Friday, June 18, 2021

Retards in the Government 211

  It's your weekly compendium of foolishness and corruption in the Philippine government.



https://mb.com.ph/2021/06/11/cotabato-city-village-chair-fatally-shot/
A barangay chairman here was gunned down by two men in a car wash in Barangay Rosary Heights 8 in this city Thursday. 

Police are looking at the possibility that the murder of Danny Matabalao Darping, chairman of Barangay Kalanganan 1, is related to his work.

The victim was waiting in a roadside car wash center around 8 a.m. in Barangay Rosary Heights 8 when two men on a motorbike arrived.

Pastolero said witnesses saw one of the suspects pulling out a pistol and shooting the unsuspecting Darping in the head and body, killing him instantly. The suspects fled toward an unknown direction after the incident, witnesses added.

He said the family initially told police probers that the slain barangay official has been receiving death threats. Police found two empty shells of caliber .45 pistol at the crime scene.

A barangay chairman who had been receiving death threats was gunned down while washing his car.


https://www.philstar.com/nation/2021/06/11/2104746/masbate-vice-mayor-arrested-over-2019-slay-vice-mayor

The incumbent vice mayor of Batuan town in Masbate has been arrested over the 2019 killing of then town Vice Mayor Charlie Yuson III. 

Authorities said they arrested Nelson Cambaya, 58, in Barangay Quinapagian, Mercedes, Camarines Norte at around 5 p.m., Thursday. 

Cambaya is facing charges of frustrated murder and murder. Bail is set at P200,000 for the first charge, while no bail is recommended for the second charge.


Cambaya is alleged to be one of the gunmen who killed Yuson and is among the seven ordered arrested by a Manila court over the slay. 

The court also ordered the arrest of Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office board member Sandra Cam, who had surrendered herself to authorities.

A Vice Mayor has been arrested over the murder of his predecessor.

 

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1445728/lipa-city-village-councilor-gunned-down

A 60-year-old barangay councilor was shot and killed Sunday in Lipa City in Batangas province night, a report said Monday.

Rene Laylo, a resident of Barangay Antipolo Del Sur, and his son, Jerome, were about to go home from a wedding celebration in Sitio (sub-village) Alibangbang, when an alias “Jack” and Marciano Olan, a barangay tanod (village watchman), suddenly appeared around 10 p.m., the Lipa City police reported.

Using a caliber .45 pistol, Jack repeatedly shot Laylo, who died on the spot, the report added.

Jerome managed to grab the firearm after a scuffle, but the gunman and Olan escaped.

Another barangay councilor assassinated. This time they know who did it but not why as he escaped.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1445866/village-exec-wounded-in-pangasinan-gun-attack

A village councilman in Labrador town, Pangasinan province survived a gun attack Sunday, June 13, the police said.

Albert de Vera, 41, of Barangay Bolo was sitting at the porch of his house when the assailants alighted from a vehicle and shot him before fleeing to an unknown direction, investigators said.

De Vera suffered bullet wounds to his upper left body and was brought to the Lingayen District Hospital for treatment.

Another attempted assassination against a village councilman by unknown men for unknown reasons.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1445628/auditors-flag-pia-cash-advances

The Commission on Audit (COA) has flagged the Philippine Information Agency (PIA) for granting additional cash advances to its regional offices although the offices had not liquidated around P85.5 million in previous advances as of Dec. 30, 2020.

In its 2020 audit report, the COA said “no additional cash advance shall be allowed to any official or employee unless the previous cash advance given to him is first settled or a proper accounting” is made.

Despite the nonliquidation of previous advances, state auditors said more advances were approved for the maintenance and other operating expenses and personnel services of various PIA regional offices.

The report said the PIA released advances totaling P179.9 million, with Northern Mindanao getting the most with P16 million.

The COA directed the PIA not give any more cash advances but they continued to do this. There are also other financial anomalies flagged for this organization such as transportation allowances when a car was already given.

A former municipal mayor in Davao Oriental has been sentenced to up to eight years in prison in connection with the anomalous procurement of P32.7 million worth of heavy equipment. 

Aside from prison terms, the court disqualified Duma-an from holding public office and ordered him to pay P32.7 million in civil liability to the municipal government.


“Duma-an acted with gross and inexcusable negligence in the procurement of the equipment without public bidding, authority from the Sangguniang Bayan and proper disbursement documents,” the decision read. 

