Friday, 14 November 2025

$100-Million Fund Fuels Row Between Ethnic Press and Gov't

Volume 7, Issue No. 26
OPINION/COMMENTARY
/ News That Fears None, Views That Favor Nobody /

. . . . . A community service of The Filipino Web Channel (TheFilipinoWebChannel@gmail. com) and the Philippine Village Voice (PhilVoiceNews@gmail.comfor the information and understanding of Filipinos and the diverse communities in North America . . . . 

Our latest as of Friday, November 14, 2025 

The federal government has apparently left out Canada's mostly print-based ethnic media from accessing the $100-million contribution by Google to the implementation of the recently-passed Online News Act, sparking hostility and condemnation from local press officials. In another development, meanwhile, the conjugal editors at a Filipino tabloid appear to have been delisted from a media list, setting off speculation they were being rebuked for their lies and deception that had victimized two of their writers. 

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ONLINE NEWS ACT 
Gov't Excludes Ethnic Press
From $100-Million Funding


By ROMEO P. MARQUEZ 
Editor, The Filipino Web Channel


“The only thing that hurts about a rebuke is the truth.” ― Karl Marlantes


TORONTO - The National Ethnic Press and Media Council of Canada (NEPMCC) is up in arms over its claim that it had been excluded from new funding by the Department of Canadian Heritage.

The not-for-profit organization consisting of over 300 members (based on listing on its website) across the country said the non-inclusion amounted to a repudiation of its status and a denial of "equality rights" enjoyed by mainstream and indigenous publications.

It's considering pleading its case "before the Canadian Human Rights Commission and the UNHCR (sic) to ensure the respect of the provisions of the Canadian Charter of rights." (By UNHCR, did it mean United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees or it meant United Nations Commission on Human Rights now replaced by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights?)

The evolving dispute centers on $100 million Google Search is allocating as its annual contribution to various news businesses in line with Canada's Online News Act passed by Parliament in June 2023.

According to the government, the act "aims to ensure that dominant platforms compensate news businesses when their content is made available on their services."

It explains that the act "creates a bargaining framework to ensure that platforms compensate news businesses fairly. It encourages platforms to reach voluntary commercial agreements with a range of news businesses."

The NEPMCC maintains that Canadian Heritage "completely excludes ethnic publications from the distribution of the amount of 100 million dollars."

Canadian Heritage "is deliberately discriminating against Canadian print outlets operating in and for clientele publishing in a third language (non-English or French)," NEPMCC said in a resolution dated November 10, 2025.

" . . . such action is not only offensive to all the ethnic communities of Canadait also denies them the rights to equal and equitable funding access and benefits of government cultural and linguistic programs now skewed disproportionately to mainstream Anglophone and Francophone publications," the resolution stated.

An electronic copy of the resolution, leaked to this reporter this week and not available on the NEPMCC website, was signed by Dr. Mohammad Tajdolati, chair of the Special General Meeting; Neel Nanda, secretary general; and Thomas S. Saras, president and CEO. The three officials were not immediately available for comment.

* * * * *

Meanwhile, in a separate but related development, the names of Hermie Garcia and Mila A. Garcia, co-editors of the moribund The Philippine Reporter (TPR), and their friends that included Veronica Cusi, Lui Queano, and Rick Esguerra, were significantly missing in the October 2025 list of members in the NEPMCC website.

It's not clear if the names were purposely delisted since only the Garcias are connected to what a ranking NEPMCC official called "technically criminal" activities as recipient of LJI funds. 


A former TPR staff writer, Michelle Chermaine Ramos, exposed their deception in managing LJI grant money and lying about it for months, telling her and another writer in Edmonton, Alberta that their salaries - paid by Canadian Heritage in advance in one lump sum - were being withheld by a "grant guy" at Canadian Heritage. It turned out to be fictitious.


* * * * *

Most members of NEPMCC - self-described as "Canada's other voices" - are print periodicals serving an estimated three million Canadians who speak neither English nor French, the two official languages.

The NEPMCC said it will initiate measures so that Canadian Heritage "will abandon this policies of discrimination against the ethnic Canadian Communities and their publications and media."

The organization contends Canadian Heritage "is now enforcing policies discriminatory against the ethnic communities and their publications."

Except for an auto generated response, the federal agency has not addressed questions raised by this reporter as of this writing.

NEPMCC president Thomas Saras has also been tasked to work with Canadian Heritage to insure it "will respect the rights, the dignity and integrity of the individual members and of the organization, as they are struggling to inform their communities in their mother tongs (sic), about the Canadian political system, democracy and the Canadian culture."

The $100 million Google contribution is the latest to be made available to electronic news outlets. This could mean that only a few, if ever there is, could qualify among NEPMCC members as most of its members are print-based.

The government considered the fact that most Canadians get their news online, thus the Online News Act. It noted that "in 2022, online advertising revenues in Canada were $14 billion, with two platforms receiving roughly 80 percent of these revenues."

