Metrobank turns over P40 million grants to 32 partners

GEORGE S.K. TY GRANTS TURNOVER: The Metrobank Foundation Inc. and the Ty family foundation turned over P40 million worth of development grants to 32 development partners during a ceremony held yesterday at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in Bonifacio Global City. In photo are (from left) Metrobank Foundation president and GT Foundation executive director Aniceto Sobrepeña, Metrobank Foundation and GT Foundation vice president Alesandra Ty, Metrobank Foundation and GT Foundation senior vice president Anjanette Dy Buncio, Technological Institute of the Philippines VP for student affairs and services and Career Center director Frank Alejandrino, TIP Career Center manager Adrienne Louise Cacho, Metrobank and Metrobank Foundation chairman Arthur Ty and GT Foundation president and Metrobank Foundation vice chairman Alfred Ty.
JESSE BUSTOS

MANILA, Philippines — The Metrobank Foundation Inc. (MBFI) and the Ty family foundation GT Foundation Inc. (GTFI)  turned over yesterday P40 million worth of development grants to 32 development partners at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in Bonifacio Global City.

Under the theme “Engaging Partnerships, Empowering Communities,” the George S.K. Ty Grants Turnover celebrates the strong collaboration among development organizations with the collective goal of empowering communities to address challenges, especially in the areas of health, education, arts, culture, and livelihood.

“Our contributions will benefit individuals nationwide, but the work doesn’t stop there. Our story doesn’t end there. We must recognize that our role extends beyond implementing projects. It’s not enough that we follow the trends; we must also be committed to shaping them. In a rapidly changing world, we need to think ‘business unusual’,” MBFI president Aniceto   Sobrepen?a said.

This year’s assistance from MBFI and GTFI to development partners will support interventions that will address malnutrition, ensure access to quality education, empower creative communities, and promote sustainable livelihoods, among others.

MBFI has partnered with Pilipinas Shell Foundation Inc. to expand the latter’s Roots to Shoots Program, a three-year comprehensive initiative against malnutrition that will tackle the nutrition, water access, sanitation, and livelihood needs of 345 parents/caregivers and their children in Pasacao, Camarines Sur.

On the other hand, MBFI has also locked arms with Food for the Hungry Inc. in continuing to address the issue of malnutrition in eight barangays in Eastern Visayas, targeting 110 beneficiaries composed of parents and school children.

MBFI has partnered with the International Institute of Rural Reconstruction to set in motion their sustainable and healthy food system through the provision of seeds and equipment and the establishment of diversified home gardens for food self-sufficiency that would benefit 250 families with pregnant and lactating women in Guinayangan, Quezon.

Meanwhile, GTFI has partnered with Save the Children Philippines to address the growing incidences of malnutrition in Matuguinao, Samar, as well as with Communities for Alternative Food Ecosystems Initiative in imparting knowledge and skills on food trade, food preparation practices, and food consumption to 100 families in Cebu City and Northern Cebu.

Clean and potable drinking water is the priority of Plante Water Foundation in its partnership with GTFI, focused on deploying a water filtration system, program to 1,800 individuals in Quezon Province.

The family foundation has also renewed a partnership with Cure Philippines in providing physical and spiritual care for 60 Filipino pediatric patients with repairable deformities in Davao City.

Likewise, GTFI will continue to aid the Metrobank Group’s premiere healthcare ally, Manila Doctors Hospital.

GTFI also struck a partnership with De La Salle Araneta University in providing scholarships in select programs such as BS Accountancy, BSBA Financial Management, BS Hospitality Management, BS Tourism Management, and BS Computer Engineering.

Additionally, the family foundation sustained agreements with Dualtech Training Center Foundation, Inc. and Don Bosco Technical Institute of Makati, Inc. to offer technical vocation scholarships for 100 students for Electromechanics, and 100 students for Automotive, Mechatronics, and Computer Servicing, respectively; Toyota Motor Philippines School of Technology is also a partner of GTFI in supporting 60 students that will undertake General Automotive Job Training Course.

As part of its continuing partnership since 2020, GTFI turned over to Fr. Al’s Children Foundation its support for their scholarship program that benefits qualified students, targeting junior high school students from Boystown and Girlstown in Manila.

The family foundation is also committed to supporting the tuition of 15 academically performing, but financially challenged 4th-year college STEM learners at the Technological Institute of the Philippines; 12 first-year BS Nursing students from the Metrobank Group’s educational affiliate Manila Tytana Colleges; and 10 first-year college students under the University of the Philippines Engineering Research and Development Foundation’s roster of scholars.

GTFI will also provide support for Caritas Philippines in implementing its Alay para sa Karunungan Educational Assistance Program (AK-EAP), where 250 Junior High School students in Mindanao will benefit through skills training for future employment.

Meanwhile, MBFI is partnering with Edukasyon.ph, whose EDGE Teacher Training Program aims to educate 100 public school teachers on how to strengthen their students’ skills in vocabulary, comprehension, and speaking.

MBFI’s partnerships around the education pillar have also prioritized student health and welfare, as it works with RMN Foundation for the construction of handwashing facilities in Region III, Region IV, CARAGA, and BARMM as well as with Virlaine Foundation for the implementation of Walk Your Way to School, which promotes the integration of street children in the formal education system.

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