The court ordered the cases against Duma-an’s co-respondent, former municipal treasurer Arnold Samon, archived as authorities have yet to locate him.


Filed by the Office of the Ombudsman in 2017, the cases stemmed from the municipal government’s procurement of a hydraulic excavator, fire truck and three dump trucks from the Kilusang Magkakaibigan Multi-Purpose Cooperative in October 2011. 

The ombudsman said that aside from the lack of public bidding, the procured items were second-hand or used, which violated a resolution of the municipal council. 

The resolution provided that the heavy equipment to be procured should be brand new.

An ex-mayor gets 8 years for graft he committed back in 2017. He procured trucks without a bidding war and they were used instead of brand new which violated the city council's resolution regarding the procurement. Furthermore the city treasurer is also wanted on these same graft charges but he has yet to be found.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1143725

The Supreme Court (SC) ordered the dismissal of a stenographer after the Civil Service Commission (CSC) concluded that another person took the examination on his behalf.

In a resolution recently posted online, the High Court en banc dismissed from the service Nueva Ecija Municipal Trial Court stenographer Nestor D. Bulaong who was found guilty of dishonesty.

The court also ordered the forfeiture of all of his retirement benefits and with prejudice to reinstatement or appointment to any public office.

“His actions prejudiced not only the civil service but the public in general, as he improperly secured the government position when someone else was probably more qualified to hold it," it said.

The CSC, in 2013, referred the case to the Office of the SC Court Administrator and alleged that Bulaong committed dishonesty and grave misconduct in relation to the Career Service Professional Examination, held on Dec. 17, 1995 in Malolos, Bulacan.

Bulaong claimed that he took the examination and earned a rating of 88.01 percent. Eventually, he was appointed as Court Stenographer I.

However, the CSC discovered the scheme because there were glaring differences between the photograph and signature of Bulaong in his Personal Data Sheets (PDS) and in the examination's seat plan.

A court stenographer had someone else take his Civil Service Exam. The proof is in the photo and signature submitted by the test taker differed from his own photo and signature. His test was administered in 1995 but apparently the fraud was not discovered until much later. In 2013 the CSC referred the case to the Supreme Court and 8 years later a verdict was finally reached.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1143771
Five people, including a government employee, were arrested while some PHP127,071 worth of illegal drugs were seized in separate anti-drug operations in the region.

Brig. Gen. Ronaldo Genaro Ylagan, Police Regional Office-9 (PRO-9) director, on Tuesday identified the government employee as Christian Paul Velonta, 32, of Zone II, Purok Malipayon, Barangay Bulatok, Pagadian City, Zamboanga del Sur.

Ylagan said Velonta, an employee of the provincial government, was arrested in a buy-bust around 8:40 p.m. Monday in Purok Nangka, Barangay Banale.

Recovered from Velonta were some PHP10,404 worth of suspected shabu, PHP1,000 marked money, a caliber .45 pistol with ammunition, and a sling bag.

Another government employee busted for drugs.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1143793

The Supreme Court (SC) awarded damages worth more than PHP1 billion to the Philippine government as it affirmed the decision of the Sandiganbayan against the late Herminio Disini in connection with anomalies in the mothballed Bataan Nuclear Power Plant (BNPP). 

In a statement, the SC said it voted unanimously, with two justices recusing, and awarded PHP1 billion in temperate damages and PHP1 million in exemplary damages in favor of the Republic of the Philippines against Disini, who brokered the USD2.2-billion BNPP project to American nuclear power company Westinghouse Electrical Corporation. 

Disini died in 2014 due to organ failure. He was 78.

The SC ruling affirmed and modified the April 11, 2012 decision of the anti-graft court’s First Division. 

The Sandiganbayan dismissed the government’s claims for damages “for not being established by preponderance of evidence”. 

During the Sandiganbayan proceedings, Danilo Daniel of the Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG) lumped the government’s claims for damages into PHP22.2 billion, representing the cost of the BNPP project, and the PHP20-billion expenses allegedly incurred by government to recover the ill-gotten wealth. 

“The level of attention given to the power plant contract, the alertness to minutiae, the substantial amount of time and effort exerted by Disini, and President Marcos were unusual. And the only reason this Court could think of behind the former president’s level of micromanaging the BNPP contract is a personal financial interest,” the Sandiganbayan 2012 decision read.

