Jitters in first court appearance after almost two years
Uncategorized Tagged court, kris ablan, litigation 1 Comment »I do not litigate. I haven’t appeared in court in almost two years. Today that streak ended as I went to the Regional Trial Court here in Laoag to appear as collaborating counsel in a Petition for Certiorari against us Board Members.


It’s all for the kids
Bokal Life Tagged ace flyer, day care center, ilocos norte, kris ablan, laoag city, teeter totter 1 Comment »









Old Schoolhouse Saved From Demolition
Uncategorized Tagged demolition, LCES No Comments »Old schoolhouse saved from demolition
READER response has been high regarding the proposed conversion of the American-colonial structure Laoag Central Elementary School into a shopping mall, and the planned demolition of the Spanish-colonial church façade in Dingras, Ilocos Norte.
Ilocos Norte board member Kristian Ablan says a public hearing was conducted on the proposed Provincial Ordinance No. 2009-02-083, “An Ordinance Imposing a Moratorium on the Conversion, Use and Demolition of Buildings, Edifices, Relics, and Other Structures Deemed as Part of the Cultural and Historical Heritage Found and Situated within Ilocos Norte.” It was conducted with the provincial board’s committees on laws and tourism on Feb. 6.
Ivan Henares of the Heritage Conservation Society and Icomos Philippines wrote to Ablan: “Congratulations on a very successful public hearing! I was elated by the news that the attendance was astounding—the session hall was packed to the brim and could not accommodate all those who came, so another room had to be opened to allow people to listen. It’s heartwarming to learn this issue has generated so much interest among the local community of Laoag. Heritage is, indeed, in the mainstream!”
It was argued the building was not a heritage building because it did not appear in the DepEd’s roster of Gabaldon-type schools dating from the American colonial period.
But architect Reynaldo Inovero of the National Historical Institute debunked the argument, stating the structure was clearly of the Gabaldon type and definitely a heritage structure built during the American colonial period.
Moreover, generations of graduates, numbering in the thousands, share the school’s heritage, adding a wealth of intangible value to the structure and its surroundings.
It was also argued that since the school stood on church property, due to church-state separation, its future use was immune from civil and citizen intervention, a view overturned by the voice of the citizens who demanded that their school remain.
The National Historical Institute’s certification that the historic value of the school merited conservation gave strong substantiation to the preservation demands of local citizens.
Gov. Michael Keon held a press conference later and announced the passage of “the ordinance that will precipitate the NHI [National Historical Institute] and National Museum in declaring the Laoag Central Elementary School a historical landmark which will block the demolition of the school and block the mall.”
Now passed and enacted, Ordinance 2009-02-083, which recognizes the value of heritage within the province, defining what structures are considered heritage structures despite their status of being publicly or privately (or Church-) owned, and providing for the preservation of these structures to the benefit of future generations, is a landmark heritage legislation in the Philippines.
That citizens supported the ordinance by attending the public hearings showed public concern for heritage. Thank you to the people of Ilocos Norte and all the provincial officials of Ilocos Norte.
The Continuous Mocking of the 1987 Constitution
Current Affairs Tagged 1987 Constitution No Comments »1.
Make Sure You Have The Numbers
Bokal Life Tagged ilocos norte, provincial board, suspension 3 Comments »America’s protest vote
Current Affairs Tagged john mccain, president obama, us elections No Comments »By now everyone probably knows that Barack Obama has won the presidency of the United States of America. As of press time, he has accumulated 349 electoral votes over John McCain’s 147.
Two Cool Innovations at SM MOA
Weblogs Tagged mall of asia, sm 1 Comment »The missus and I went to SM Mall of Asia yesterday to do a little bit of post-wedding shopping. Officially, I went there to purchase a tent for the local Red Cross chapter in my district. We discovered two new and cool things in the mall.

