Written on November 15th, 2009 by shammieno shouts
1. Community Tax Certificate/ Cedula
• Municipal Hall where you reside
2. Barangay Certificate
• Barangay Hall signed by Barangay Captain where you reside
3. Birth Certificate
• Postal (The Civil Registrar General, National Statistics Office, PO Box 779, Manila Philippines)
• Information
Birth Complete name of the child (first, middle, last)
Complete name of the father
Complete maiden name of the mother
Date of birth (month, day, year)
Place of birth (city/municipality, province)
Whether or not registered late. If registered late, state the year when it was registered.
Complete name and address of the requesting party
Relationship to the child
Number of copies needed
Purpose of the certification
4. Certificate of No Marriage / CENOMAR
• NSO through online application (http://www.e-census.com.ph) or call helpline plus (02-737-1111)
• Information
Complete name of the person
Complete name of the father
Complete maiden name of the mother
Date of birth
Place of birth
Complete name and address of the requesting party
Number or copies needed
Purpose for the certification
5. Marriage License & other requirements (to be submitted at least 1 week before wedding)
• City Health Office
Marriage license
Parental consent (ages 18-24)- should be personally signed by the parents
6. Baptismal Certificate (not required for civil weddings) – at least 3 months before wedding (w/ annotation “for Marriage Purposes only”)
• Church where you were baptized
7. Confirmation Certificate (not required for civil weddings) – at least 3 months before wedding (w/ annotation “for Marriage Purposes only”)
• Church were you were confirmed
8. Canonical Interview (not required for civil weddings)
• Church where you will hold your marriage ceremony
9. Pre-Cana Seminar (not required for civil weddings)
• Church where you will hold your marriage ceremony
• Attend weekend retreat http://www.discoveryweekend.org
10. Certificate of Attendance on Marriage Counseling (not required for civil weddings)
• City Health Office
11. Parish Permit (if Bride is non-parishioner; not required for civil weddings)
• Parish Church where Bride resides
12. Marriage Banns (not required for civil weddings)
• Church where you will hold your marriage ceremony
13. Confession (not required for civil weddings)
14. List of Names & Addresses of Principal Sponsors (not required for civil wedding)
• to be submitted to the Church where ceremony will be held
15. Marriage Certificate
• City or Municipal Hall/ NSO (can be claimed after the wedding)
Dollar Rent A Car
Street: # 36 Osmena Blvd. Cebu City
Province: Cebu
Phone: (6332) 254-7425
Dreb Guani’s Rent A Car
Street: F. Cabahug cor. Tres Borces St., Mabolo Cebu City
Province: Cebu
Phone: 63) 32-2311748 / 63) 32-2311751
Mobile/Cellphone: 63) 917-5497160
ee car/van rental
Street: Alaura St., Guadalupe Cebu City
Province: Cebu
Email: eacamello@yahoo.com
Fast Transit Corporation
Street: FTC Bldg., Pusok Lapu-lapu City
Province: Cebu
Phone: (6332) 3400-981/340-2982/83
Flamingo Rent A Car, Inc.
Street: Gun-ob Lapu-lapu City
Province: Cebu
Phone: (6332) 340-1288
Friends Rent A Car
Street: C/o Cebu Marine Beach Resort Subabasbas Lapu-lapu City
Province: Cebu
Phone: (6332) 340-5729
Hertz Rent A Car
Street: Unit 34 Cebu Capitol Commercial Complex, N. Escario St. Cebu City
Province: Cebu
Phone: (6332) 254-5004/06
Intan Rent A Car Classic Corp.
Street: 42 Osmena Blvd. Cebu City
Province: Cebu
Phone: (6332) 253-2419/01/ 253-4098
Philippines Tourism Authority
Street: Ground Floor LDM Bldg., Legaspi St. Cebu City
Province: Cebu
Phone: (6332) 253-4430/255-7748
Tai Pan Rent A Car
Street: F. Ramos St. Cebu City
Province: Cebu
Phone: (6332) 253-1808/253-3310
The Elite Car Rental
Street: S. Cabahug cor. Tres Borces St., Mabolo Cebu City
Province: Cebu
Phone: 032- 231-1748
Thrifty Car Rental
Street: 2/F MC Nenita Bldg., AC Cortes Ave. Mandaue City
Province: Cebu
Phone: (6332) 346-7886-87
It should come as no surprise that Barack Obama’s approval ratings as president are steadily plummeting, considering how poorly he has fared in managing the issue of health care – which he supposedly has invested his political capital on. However the White House spinmeisters would like to explain it, this administration’s proposal to overhaul the country’s health-care system is too far to the left of the American mainstream. For all his grandiloquent rhetoric about ensuring universal health coverage for all Americans, Obama’s sales pitch and its increasing frequency have served only to make more and more people less convinced that this is the kind of reform America needs at this time. Consider the fact that Obama and his liberal allies want to create a public option and include that in the legislative proposal that both houses of Congress must pass. A public option is nothing short of enabling government to make decisions on how individuals should handle their health care needs. This is a huge insult to America’s institutional principles of freedom and self-reliance. Obama’s incessant, repeated mantra of “If you’re satisfied with your doctor, you can keep your doctor” will continue to fall on deaf ears precisely because this administration’s hidden agenda includes, among other things: rationing health care, punishing employers (even in small business) who will not provide mandatory coverage for their employees, diminishing the significance of private health care providers, and for good measure, herding senior citizens into death panels. For a center-right country as the United States, any government program that seeks to restrain free-market values and most essentially the tradition of freedom has no chance of success in any conceivable degree whatsoever. Bill Clinton tried to ram “universal health care” down the nation’s throat nearly fifteen years ago and was rewarded with a lopsided defeat in the midterm elections of that year. For Obama, whose agenda is no different from Clinton’s, American history may very well repeat itself.