The High Court held that the Sandiganbayan erred in relying on a piece of photocopied document which was not substantiated as a secondary evidence, and which purportedly showed that Disini received USD50 million in commissions. 

Nonetheless, the totality of the testimonial and documentary evidence of the government proved that Disini had unduly enriched himself at the expense of the people and the Republic. 

The Republic has the right to be indemnified by reason thereof in the form of damages.

Justice is incredibly slow in the Philippines. Here a Marcos crony is ordered to pay the government P1 billion after he enriched himself in the building of the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant. The case was adjudicated and appealed in 2012 but the man died in 2014. It took the Supreme Court 7 years to reach a decision. Now it's all moot for Disini. Maybe the government will take the money from his heirs.

https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/06/14/21/sara-duterte-to-vp-robredo-refrain-from-giving-advice-if-you-know-nothing
A 45-year-old barangay official here was killed by assailants on a motorcycle on Wednesday morning, police said. 
Investigators identified the victim as village councilor Romalie “Manet” Gonzales Buensuceso-Aguilar. 
According to initial reports, Aguilar was at her hardware store in Purok 2, Barangay Iba O’ Este this town when the unidentified gunmen shot her around 10 a.m. 
The victim sustained a gunshot wound to the head and was taken to the Calumpit District Hospital but was pronounced dead on arrival, investigators said. 
Police said the gunmen fled towards MacArthur Highway.
Another local official gunned down for unknown reasons by unknown reasons.

https://www.philstar.com/nation/2021/06/17/2105993/ex-quezon-mayor-gets-16-years-graft

A former mayor of Lopez town in Quezon has been convicted of graft and falsification of public documents in connection with the premature release of payment for P1 million worth of kitchenware in 2008.

In a 75-page decision promulgated on May 28 and released yesterday, the Sandiganbayan’s Sixth Division said Isaias Ubana, former municipal senior administrative assistant Ma. Bernadette Nieva and Leonardo Revuelta, owner of Revuelta Enterprises, were sentenced to up to eight years in prison for graft.

Ubana and Nieva were sentenced to another eight years in prison for the falsification offense and ordered to pay a fine of P5,000. They were also perpetually disqualified from holding public office.

Filed by the Office of the Ombudsman in 2015, the cases stemmed from the municipal government’s payment of P1.005 million to Revuelta Enterprises on Dec. 8, 2008 for kitchenware to be distributed to several barangays.

The ombudsman said the full payment was released even though the items were not yet delivered.

Imagine going to prison over kitchenware. An ex-mayor is going to prison because he prematurely paid for kitchenware which were never delivered. 16 years in prison because of kitchenware.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1447430/ex-maguindanao-mayor-linked-to-davao-city-bombing-dies-during-escape-try

A former mayor of Talitay, Maguindanao who is linked to the 2016 bombing of a market in Davao City was shot dead on Thursday by his police escorts after he allegedly tried to escape while being taken to Camp Crame.

Philippine National Police (PNP) chief Gen. Guillermo Eleazar said operatives of the PNP’s Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG) arrested Montasir Sabal in the Port of Batangas at around 7 p.m. on Wednesday. Also arrested with Sabal were Noraida Nandang, 43;  Mohaladin Mokaram, 36; Aika de Asis, 34; Aileen Kumpanya, 45; Soharto Monico, 28; and Wilson Santos, 41.

Sabal yielded 400 grams of shabu (crystal meth), unlicensed guns, and P200,000 cash when he was arrested, said Eleazar. According to Eleazar, Sabal has standing warrants for violation of Republic Act 9165 (Dangerous Drugs Act), and for illegal possession of explosives.

Eleazar said  Sabal was one of the planners of the 2016 bomb attack in Davao City and a supplier of guns and explosives to the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters.

According to the PNP, Sabal was being taken to the CIDG’s office inside Camp Crame when he allegedly tried to grab the gun of one of his escorts at about 5:20 a.m. along N. Domingo St. Sabal was shot by his escorts and was rushed to the San Juan Medical Center where he was declared dead at 6:13 a.m.

Sabal resigned as mayor of Talitay in May. He was also a former member of the PNP’s Special Action Force from 1998 to 2010, the PNP said. Police added that Sabal was also included in the national illegal drugs watchlist.

A former mayor who was also a manner of the PNP's SAF and was also linked to a bombing in Davao, a supplier of guns for the BIFF, and a drug dealer was busted for drugs among other things. He attempted to grab a cop's gun to escape but he was shot down instead.

