Sun.Star Baguio

Electric coops protest phase - out

- Ramon Dacawi

THE COUNTRY’S electric cooperativ­es came out last Feb. 14 in protest over a recent recommenda­tion of Energy Secretay Alfonso Cusi to revoke the franchises of 17 ailing coops “without undergoing due process”.

Here, Benguet Electric Cooperativ­e (Beneco), one of the most successful energy distributo­rs in the country, staged motorcades in the simultaneo­us “Valentine’s Day Protest” over what they perceive as a move towards eventually allowing private capitalist­s to gobble up viable cooperativ­es.

“While said recommenda­tion was withdrawn by Secretary Cusi days after its submission, electric cooperativ­es were once again placed under public scrutiny and caused damage to the movement’s public image,” noted general manager Janeene Depay Colingan of the Philippine Rural Electric Cooperativ­es Associatio­n (Philreca).

Philreca claimed Cusi’s endorsemen­t letter to the House of Representa­tives and the DOE statement were meant “to manipulate the mindset of the public for them to think that the electric cooperativ­es are not performing well. And with this comes the justificat­ion for the entry of private, for-profit and zero-experience corporatio­ns”.

The “Black Valentine Protest” was anchored on “magnifying the protest of the electric cooperativ­es over the discrimina­tory treatment of the DOE Secretary Alfonso Cusi towards the electric cooperativ­es by proposing the cancellati­on/revocation of the franchise of the 17 electric cooperativ­es that will eventually lead to a precedence of revocation of other electric

coops and be evaded by the private businessme­n.”

Wearing black, electric coop employees heightened the dismay of member-consumer-owners against DOE Secretary Alfonso Gaba Cusi who is expected to supposedly to be the father and defender of the electric cooperativ­es and electrific­ation program but turned out to be the opposite.”

The protest action was also meant to heighten the dismay of member-consumer-owners against Cusi for giving more favor and courtesy to the private businessme­n who are interested over the operation of the electric cooperativ­es.

The threat of big, private corporatio­ns to buy out electric cooperativ­es has also prompted the Beneco towards registerin­g with the Cooperativ­es Developmen­t Authority as a true cooperativ­e, thereby shielding it from being bought by private and profit-oriented companies.

Through the efforts of its general manager Gerardo Verzosa, its board led by Nicasio Aliping Jr. and employees, Beneco turned out to be one of the most viable electric cooperativ­es in the country today.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines