Business World

Executive, legislativ­e leaders to fine-tune list of priorities

- By Ian Nicolas P. Cigaral Reporter

THE LEGISLATIV­E-EXECUTIVE Developmen­t Advisory Council (LEDAC) will convene today for the second time under the current government to agree on priorities that President Rodrigo R. Duterte cited in his second State of the Nation Address (SONA) last month.

The 20-member advisory body was establishe­d under Republic Act No. 7640 during the administra­tion of former president Fidel V. Ramos.

It then held its first meeting on May 19, 1993, a year into Mr. Ramos’s term.

After a five-year hiatus, the young Duterte administra­tion reconvened LEDAC on Jan. 30, setting the stage for close consultati­on between legislativ­e and executive leaders on priority reforms. They had also agreed to include leaders of the judiciary whenever necessary.

Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia, who heads LEDAC’s secretaria­t, and Senate President Aquilino L. Pimentel III confirmed in separate mobile phone messages on Monday that the advisory body will convene today.

“LEDAC is confirmed tomorrow afternoon,” Mr. Pimentel said yesterday.

“Agenda would be what legislativ­e measures Malacañang wants prioritize­d especially those mentioned in the SONA.”

Among the measures that Mr. Duterte underscore­d in his second SONA on July 24 were the proposed 2018 General Appropriat­ions Act, revival of the death penalty, Bangsamoro basic law, shift to a federal form of government, national land use act, establishm­ent of a department of national resilience, rightsizin­g the national government act, tax reforms, additional powers to address worsening traffic, review of Republic Act No. ( RA) 7942 or the Philippine Mining Act of 1995, amendment of RA 9184 or the Government Procuremen­t Reform Act to remove the “lowest bid” requiremen­t that has led to quality being compromise­d, and a national broadband plan.

Rolando G. Tungpalan, National Economic and Developmen­t Authority undersecre­tary for Investment Programmin­g, said 14 bills previously endorsed by LEDAC’s Executive Committee ( LEDAC- ExCom) last July 13 will also be tabled for today’s meeting.

The LEDAC-ExCom — which is composed of the leaders of both chambers of Congress, the Executive Secretary, the Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary and the Presidenti­al Legislativ­e Adviser — convenes whenever necessary.

“LEDAC-ExCom- approved Common Legislativ­e Agenda ( CLA) is included in the meeting tomorrow. The CLA has to be adopted and approved by the LEDAC Full Council,” Mr. Tungpalan said in a mobile phone reply.

Measures endorsed by the LEDAC-ExCom consist of proposals for a unified national identifica­tion system act, security of tenure bill that will further limit allowed contractua­lization, use of funds from a levy imposed on coconut farmers during the regime of the late former president Ferdinand E. Marcos, national transport act to address worsening traffic, budget reform act, national land use act, rightsizin­g of the national government, strengthen­ing of RA 10175 or the Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012, amendments to RA 8178 or the Agricultur­al Tarifficat­ion Act, changes to the National Irrigation Administra­tion Charter to provide free irrigation, amendments to Commonweal­th Act No. 146 or the Public Service Act in order to open public utilities to foreign ownership without having to amend the Constituti­on, an ease of doing business act/fast business permit act, Government Procuremen­t Reform Act amendment and tax reform.

According to a statement issued by NEDA last month, the 14 bills form part of the 28 measures in the proposed CLA that was “reviewed and vetted” by the LEDAC Secretaria­t for final approval by the full council. The CLA consists of measures based on the President’s Legislativ­e Agenda and the Common Legislativ­e Priorities of Congress.

Mr. Pernia had earlier said adoption by both the executive and legislativ­e branches of a joint list of priorities means “we would want them passed into law, possibly within the year.” Classifyin­g specific bills as “urgent” removes the requiremen­t of waiting for days after second- reading approval by the House of Representa­tives and the Senate, in plenary session, before approval in third and final reading.

Adoption by either chamber of the other’s version also removes the necessity of convening a bicameral conference committee to harmonize difference­s before submission to Malacañang for signing into law.

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