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2021/06/17/2106158/appeals-court-convicts-checkpoint-cop-maguindanao-massacre

The Court of Appeals reversed the Quezon City court’s acquittal of a police officer who manned a checkpoint during the 2009 Ampatuan massacre.

The CA's Special Sixth Division, in a ruling penned by Associate Justice Apolinario Bruselas Jr., granted the Petition for Certiorari filed by the Office of the Solicitor General that questioned QC Regional Trial Court Branch 221’s March 11 Omnibus Order that acquitted SPO2 Badawi Bakal.

The appeals court found Bakal guilty beyond reasonable doubt as an accessory to the crime and sentenced him to up to ten years in prison for each of the 57 counts of murder in the Ampatuan massacre case.

Associate Justices Rafael Antonio Santos and Carlito Calpatura concurred with the ruling.

A police officer's acquittal was overturned by the court of appeals. The OSG says there was a "gross misapprehension of the facts" by the lower court which acquitted him.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1143827

Four persons, including a barangay chairperson were killed, while seven others were wounded in a dynamite explosion in Barangay Pajo, Balud town in Masbate Tuesday afternoon.

In a statement, Brig. Gen. Jonnel Estomo, Police Regional Office 5 (PRO5) director, identified the fatalities as Lina Boco Recto, chief of the said village; Mac-Mac dela Cruz, Ronelyn Banez Bulala, and Aisa Sese.

"Wounded during the explosion were John Paul Villaruel Badahos, 12 years old; Chris Villaruel Bagaipo, 7; Ivan Canones Mahilum, 20; Junvin Villaruel Badahos, 24; Tessie Villaruel Badahos, 59; Leonard Recto Amistoso, 42; and Ruel Henticay Chavez, 26," a police report said.

Lt. Col. Juriz Cantoria, Masbate police provincial director, in a phone interview, said the explosion occurred at Recto’s residence at around 12:55 p.m.

Police are still investigating the incident.

Estomo said dynamites are usually used in illegal fishing.

Police probers are also looking into the possibility that Recto's house was used in the production of explosives for blast fishing, which is rampant in the coastal waters of Masbate.

It is quite possible that a village chief's house was being used as a production facility for dynamite to be used in illegal blast fishing. Now said chief as well as three others are dead.

Thursday, June 17, 2021

Coronavirus Lockdown: Following Health Protocols is Patriotic, Missing Document, and More!

More news about how the COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines is being handled by the public and the government.

There has been an uptick in cases across the country. How is the government going to deal with it? By throwing the full force of the law on health protocol violators. 

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1444047/cagayan-de-oro-local-govt-threatens-to-sue-virus-infected-people-resisting-isolation

The local government here has threatened to file charges against individuals who refused to be picked up from their homes even as they are confirmed to be infected with the new coronavirus disease (COVID-19).

This came as acting city health officer Lorraine Nery revealed that some individuals who were taken from their homes have shown resistance to be transferred to designated isolation facilities.

“To tell you honestly, there are still some who have a little aggression because they don’t want to be extracted. Ever since we have experienced these kinds of challenges,” Nery said.

“We would like to remind them that we have a law. We can still actually convince them but it would take a long time. It will be an added effort on the part of our team,” she added.

Mayor Oscar S. Moreno has earlier ordered that even if they are asymptomatic, individuals who tested positive for the coronavirus must be brought to isolation facilities to prevent the further spread of the disease at home.

"They don't want to be extracted." Of course not! The government is practically imprisoning people who test positive for the virus. That is totalitarianism at its finest. And they justify it becasue they have a law. As if this is a nation where laws are strictly observed and not broken at one's convenience.

Roque says the government will push for a new law to punish violators.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1143113

Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque on Wednesday pushed for the passage of a “special” and “permanent” law that will impose heftier penalties against quarantine violators.

In an interview with DZRH, Roque said a “quarantine law” is more necessary instead of filing murder raps against coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) spreaders.

(The easiest thing to impose the penalty is to have a special law),” Roque said.“(We really need a permanent quarantine law. Other countries already have that).”

(Once we have a permanent quarantine law, there will be no more issue. There is no need to issue a local ordinance imposing penalties on those defying minimum health standards),” he said.

What other countries have a "permanent quarantine law?" Roque does not say but since when defending face shields they bring up Peru he is probably referring to Peru or some other backward nation that is not exactly handling the pandemic in the best way possible.

Last week Duterte mandated that all flights into Cebu because Cebu was following a different protocol for arrivals that that recommended by the IATF. In Manila all incoming passengers must quarantine for 14 days. In Cebu all arriving passengers merely were swabbed and based on the result were either quarantined or could go. Now some Senators are saying the Cebu model should be implemented.

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/381851/more-senators-back-cebus-swab-upon-arrival-policy

More Senators are backing Cebu province’s own Swab-Upon-Arrival policy, a few days after  Malacañang announced all international flights bound for Mactan to be diverted to the country’s capital. 

Senators Sonny Angara and Bong Revilla, in separate statements, said they supported the Capitol’s move to swab Returning Overseas Filipinos (ROFs) and Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs) upon arriving at Mactan-Cebu International Airport (MCIA). 

Angara said he hoped Cebu’s swabbing procedures for ROFs and OFWs, which deviated those from the policies rolled out by the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Disease (IATF-MEID), could be implemented nationwide. 

Both Angara and Revilla agreed that prolonging the quarantine of a Filipino traveler from abroad just meant added burden.

They also said the province’s protocols did not necessarily violate the objectives of IATF and that is to screen incoming passengers for signs of COVID-19. 

Under IATF’s guidelines, ROFs and OFWs will have to complete the required 14-day quarantine rule, in which 10 days will be in designated quarantine facilities or hotel rooms, and the remaining four days in their respective houses.

Having to quarantine for 14 days is certainly an undue added burden. Why not just test for the virus and be done with it?

Independence Day this year was celebrated a a day of freedom...from COVID-19!

https://www.panaynews.net/freedom-from-pandemic-following-health-protocols-is-patriotic/

Today is the 123rd anniversary of Philippine independence. How can Filipinos show patriotism in this time of pandemic? 

For Iloilo’s Gov. Arthur Defensor Jr., Ilonggos can show love to the country by following the health protocols – wearing of facemasks, frequent hand washing and physical distancing, among others. 

If all Ilonggos could fulfill this “duty”, coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infections in this province would dwindle and exhausted healthcare frontliners could rest. 

Defensor said today’s Independence Day celebration should be dedicated to healthcare frontliners.


“Sila gid ang naga-atinder sa aton pasyente. We want independence from COVID-19 and dengue, among other diseases,” said Defensor. 

“Today, we (must) work very hard to achieve freedom from any type of discrimination, abuse, false information, hate speech, harassment, and even freedom from the effects of this pandemic,” he stressed.

Yes, patriotism is doing everything the government tells you to do even if it has no scientific basis. Like wear a face shield and a face mask together when outside the house. This man does not know the first thing about patriotism or freedom but he sure knows how to make people obey.

The Speaker of the House was even more revealing in his speech acknowledging that "basic rights" have been taken away during the pandemic.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1445200/on-independence-day-velasco-tells-filipinos-to-unite-to-free-ph-from-pandemic

“Many of us are unable to go to work, schools remain closed, millions have lost their jobs and livelihoods, and a lot of people can’t avail of medical care because hospitals are filled with COVID-19 patients. Indeed, some of our basic rights have been momentarily taken away due to the coronavirus,” Velasco said.

“While we continue to navigate the challenges brought by the pandemic, may we be reminded of the immense sacrifices our ancestors made and what they had to pay for the freedom we enjoy. We, too, have to take up the fight to free our country from COVID-19,” he added.

With COVID-19 vaccines already arriving, Velasco stressed the government must vaccinate as many Filipinos as possible to finally end the health crisis.

“To win against COVID-19, we need to work together and build on our strengths, just like what our forefathers did almost a century and a quarter ago. Together, there are no challenges we can’t overcome,” Velasco said.

It's a huge admission but no one's going to care. Nothing will come of it. For Filipinos patriotism is doing whatever the government tells you to do whether it's right or wrong, smart or stupid. No one in this country would ever understand Patrick Henry when he said, "Give me liberty or give me death."

The Philippines continues to receive vaccines from China. This week 1 million more doses of Sinopharm arrived. Only one problem, the shipment was missing paperwork!

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2021/06/14/2105418/sinovac-shipment-stuck-storage-until-drugmaker-sends-missing-document

The latest shipment of COVID-19 vaccine doses procured from China’s Sinovac Biotech has yet to be distributed pending the drugmaker's submission of a necessary document.

