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SDNP Philippines: IT Pioneer
"Isn't that nice?" says Amy Morado Lecciones, "an NGO training the
Government!" Ms. Lecciones is National Co-ordinator of PSDN, the
Philippine Sustainable Development Network, established in 1993. For the
last three years, PSDN has been holding quarterly, one-day training
sessions in email and Internet use, web mastering and content. Some 20
participants usually attend the workshops: members of NGOs, the private
sector, academia and the Government. But Government tends to outnumber
other sectors in the workshops.
During its six years of pioneering Information Technology (IT) in the
Philippines, PSDN has seen its role change dramatically, responding to a
dramatically changing IT landscape. The project was launched in March,
1993, with grants of US $177,000 from UNDP, US $30,000 from the
Foundation for the Philippine Environment and US $7,300 from CIDA. At
the time, there was no Internet access in the Philippines, so PSDN set out to
prepare the way for it.
Pioneering IT
"As early as '93 and '94, we were the only ones talking about these things,"
says Ms. Lecciones. "We conducted seminars and training courses for
NGOs, people's organisations, academia and even the Government, telling
them what information technology was, what a modem was, what it could
do for them, all through the Bulletin Board System [BBS]."
Before the arrival of Internet access, PSDN established three Bulletin Board
System (BBS) nodes around the country, holding workshops to teach
people how to use them. It was an uphill struggle. "We went from city to
city," says Ms. Lecciones. "People looked at us as if we were crazy, and we
thought we convinced nobody." For one thing, few workshop participants
had the necessary equipment, such as modems, to use the new
technologies. So PSDN provided modems to a number of organisations,
and the investment paid off. "These were very new users who got the hang
of it when the Internet got here," says Ms. Lecciones. "The use of IT
started mushrooming after a time. We really had a big role to play in that."
When the Internet came in in 1994, PSDN was among the very first to offer
Internet and email access, as well as intensive training in their use. They did
the job so well that now, many government departments that started as
customers of PSDN, are allocating funds for their own servers. "I think
we've been successful because we were able to carry them through from
dial-up technology to this stage," says Ms. Lecciones. "We served quite a
number of big government departments when they were just starting. We
even trained their systems administrators. Now they are justifying the
acquisition of equipment and band-waves. It's good for them, it's bad for
us."
An IT explosion
Since 1993, the IT industry in the Philippines has exploded. Today, there are
nearly 500 commercial ISPs and more than ten gateways with E1
connections. In terms of hardware and high-tech services -- such as
"roaming" service whereby a customer traveling in the US can dial the
Philippines as a local call -- PSDN can no longer compete. To stay in
business, it offers the lowest connectivity fees in the country, and provides
technical "handholding" to its 100 customers, most of whom are NGOs with
limited IT capacity. "We don't mind staying on the phone explaining to
them, 'No, actually, this is how it goes...'" says Ms. Lecciones. "Commercial
people don't do that."
Building content, promoting participation
Another unique feature of PSDN is that early on it established its own
foundation, made up of key players in sustainable development. Eleven
foundation members serve on PSDN' Steering Committee, which includes
ex-officio representatives from UNDP and the Environmental Management
Bureau, a government agency. All members pay an annual fee of US $100.
They receive free IT access, and all are expected to further the cause of
sustainable development through the material they publish on the web. In
fact, the existence of the foundation itself via the peer pressure and support
that it provides has been crucial in getting members to share their
information with each other and to contribute to the development of such
resources in the Philippines.
"There's hardly any content about the Philippines on the Internet," says
Ms. Lecciones. "We would like to encourage other organisations to put
their information on the net. For example, we have a biodiversity
conservation database. I don't think people are on a level yet where they
are willing to pay for this kind of information, but we would like to trailblaze
into that direction."
In addition, to further their mission of promoting sustainable development,
PSDN holds regular fora on issues related to sustainable development in
the country. "That's our way of putting people together to exchange views
and come up with solutions," says Ms. Lecciones. "Right now we're
conducting a series of fora called the Water Forum series, in collaboration
with the Foundation for Sustainable Development and the Presidential Task
Force on Water Management." Participating stakeholders include
representatives from the women's groups, farmers' groups, national and
local Government, industry, and landowners. "It's an experts' forum," she
says. "We're coming up with a management plan for the use of the
Government."
Mission accomplished?
But life has not been easy for PSDN in recent times. When UNDP funding
ended in 1995, PSDN staff took a voluntary salary cut of more than 60
percent. Since then, the organisation has existed - just barely - on the US
$100 a year from the 30 members of a foundation it established, and US $13
a month from each of its 100 email and Internet access customers, most of
whom are NGOs with limited budgets. Training workshops and seminars
merely break even. "Nobody thought that we'd be able to survive this fierce
competition," says Ms. Lecciones. "A lot of small entities like us have
folded up already. Only the big ones remain. If you ask me, I think we've
been successful in completing our mission."
Mission accomplished? It would seem so, since Filipinos are now willing to
pay commercial servers for the technologies PSDN helped introduce. In
fact, when Ms. Lecciones looks at overall conditions in her country today,
she sees IT as the healthiest of all economic sectors. "I think the
Philippines is in a kind of limbo right now," she says."The only area that is
progressing is IT. Why? IT enables you to learn about everything that's
going on -- everything. Nobody can fool you any more. We are now
evaluating the niche we can occupy in the IT-aware world that we helped to
create in the Philippines."
For more info: info@sdnp.undp.org
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