Random Thought about our Wedding
Weblogs Tagged ilocos norte, kris ria ablan, wedding No Comments »1. When Ria and I were conceptualizing our wedding invite we didn’t want it to be the usual kind of invitation–you know, the traditional and standard design. In one of the wedding fairs we attended we noticed pop-up invites. We immediately knew that was the kind we wanted. Most of the designs had the couple as pop-ups, with the husband in barong and the bride in white gown, and a church as background. Nag-isip kami ni Ria pano maiba. Since both of us are lawyers, naisip namin na business suit damit namin and courtroom yung background.
A Wedding, A Pageant, and A Race
A funny thing happened to me..., Bokal Life Tagged milo race, primacare, weddings No Comments »Even if I want to concentrate in preparing for my wedding in Sarrat, I cannot avoid my duties and obligations as Board Member.
After 3 days of delivering the bulk of the Manila invites, I had to travel back to Laoag for a couple of weekend commitments.
The Wedding
On September 20 Ria and I attended the Reyes-Cua Wedding in Sta. Monica Church, Sarrat. Yep, the same venue of our wedding. We wanted to see how a wedding looked like in that church. At the same time, we also wanted to visualize how our wedding would look like. Thank you to Junie and Elaine for inviting us. Congratulations to the both of you!
Ria and I missed the reception in Fort Ilocandia because she had to fly back to Manila and I had to rush to a pageant.
The Pageant
I went to San Nicolas to attend the Ms. Primacare Pageant. I was excited to judge the event. I was expecting girls and a swimsuit competition. After all, it was the MS. PRIMACARE PAGEANT.
Hollee Mollee, it was a cross-dressing pageant!
Now I’ve judged everything. I’ve judged little kids in a pageant. I’ve judged young ladies in a pageant. I’ve judged senior citizens a pageant. And I’ve judged gays in a pageant.
Judging real men dressed as women completes my pageant bucket list.
I thought to myself, ‘I missed a wedding reception for this?’ I wanted to leave.
But that changed when the talent competition came up. My god, I never laughed so much in a long time. This guy, who looked like a government official in drag, stripped within 4 ft away from the judges’ table and shook his booty.
He was wearing a wig, a bra and a g-string.
A 230 pound man in his late 30s.
I couldn’t look at him straight in the eye. I was laughing so loud.
And then there was this other guy whose talent was to draw in a legal size pad for 20 seconds with a pencil, and show his ‘work’ to us at a distance of about 30 feet. I saw a blank white page. THAT was his talent.
Anyway, the pageant lasted until 1am! And there were only 9 contestants. It took us 5 hours to choose a winner. My gulay, daig pa namin ang Miss Universe. Imagine, there they get to select a winner within 2 hours from a pool of 80 contestants. And here we are taking us 5 friggin’ hours to choose one guy winner among 9.
And the guys smelled of liquor pa ha.
The Race
Early Sunday morning I had to wake up to participate in the 32nd Milo Marathon – Ilocos Norte leg. I only had 4 hours of sleep. I was the first Board Member there. Governor Keon came. So did Board Members Barba, Ranada, Galano, Peralta and Castro. But they weren’t in running attire. I thought we would all run, the governor at the very least. But he told me he was out of shape.
Anyway, before the race nag-ribbon cutting kami sa recently renamed President Ferdinand E. Marcos Memorial Stadium and blessing of its new synthetic track oval.
Afterwards, marathon na. Madaming participants. They said there were about 15,000 runners. First to run were the 21K participants. Mostly composed of runners from out-of-town (Baguio, Manila, Iloilo, etc.) Then the 3K runners—children 12 years old and below. Last to run were the 5K participants. Obviously, this is where I ran.
I am not fit. The only training I did for this race was last Wednesday when I walked around the village for about an hour. That’s it. I tried to run, but after one kilometer I was panting already. I had to slow down and brisk walk. But when I saw teenagers wearing jeans and sneakers and carrying knapsacks passing me, I just couldn’t take it. Imagine kids in heavy jeans, flat sneakers and bags beating me? Aba, di naman pwede yan. Kahit ang sakit sakit na ng tiyan ko, sige takbo, kris, takbo.
It took me 41 minutes to complete five kilometers. It was embarrassing.
But at least natapos ko.
And I beat most of the kids in jeans, sneakers and bags.
Now, my body is starting to hurt.