A million doses of Sinovac’s two-dose CoronaVac arrived in the country last week. The delivery raised the total number of CoronaVac doses received by the Philippines to 7.5 million, including a million doses donated by Beijing.

But in a briefing Monday, Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire said the agency has yet to receive a certificate of analysis (COA) from Sinovac Biotech, delaying the delivery of shots to vaccination sites.

A certificate of analysis is one of the documents required by the country’s Food and Drug Administration.

"We cannot distribute or transport these vaccines to specific recipients in the regions, local governments if the document is incomplete. So we are waiting for the COA to be sent to us so we can already distribute Sinovac doses," Vergeire said in a mix of English and Filipino. 

A terrible blunder indeed. They will surely send the missing papers ASAP. But what does it matter when the drug is not FDA approved but only given an emergency use authorization.

Despite all the hullabaloo about Ivermectin there will be no trials in the Philippines. Instead they will wait for the results of trials in other countries.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1444648/ph-to-just-wait-for-results-of-ivermectin-trials-in-other-countries

There is no more need for the Philippines to conduct its own clinical trial on ivermectin as a prophylactic, or preventive medicine for COVID-19, because several trials are already being done in other countries, according to experts studying the drug.

Dr. Aileen Wang of the University of the Philippines-Philippine General Hospital (UP-PGH) said at least five international studies are already being conducted, “so my feeling is, we don’t really need to do one in the Philippines and [instead] just wait for the results of] these studies.”

UP-PGH Department of Internal Medicine vice chair for research Dr. Cecilia Jimeno said, “there is no plan, at the moment, for an ivermectin prophylaxis trial.”

That ought to save some money at least. Though it has not stopped Duterte from claiming that some people have been cured of COVID-19 by taking ivermectin.

Government officials across the nation have come down with the virus. In one town the entire government was taken down with the virus.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1446116/dilg-takes-over-cotabato-town-as-all-officials-go-on-quarantine

For the first time since the coronavirus pandemic struck, a whole town was emptied of its elected officials, forcing the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) to install its own municipal officer as the town’s caretaker.

All the elected officials of the Magpet municipal government in Cotabato province—from the mayor down to the last councilor—had to be quarantined because they were either infected by COVID-19 or had to be isolated for coming in contact with town officials who tested positive for the dreaded virus.

Ivy Cervantes, DILG municipal local government operations officer, took over as caretaker on Monday to prevent a leadership vacuum in the administration of the town’s affairs, the DILG in the town announced.

This should only last about two weeks until their quarantine time is up.

Nurses and hospital workers in the Philippines get treated like garbage. Last year they were demanding to know "Where’s our COVID hazard pay, allowance?" The DOH "repurposed it."

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1446699/doh-repurposes-hospital-workers-allowance

The Department of Health (DOH) had “repurposed” or already spent on other COVID-related matters the funds originally intended as allowances of public hospital employees during the pandemic.

Sean Velchez, president of the National Orthopedic Hospital Workers Union, said it was “disheartening” to learn that they could no longer receive the money “that was rightfully ours” in the first place.

He said this was even after the Office of the President on June 1 granted the workers’ request to monetize or get the cash equivalent of the benefits.

In a copy of the letter to the Philippine Orthopedic Center (POC), the DOH on June 8 said the Sub-Allotment Advice or P35.5 million worth of meal, transportation, and accommodation benefits were “already repurposed for COVID-19 related activities or responses, such as hiring of additional emergency (Human Resources for Health), vaccination program, and compensation benefits of health workers who contracted COVID-19 infection.”

There was no longer any “additional funding or budget request” to cover the said benefits, added the letter signed by Maylene Beltran, the health assistant secretary for administration and financial management team.

That's a big middle finger to all these medical frontlines who are supposed to be the nation's heroes. Duterte even wants to build a wall commemorating them yet the government has stolen their rightful money. What a joke.

Wednesday, June 16, 2021

Pacquiao's Housing Promise is Actually a Constitutional Mandate

Why are so many Filipinos ignorant of the Constitution? It is one thing to be dismissive of it and call it nothing but a piece of paper like President Duterte. But it is a whole other thing to be ignorant of its contents and consider oneself an informed citizen. Take this one instance. This week Manny Pacquiao said if he were elected President in 2022 he would build subdivisions for squatters.


https://www.manilatimes.net/2021/06/13/latest-stories/pacquiao-to-build-subdivisions-for-squatters/1803105

Senator Emmanuel "Manny" Pacquiao vowed to end squatting if he becomes President.

He pledged to build subdivisions and buildings for squatters.

"No one will live in a squatter (area) especially in Metro Manila," the boxing champ said in a virtual interview with broadcaster Anthony Taberna in his YouTube channel "Tune in with TUNYING" on Sunday evening.

People across the internet, mostly the DDS crowd, have been guffawing and mocking Manny over this proposal. Take Thinking Pinoy's snarky reply as an example.


https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=353133249547614&set=a.283010229893250&type=3

Dear Senator Manny Pacquiao

Good day. 

May I have a copy of the feasibility study that your office must have had conducted prior to issuing this statement?

If possible, can you include a computation of our prospective budget deficit should this be implemented, along with the possible sources of financing, and its ramifications on our country's creditworthiness, in the event that we might have to do some debt restructuring after a few years?

I bet you already took into consideration present realities, including the ongoing economic recession. 

And while we're at it, can you identify the areas where most of the informal settlers will be situated? I have seen your SALN and I'm certain that you can't pay for the requisite land yourself, so I want to know which areas you may exercise the government's Power of Eminent Domain, and how you will alienate that land in accordance with the law?

Sabi mo kasi, "subdivision" e, unless you plan to relocate informal settlers in NCR to some backwater. 

You can send a soft copy of the said proposal to tp(at)ThinkingPinoy.net

Sincerely,
TP

Is RJ Nieto really so stupid as to think that Pacquiao would pay for this project out of his own pocket? Granted those are good questions to ask about such a project so why not ask the government which is tasked with doing this very thing?  It appears that none of Manny's detractors are aware of that fact. It is in article 13, section 9 of the Constitution.

https://www.officialgazette.gov.ph/constitutions/1987-constitution/

SECTION 9. The State shall, by law, and for the common good, undertake, in cooperation with the public sector, a continuing program of urban land reform and housing which will make available at affordable cost decent housing and basic services to underprivileged and homeless citizens in urban centers and resettlements areas. It shall also promote adequate employment opportunities to such citizens. In the implementation of such program the State shall respect the rights of small property owners.

This mandate is currently being carried out by the National Housing Authority (NHA) and the Department of Human Settlements and Urban Development (DHSUD). The NHA was organized  in 1975 but it is the descendant of the People's Homesite Corporation (PHC) which was founded in 1938.

The National Housing Authority (NHA) is the sole national agency mandated to engage in housing production for low income families. It traces its roots to the People’s Homesite Corporation (PHC), the first government housing agency established on 14 October 1938 and to the National Housing Commission (NHC) which was created seven years later, on 17 September 1945. These two agencies, the PHC and NHC, were eventually merged on 4 October 1947 into the People’s Homesite and Housing Corporation (PHHC). 

In the years that followed, six (6) more housing agencies were created to respond to separate and distinct shelter requirements, namely: the Presidential Assistant on Housing and Resettlement Agency (PAHRA); the Tondo Foreshore Development Authority (TFDA); the Central Institute for the Training and Relocation of Urban Squatters (CITRUS); the Presidential Committee for Housing and Urban Resettlement (PRECHUR); the Sapang Palay Development Committee (SPDC); the Inter-Agency task Force to Undertake the Relocation of Families in Barrio Nabacaan, Villanueva, Misamis Oriental. 

Eventually, on 15 October 1975, the National Housing Authority was organized as a government-owned and controlled corporation, by virtue of Presidential Decree No. 757 dated 31 July 1975. All other housing agencies were abolished by the said decree. The NHA took over and integrated the functions of the abolished agencies- the PHHC and the six (6) other housing agencies. The creation of the NHA is the second attempt of the government to integrated all housing efforts under a single agency, twenty-eight years after the merger under the PHHC. 

https://nha.gov.ph/about/history/

Since 1938 the government has been tasked with hosting the people. How has that gone so far? Not every good as there are still squatters and homeless people everywhere. Squatters live in the most filthy of conditions in "houses" that go up in flames the moment a faulty electrical wire sparks. Resettlement areas set up by the government are not much better. The causes of this are nothing to get into in this article. The point here is that those who are descrying Manny's plan of housing everyone is completely unaware that such a project is exactly within the purview of the government.  It is their constitutional mandate. It would appear that way too many Filipinos are ignorant of their country's own constitution.