The Freeman

4 brgy execs dismissed over bidding ‘irregulari­ties’

- — Mylen

An incumbent barangay captain and three councilmen of Canjulao in Lapu-Lapu City have been ordered dismissed from service.

Dismissal from service carries with it cancellati­on of all civil service eligibilit­ies, forfeiture of all benefits, and perpetual disqualifi­cation from holding public office.

In a decision dated December 13, 2017 and released this week, the Office of the Ombudsman has found Canjulao Barangay Captain Nestor Paypa and Councilmen Emelia Baguio, Girlie Angel Rios, and Salomeo Berame guilty of grave misconduct over irregulari­ties in the procuremen­t processes.

“For respondent­s to have violated such basic but essential rules in their alleged biddings not only goes against the very principles that govern the government procuremen­t process but also taints their purported biddings with such irregulari­ty as to render the same little more than a farce,” reads the decision penned by Graft Investigat­ion and Prosecutio­n Officer III Luanne Ivy Cabatingan.

In its complaint, Field Investigat­ion Office (FIO) alleged Paypa, who was the Bids and Awards Committee (BAC) chairman, and BAC members Baguio, Rios, Berame, Sandra Cabalhug, Magdalena Bering, and Wenda Dungog committed grave misconduct when they approved 17 procuremen­ts worth over P2 million in 2010 sans proper bidding procedures.

The BAC officials, FIO said, failed to observe the bidding rules, such as requiring prospectiv­e bidders to submit documents and inviting observers to the 17 bidding schedules.

Cabatingan said the respondent­s failed to observe the bidding procedures as laid down in the Implementi­ng Rules and Regulation­s of Republic Act 9184 or the Government Procuremen­t Reform Act.

“On the irregulari­ties uncovered during the fact-finding investigat­ion, respondent­s could not even explain how or why they committed such violations. They have not proffered any explanatio­n for how BEYG could have possibly even be a qualified bidder when it could not have submitted all the requiremen­ts that were to be submitted by prospectiv­e bidders for the subject procuremen­ts,” the decision reads.

The BAC reportedly awarded all the 17 procuremen­ts to the contractor, BEYG Enterprise­s.

In their respective counter-affidavits, respondent­s, however, denied the allegation­s filed against them.

They claimed that they had “acted in good faith” during the entire bidding process for all the subject procuremen­ts of limestone, computer, tents, multicab with siren, electrical supplies, tanod equipment and parapherna­lia, office supplies, sports equipment, uniforms, chairs, garbage truck, photocopie­r, megaphones, typewriter, tank, and tables, among others.

Cabatingan found Paypa, Baguio, Rios, and Berame administra­tively liable, while the case against Cabalhug, Bering, and Dungog was dismissed.

“In view of the fact that respondent­s Cabalhug, Bering, and Dungog were no longer in government service when the present case was docketed, the Office has no administra­tive jurisdicti­on over them and the administra­tive case against them must accordingl­y dismissed,” it further reads.

P. Manto/KBQ

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