Presently, the NEPMCC is receiving money grants through the Canada Periodical Fund and the Local Journalism Initiative (LJI). In fact, for the period 2021-2025, it received $4.2 million from Canadian Heritage. (Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved).

Wednesday, 5 November 2025

2025 Canada Budget Eyes Benefits for Filipino Canadians

Volume 7, Issue No. 25
OPINION/COMMENTARY
/ News That Fears None, Views That Favor Nobody /

. . . . . A community service of The Filipino Web Channel (TheFilipinoWebChannel@gmail. com) and the Philippine Village Voice (PhilVoiceNews@gmail.comfor the information and understanding of Filipinos and the diverse communities in North America . . . . 

Our latest as of Wednesday, November 5, 2025 

The Liberal leadership in Ottawa is doing a sales pitch for its 2025 Federal Budget, saying Filipino Canadians are among those who stand to benefit. Easing of licensing requirements, tax credit of up to $1,100 for personal support workers, construction of new homes, and a pathway to permanent residency for over 30,000 workers are promised in the proposed measure now in the House of Commons.

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NOW IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS 
Some Benefits for Filipino Canadians
Are Planned in the 2025 Federal Budget



By ROMEO P. MARQUEZ 
Editor, The Filipino Web Channel


TORONTO - The 2025 Federal Budget is giving recognition to the essential role Filipino Canadians play in health care, construction, and caregiving, a press statement from the Prime Minister's Office in Ottawa announced on Wednesday. 

Of the $51 billion budget tabled this week in the House of Commons, $97 million is earmarked for foreign credential recognition.

This "will help internationally trained nurses, personal support workers, engineers, and trades workers get their licenses faster and work in their professions sooner," the statement said.

For Filipino families, the budget will deliver direct relief. "A new Personal Support Workers Tax Credit will mean up to $1,100 more per year for eligible PSWs," according to the statement.

A new Filipino Canadian community centre in Metro Vancouver is planned to be built. "The government is also increasing financing to accelerate the construction of multi-unit homes such as apartments and townhomes, which will help reduce housing pressures, especially for multigenerational Filipino families," the statement said.

On immigration, the government hopes to stabilize the number of newcomers while increasing opportunities for those filling labour shortages. The statement said that up to 33,000 work permit holders already contributing to Canada will have a pathway to permanent residency.

The measures that may benefit the Filipino Canadian community include, according to the press statement:

1. The government is taking action on everyday affordability by reviewing bank fees, including Interac e-Transfers and ATM charges. And by enabling automatic tax filing for simple cases, low-income Canadians including newcomers and seniors will no longer miss out on important benefits like the Canada Child Benefit and the GST credit.

2. To ensure young people and workers thrive, Budget 2025 is investing in training for skilled trades and renewing the Canada Strong Pass to provide free or discounted access to national parks, museums, and VIA Rail travel. These measures help families explore Canada, participate in culture, and enjoy more affordable experiences together.

 

3. This budget strengthens safety and security for all Canadians. A new National Anti-Fraud Strategy will better protect seniors, newcomers, and vulnerable community members from increasingly sophisticated scams, while major investments in defence and cybersecurity ensure Canada remains safe and resilient in a rapidly changing world.

4. Budget 2025 invests in the workers and families who are building Canada every day, including Filipino Canadians. Together, we are building a confident, secure, and prosperous Canada for future generations. (Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved).

Monday, 3 November 2025

Filipino Web Channel Marks 15 Years of Service to the Community

Volume 7, Issue No. 24
OPINION/COMMENTARY
/ News That Fears None, Views That Favor Nobody /

. . . . . A community service of The Filipino Web Channel (TheFilipinoWebChannel@gmail. com) and the Philippine Village Voice (PhilVoiceNews@gmail.comfor the information and understanding of Filipinos and the diverse communities in North America . . . . 

Our latest as of Monday, November 3, 2025 

This is a proud moment for us serving and sharing knowledge and experience in hopes of elevating the Filipino community from the obscene situation it's struggling to breakout. Here at the Filipino Web Channel (now on its 15th year) and its allied news outlets, we care enough to do this challenging job of chronicling life, our way of life, and its ebb and flow, in the Filipino community. 


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ROMAR MEDIA'S FILIPINO WEB CHANNEL
A Joyful Struggle Serving the Community
It's Been 15 Years and We've Not Wavered


By ROMEO P. MARQUEZ 
Editor, The Filipino Web Channel



"That you have enemies you must not doubt, when you reflect that you have made yourself eminent." - Thomas Jefferson


TORONTO - Each year of perseverance is a struggle towards fulfilling a purposeful journey. No material wealth to aim for, nothing to satisfy the ego, nobody to exert influence on. Just an objective passion to perform grace and charity for the community.

From its inception, the driving force writ large is to serve, mainly, the Filipino community in the Greater Toronto Area, and wherever such community exists, and to advocate for the Filipino diaspora. 

As the awareness expanded and the audience grew large, the coverage branched out to the multicultural public, and now, to countries Filipinos call home.

It's fulfilling to realize we - I myself personally - contribute something to inform and enlighten the community by sharing knowledge and experience gained from decades working as an international and domestic journalist.

