This is how the government's Farmers' Information and Technology
Services (FITS) centers have expanded over the last nine years.
And through these centers, rural people, particularly farmers,
have been considerably benefiting from improved agricultural
technologies they provide.
FITS centers, now popularly known as Techno Pinoy, are a
component of Techno Gabay Program (TGP), the banner program
on technology transfer and R&D utilization of the Los
Baños-based Philippine Council for Agriculture, Forestry
and Natural Resources Research and Development (PCARRD).
A FITS center is a one-stop information shop that provides
farmers, traders, entrepreneurs, processors and other stakeholders
quick access to location-specific agricultural information
services.
Since PCARRD launched the FITS program in 1997, 198 such
centers have been set up from Batanes to Basilan, Dr. Bessie
Burgos, director of PCARRD's Technology Outreach Program
Division (TOPD), reported as a press forum at the Traders'
Hotel in Manila last July 21.
Dr. Burgos said the FITS centers are based at or hosted
by local government units (67 percent), state colleges and
universities (19 percent), Department of Agriculture, Department
of Science and Technology provincial S&T centers, Department
of Environment and Natural Resources and nongovernment organizations.
The FITS centers are supported by farmer-scientists (magsasaka-siyentista)
or successful farmers or farmer-leaders whose farms are showcases
of "best practices." They share their technologies
and practices with other farmers.
The TGP-FITS have been of great help to people in the countryside,
as found in a PCARRD study done in Bacarra, Ilocos Norte;
Alfonso Lista in Ifugao; and La Trinidad, Benguet.
The sites primarily produce rice, corn, and semi-temperate
vegetables.
"The TGP interventions not only resulted in significant
increases in output, but in farm income as well," the
study noted. "Farmers, in general, said that they were
better off with TGP than without it."
PCARRD concluded that because of the TGP's viability, it
is now part of the national extension strategy, as reflected
in the Medium-Term Philippine Development Plan.