DBP grants P195-million term loan to San Juan City school

Present during the loan signing were DBP Account Officer Stephanie Mariano, DBP Senior Assistant Vice President Raymond Valdez, COLF Board of Trustees Chairperson and President Feny de los Angeles, DBP Vice President Jeanne Adamos, COLF Assistant Director and Treasurer Marissa Pascual, and COLF Administrative and Finance Adviser Aldo Justino de los Angeles.
Present during the loan signing were DBP Account Officer Stephanie Mariano, DBP Senior Assistant Vice President Raymond Valdez, COLF Board of Trustees Chairperson and President Feny de los Angeles, DBP Vice President Jeanne Adamos, COLF Assistant Director and Treasurer Marissa Pascual, and COLF Administrative and Finance Adviser Aldo Justino de los Angeles.

STATE-owned Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP) has granted a P195-million term loan to a San Juan City-based educational institution to partially finance the construction of a six-story building which would be the site of its permanent offices and school facilities, a top official said.

DBP president and chief-executive-officer Emmanuel Herbosa said the bank’s assistance to the Community of Learners Foundation, Incorporated (COLF) was made under the bank’s flagship Education Sector Support for Knowledge, Wisdom and Empowerment through Lending Assistance program, or DBP ESKWELA.

“We are excited to be a developmental partner of COLF which is considered among the pioneers in the progressive approach to education in the country,” Herbosa said. “DBP prioritizes support to initiatives which invest in human capital growth as a driver of sustainable socio-economic development.”

DBP is the sixth largest bank in the country in terms of assets and provides credit support to four strategic sectors of the economy – infrastructure and logistics; micro, small and medium enterprises; the environment; and social services and community development.

COLF is a 38-year-old inclusive educational institution that utilizes a progressive approach in an “experience-based, interdisciplinary and collaborative setting” in teaching students ranging from two to eighteen years old. Supportive of all children, the school has decentralized classrooms with interest centers and work and play areas, and caters to a diverse student population.

Herbosa said under the DBP ESKWELA program, local government units, private and public educational institutions, accredited training centers, and other institutions that support educational programs can avail of loans which may be used for capital expenditures, working capital, and onlending to students through borrower-schools.

Herbosa said that as of end 2020, DBP has approved a total of P10.66 billion to 154 borrowers for the construction of over 400 school buildings and 3,500 classrooms nationwide.

“DBP will continue to align its programs for the education sector with the National Government’s vision of ‘transforming the country’s human capital towards greater agility, for a healthy and resilient Philippines,’ as articulated in the Philippine Development Plan for 2017-2022,” said Herbosa./PN

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