Sustainability: At the Forefront of Coca-Cola FEMSA Philippines’ Community Building Efforts
9/28/2017 09:54:00 AM
The
Coca-Cola FEMSA Team, led by Jose Ramon De Jesus Martinez Alonso, poses
with the Teach for the Philippines team, led by Margarita Delgado.
Coca-Cola FEMSA (KOF) corporate affairs director Jose Ramon De Jesus
Martinez Alonzo recently, made his first visit to the Philippines on
official business. One advocacy took center stage in his itinerary—
sustainability, which he believes is an integral aspect in KOF’s shared
journey with the communities in which they operate.
“Our
advocacies in the Philippines have to do with education and
environmental consciousness,” said Martinez. “Coca-Cola FEMSA is always
thinking of how we can help nurture generations of kids that take care
of water, that recycle, that know about proper nutrition. And the best
vehicle to do this is education. This, we believe, is a natural part of
the journey to progress, which we share with the communities with whom
we work.”
Partnership Between KOF-PH and Teach for the Philippines
Martinez
met with Coca-Cola FEMSA’s partners in implementing the Coordinates for
Life (CFL) program, Teach for the Philippines (TFP), an NGO whose
vision is to provide children with access to relevant and excellent
education.
CFL
is an education program originally launched by Coca-Cola FEMSA in
Mexico, which seeks to go beyond academics, equipping children with
values roadmaps that can help them develop maturity, discipline, and the
ability to cope with the challenges of growing up. The program was launched in the Philippines in 2014, and will be implemented nationwide this year.
Martinez speaks to Delgado in the Teach for the Philippines office.
Martinez
sat down with Margarita Delgado, TFP co-founder, to discuss their
experiences with education, and both of them quickly acknowledged the
need for a holistic education that prizes values and morals as much as
it does on traditional academics.
“When
Teach for the Philippines started, we realized that our teachers could
not teach academic lessons effectively in the classrooms, because the
students were in dire need of basic life skills and behavioral
management,” Delgado said. “Aside from focusing on teaching academic
lessons, the development of life skills in our students is essential for
them to become responsible and independent adults.”
“TFP
partnered with Coca-Cola FEMSA to implement CFL because we strongly
believe that the program can help build in our students the resilience
they need to face and overcome the challenges of poverty, which impede
them from attaining opportunities for success,” she continued.
“We
found, with Teach for the Philippines, a perfect match with our
initiative,” added Martinez. “This program is really good because Teach
for the Philippines has the agenda of teaching kids, while our CFL
program at Coca-Cola FEMSA provides tools to orient families about
values, and about how they can grow as a family and help their kids. So
we are sharing this journey with not only the community, but also with
like-minded organizations.”
Coca-Cola FEMSA Philippines’ Invaluable Contribution to Gat Andres Elementary School in Taguig
Martinez’s
trip to the Philippines also took him to Gat Andres Elementary School
in Taguig City. The school is one of the primary beneficiaries of Fort
Bonifacio Development Foundation’s Adopt A School Program.
In
line with its philosophy of helping improve education by looking beyond
academics, KOF-PH, whose office is based in Bonifacio Global City,
immediately agreed to sponsor the construction of the school’s guidance
office and clinic. Martinez visited the school to inspect the donated
facilities, and to meet and interact with some of the teachers and
students.
The
Coca-Cola FEMSA Philippines team together with Principal Felix Alviar,
as well as Jun San Juan of Fort Bonifacio Development Foundation in
front of Gat Andres Elementary School.
“KOF-PH
has been a huge help to us,” said school principal Felix Alviar. “There
really has been a huge improvement, thanks to the help of stakeholders
and the Taguig local government. If you saw this place just a few years
ago, it was just a lot of unused land. Now it’s much better.”
“The
best part is, now that we have a clinic and a guidance office, the LGU
has also assigned regular employees here. We have guidance counselors
and dentists now, and soon, I think they’ll provide us with a dental
chair,” said Alviar.
Martinez
emphasized that all these initiatives by KOF-PH stem from a long
history of creating what the company refers to as “social value.”
“The
people who founded this company 126 years ago were big entrepreneurs,”
said Martinez. “The company has faced a lot of difficulties in that
time, with the Mexican Revolution in the early 19th century,
and with the Great Depression in the United States. After the company
fell down again, our founder thought of how to create something that
goes beyond profits. He decided to focus on creating social value.”
“We
are working to give our small part in a big journey to improve
education,” said Martinez. “This is one of the major ways for us to help
the Philippines.”
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