A decade and a half it's been, and we haven't missed a beat, never wavered in the face of threats, never succumbed to fear. Our cup runneth over with gratitude for the goodwill and encouragement showered on us by subscribers and viewers alike.

It must be said, however, that along the way we created adversaries. Not of our choosing, just to make it clear, but because we've gone into something unheard of in the community - muckraking.

The Cambridge dictionary defines muckraking as "the activity, especially by newspapers and reporters, of trying to find out unpleasant information about people or organizations in order to make it public."

Some sectors in the GTA did not like the sound of it, much less its practice, because it aims to shine the light on criminal activities perpetrated on unsuspecting residents by people occupying positions of authority.

Some of the muckraking we did are chronicled in my Filipino Web Magazine blog (https://filwebchannelmagazine.blogspot.com/). And it might astonish readers to learn that people we thought worthy of trust and respect are the very same ones engaged in skullduggeries.

Nonetheless, our heart is filled with joy as The Filipino Web Channel commemorates another milestone - 15 years - since we launched it in the fall of 2010 (exact date: November 15, 2010) to fill a gap in news coverage. (Video: Journalist Launches The Filipino Web Channel in Toronto).

Over the course of producing videos and writing the stories behind those videos, The Filipino Web Channel (YouTube has dropped the article The, thus Filipino Web Channel, or FWC) has amassed a following, either attracted by its contents, or repelled by them - a healthy exercise of one of our freedoms.

The number of subscribers (6.53K as of this writing) has grown considerably through the years. That's more than gratifying in view of the fact we had nothing but grit when we began. We aspire to reach at least a million subscribers, but that's not to say we're not happy with what we have. 

More eyeballs trained on 1,586 videos we've created, surpassing our expectations with recorded views of 3,185,985. The numbers are dizzying and to us, it shows appreciation for our work.

FWC is an offshoot of my mainstream outreach, The Gotcha Journalist aka Currents & Breaking News (C&BN), which I introduced five months ahead of FWC, on June 12, 2010, which, significantly, is the same day in 1898 when the Philippines declared its independence from Spain.

There's so much news to report about the Filipino community in Canada, specifically in our home base in the Greater Toronto Area, so that a dedicated news outlet was needed. I saw coverage by local periodicals wanting and lacking focus.

For want of resources, then and up to now, to put up a business, I had to rely on social media platforms that are readily available for free, thus the birth of C&BN and FWC on the same year on YouTube and Vimeo.

The prospects were good, so that ten months later, in September 2011, I created two more channels on YouTube - Filipino Web Entertainment and Eats & Restos - in order for FWC and C&BN to concentrate on news and features alone. As their names implied they're devoted to their respective fields.

To articulate stories through photographs and the written word, I went to blogspot.com where I actually have two more - Time & Circumstance (https://timecircumstance.blogspot.com/) and Travels & Themes (https://travelsthemes.blogspot.com/, which is complemented by Toronto Travelogue at: https://www.youtube.com/@TorontoTravelogue). Both are transitioning from blogs to vlogs on YouTube.

All these platforms led me to establish Romar Media Canada as the overall organization for my outlets on both YouTube and Vimeo. (Related video: Romar Media Canada: Redefining Community News).

From the get-go, I didn't want my time, knowledge and experience in international and local reporting to become useless without doing anything, not for financial gain, but to advance the cause of the Filipino community.

Very little is said about folks among us who are real exemplars of virtue and accomplishments, like those we find in the Philippine Artists Group. (Related story: https://filwebchannelmagazine.blogspot.com/2023/06/pags-art-exhibit-celebration-of.html). 

We readily believe propaganda being disgorged by human hype machines such as by (scam?) "artists" of a suspicious organization called SPARC which managed to beguile a "foundation" to bestow its questionable community service award to a former driver. (Video at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lKKviJ2tEn4&t=60s).

Moreover, pages upon pages of newspapers are generously devoted to social climbers, to movie stars and their low lives, to rumors than to factual stories, to lavish socials than to projects that enhance our well-being. 

(Related stories: 
2. https://filwebchannelmagazine.blogspot.com/2024/12/why-do-we-celebrate-mediocrity-instead.html

I thought our moral compass has sunk to depths from which it needed rescue, and in my own little way I had to contribute what I can to call attention to the many wrongs by exposing them. 

(Related stories: 
It's not just what ails us that I focus on, the challenge was why the wrongs were being committed with impunity and being tolerated by the community. Where's the courage that drove us to fight our ancient conquerors - the Spaniards, the Americans, the Japanese?

To my surprise, some individuals and their friends felt offended by my language, particularly the way I described wrongdoings by the usual scam artists and largely ignored by community media.

Well, despite the poison pens and the physical and legal risks, I am very much committed to what I had set out to do in November 2010 leading to the creation of my social media platforms. 

I am inspired by what music artist Madonna said upon receiving the Woman of the Year award in 2016. Here, I am adapting it. She says: "Your resistance made me stronger, made me push harder, made me the fighter that I am today . . . " (Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved).