga and Arteche.

  • Related Posts

    VSU Wins 2025 Tanglaw Award as Philippines’ Top Research Institution

    Spread the love

    Spread the loveby Lemy Macantan The Visayas State University (VSU) has once again proven its excellence in research and innovation as it received the 2025 Tanglaw Award from the Department of Science and Technology–Philippine Council for Agriculture, Aquatic, and Natural Resources Research and Development (DOST-PCAARRD) on January 30, 2026, at the SMX Convention Center, Pasay City, during the 53rd PCAARRD’s Anniversary Celebration. The award recognizes VSU as the Most Outstanding Research Institution, highlighting its vital role in turning scientific knowledge into real solutions that benefit communities and the environment. VSU topped other institutions by achieving remarkable points on technologies developed/utilized, significant information gathered and applied, generated financial resources for the past five years, capability building, and other accomplishments such as institutional publications, awards received, linkages forged, and projects implemented. Along with a trophy, VSU also received a Php5-million grant to support the university’s research, development, extension, and innovation (RDEI) infrastructure upgrading, and capability building. A Century of Purpose, A Culture…

    Borongan Budget Standoff: JO suspension entangled in law, leadership transition, and alleged political delay

    Spread the love

    Spread the loveby Rowel Montes The temporary suspension of Job Order (JO) workers in Borongan City, announced on January 30, 2026, by the Office of the City Mayor through Acting Mayor Emmanuel Tiu Sonco, has continued to stir public debate—now further complicated by allegations surrounding the delayed action on the proposed 2026 annual budget. Budget submission and alleged inaction The Office of the City Mayor, under Mayor Jose Ivan Dayan Agda, formally submitted the proposed Annual Budget for Fiscal Year 2026 to the Sangguniang Panlungsod on October 16, 2025. However, the budget was enacted only on December 23, 2025, leaving the city to operate under a re-enacted budget at the start of the new fiscal year. It is now being alleged by some sectors that the then Vice Mayor—who presided over the Sangguniang Panlungsod at the time—deliberately failed to act promptly on the proposed budget. This perceived inaction, critics argue, may have contributed to the fiscal bottleneck now affecting hundreds of Job Order workers and…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *