Home Headlines SBMA turns over worn-out flags for proper disposal in Bataan

SBMA turns over worn-out flags for proper disposal in Bataan

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Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority (SBMA) Chairman and Administrator Eduardo Jose L. Aliño (center) leads the turnover of its worn-out Philippine flags to Barangay Captain Vicielito Balan (2nd from left) of Alion, Mariveles, Bataan, for inclusion in the flag disposal program on March 13 in compliance with Republic Act 8491. Assisting the turnover were SBMA acting-Deputy Administrator for Administration Vicente Evidente, Jr. (2nd from right), SBMA Procurement & Property Management Department (PPMD) acting-manager Jennifer Guiang (right), and PPMD Division Chief Dennis Rolan Baviera (left).

Subic Bay Freeport – Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority (SBMA) turned over its worn-out flags, which have been hoisted in front of the administration building over the years, for proper disposal in Mariveles, Bataan.

SBMA Chairman and Administrator Eduardo Jose L. Aliño led the turnover of these national symbols to Alion Barangay Captain Vicielito Balan during a simple ceremony held at the Chairman’s Office in Subic Freeport on March 4, 2026.

According to Aliño, the Sangguniang Barangay of Alion wrote a letter to the SBMA, requesting that the agency donate its tattered, faded, or worn-out Philippine flags for inclusion in the burning ceremony.

During the1st Regular Session of the Sangguniang Barangay (SB) of Alion on January 5, the SB passed a resolution for the proper disposal of tattered or worn-out Philippine flags. The said flag disposal program will be held on March 13 at the Flag Disposal Site inside the Alion Barangay Hall Compound.

The program aligns with the flag disposal rites of the Boys Scouts and Girls Scouts of the Philippines,  Armed Forces of the Philippines, and the Philippine National Police.

The ashes of the disposed flags will be placed in an urn to be laid to rest in a memorial site especially provided and made for them.

The said disposal site complies with Republic Act No. 8491, otherwise known as the “Flag and Heraldic Code of the Philippines,” which stipulates that reverence and respect shall be accorded to the flags, the anthem, and other national symbols.

Located along Waterfront Road, Subic Bay Freeport Zone, the SBMA flagpole, where these flags are hoisted, boasts of a rich historical symbolism, as it witnessed the epic transition of Subic Bay from a U.S. naval base to a Philippine-led economic zone.

The flagpole stands at 120 feet, symbolizing a total of 94 years of foreign military presence in Subic, the 18 heads of state who attended the 1996 Asia-Pacific Economic Conference (APEC) in Subic, and the eight thousand volunteers who protected and preserved the base facilities after the U.S. Navy withdrew in 1992.

The Philippine flag in Subic Bay Freeport, hoisted permanently in compliance with RA 8491, is one of the largest in the country, measuring 44 feet long and 22 feet wide.

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