Friday, August 31, 2007
In Case Your Rooster Gets Dirty...
This has got to be the single most funny thing I've seen in a long time!
License To Chaos
I decided to get a Filipino driver's license. Partly for driving, and partly for identification purposes. Regarding the driving part: I plan to do very little of it. Come here and try to drive using your Canadian and US standard of driving. It won't work. I see Filipino drivers as using the concept of 'organized chaos'. On first glance what you see is bumper to bumper traffic not obeying any laws; not respecting lanes; not caring if a sidewalk is meant for pedestrians; not understanding that stop signs mean 'STOP' and not 'DRIVE THROUGH QUICKLY'... I've witnessed on many occasions how a street built for three lanes of traffic somehow becomes six lanes of traffic. It's amazing. And this where I first thought, 'these people are insane, they must be the worst drivers in the world'. But now, ah, but now I've altered my view. In order to survive in this crazy world of insane traffic you really need to be a skilled driver. People will cut you off. People will squeeze in beside your car with only an inch of room and somehow not bump into you. And if you're not careful you will find yourself being pushed out of your lane and onto the sidewalk. You need to pay attention and you need to be aggressive BUT this is where it becomes 'organized chaos'. It truly is chaos but somehow it all works. I lack this skill so I probably would be the guy getting pushed onto the sidewalk. Give me time, but for now, I'm only planning to drive small distances.
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
Alien Certificate of Registration Card
I land, stand in the lineup for Immigration, hand the Immigration Officer my massive envelope and waited to see what would happen. I was still assuming there was an interview in the future since the application form (which wouldn't lie would it?) said there was. The Immigration Officer ripped open the envelope, stamped some of the paperwork with the 'official seal', stamped my passport with the 'official seal' and told me to go to the Bureau of Immigration to apply for my Alien Certificate of Registration Card (ACR Card). This card is my identification proving I'm a legal resident of the country. Now, this is where the story gets silly.
Aimee and I go to the Bureau of Immigration office to apply for the ACR. Once we arrive one of the guards out in the street notices my massive envelope and mumbles something about 'Quarantine' but gets so frustrated that we don't understand that he just lets us go in. Once in the building an employee tells us we don't need to be there. Our first step needs to be the Quarantine Office where they will look at my chest x-ray, give me a physical (didn't I already have one in Canada?) and decide if I'm healthy enough to be a resident. After that, he says, I go to a different Bureau of Immigration Office that's a 'One Stop Shop' for all your immigration needs.
We go to the Quarantine Office, the representative looks at my chest x-ray, looks through all my various pages of all the medical tests I did, and after stamping with another 'official seal' directs me to the payment desk. I pay the fee and then get directed to a back room for my physical. My physical consisted of only checking my blood pressure. I knew I passed this part successfully when I noticed one of the employees was stamping my passport 'APPROVED' even BEFORE my physical had completed. Thank you, I am healthy, now back to the 'One Stop Shop'.
Chaos. It's a good word and it's an awesome word to describe the 'One Stop Shop'. We walk in and the office is jam packed with people. I have in my hand my approved medical paperwork and an application for my ACR Card. But there's no clear direction about who I show this to. I see a finger printing station, I see a photo taking station, I see some fee payment booths and other booths listing off services I've never heard of. There's no aircon and it's bloody hot (this is the Philippines after all). We ask the guard at the door where I start and he points in some odd direction that doesn't seem to represent any where in the office. So I go stand in line in front of one of the ambiguous booths because it looked like he was pointing in that direction. He wasn't so that was wasted time. Finally after various bad decisions and incorrect line ups we spoke to some low level employee - for his privacy let's call him Pinoyboy. We asked him, "Where do we start the process for the ACR Card?". "You start with me" (please keep in mind that most conversations were in Tagalog between Aimee and the representatives). We (Aimee) asked him how long it takes to get the ACR Card once the application is completed. "6 weeks", he says. "6 weeks?", Aimee says, "Is there anyway to speed up the process?" (We had a trip planned to go to Hong Kong in two weeks and without that ACR Card I'm not allowed to leave the country). Pinoyboy replies, "Oh, there are ways ... for say, 2000 pesos". This isn't like asking the Canadian Passport Office for speed service to get your passport faster. This is quite ... different. Pinoyboy is some low level employee so Aimee and I were a little nervous about getting 'speed service' from him. We talked it over, weighed the options, thought about the 'service charge' price which is really only $45 Canadian and said, "yes, but we want to stay with you every step of the way". He paused, then put on a smile and said, "Ok". He took my finger prints, got me to sign some forms, and as we followed him around the office, around another office down the street, and back to the original office, I noticed him whispering to various other employees who were obviously part of this 'service charge speed service'. I started to wonder if I was witnessing a group of rogue Immigration Office Employees who share the money or if the 'service charges' are encouraged by the government to fund the services. It's hard to say of course, but all I know is our Pinoyboy and his friends fulfilled their agreement: a week later I received my ACR Card. The card is professional and it's real. I really hate the photo they took of me but at least now I can leave the country if I need to.
Oh, did you happen to notice I never had an "Official Interview" ... the application form did lie. :)
ARC Card: Done
Next stop: a Philippines Driver's License
The Kenniverse is Pinoy: The Beginning
Let's go forward in time by 12 hours ... the plane lands in Manila.
When we left WWAT they told us the process of picking up Daphne from cargo would be an easy one. We were told, "once you arrive go to quarantine, show them her cargo claim number and they will give her to you”. Sounds easy right? Well, it wasn’t that easy … not even close. We walked over to the quarantine booth and were told the paperwork we were given to collect Daphne wasn’t original and only the original paperwork was accepted. The silly thing is the original paperwork was taped to Daphne’s crate so how were we suppose to get the original paperwork from Daphne when were weren’t allowed to pick her up? We were told she was probably still being held in Philippine Airlines cargo building which was actually … get this … outside the airport. So we hopped in the car and drove there. On arrival to cargo we were told only one person could enter the building at a time. We figured it was best that Aimee be the one since she understood the language. She entered the building and I sat and waited. The person at cargo said we didn't have all the required paperwork yet (different paperwork than first requested by quarantine) so Aimee had to walk back to Terminal 2 which is the Arrivals section and had to buy a gate pass, fill it up, take it to quarantine (remember we were told to leave the airport and go to cargo … now they were telling Aimee to go back. You can’t enter the airport unless you have a valid plane ticket. Since Aimee didn’t have a valid ticket seeing as our flight was in the PAST she was force to buy a gate pass), pay taxes on Daphne (the paperwork counter and payment counters are side by side so just picture Aimee side stepping between the two of them several times do get all the required paperwork and fees paid), then head back to cargo where they further asked her to pay handling charges before they release Daphne to us. They said it would have been easier for us if we just checked Daphne in as luggage. Easy enough to say but luggage isn't temperature or oxygen controlled. So clearing her out was actually a terrible experience. Obviously all this stress was effecting Aimee more than me. I was sitting in a car with aircon waiting for her. The worse part Aimee said is she could see Daphne's cage in the distance and wasn't allowed to see her until all this political nonsense was dealt with. From what Aimee tells me the airline placed Daphne's cage with all the other cargo things - therefore boxes - while a forklift drove by crashing and smashing into things. Daphne was certainly freaked out and when Aimee asked if someone could place Daphne in a quieter area they refused to. Finally Aimee had Daphne and brought her to the car. She was freaked out obviously but within a few days she was eating, drinking and purring like normal.
Luggage: check
Cat: check
New life officially starts … wait for it … NOW!
Next stop, getting my immigrant residency card…