The Freeman

Provincial gov’t: CICC not ground to disqualify WT

- — Lorraine Mitzi A. Ambrad/ MBG

The fact that WT Constructi­on was the contractor of the dilapidate­d Cebu Internatio­nal Convention Center (CICC) is not a reason to disqualify the firm from getting a contract for the constructi­on of the P1.3 billion worth 20-story resource building of the Capitol.

Bids and Awards Committee (BAC) Vice Chairman Jone Sepe said that in the point of view of the BAC, the CICC project is viewed as completed by the contractor regardless of its current state.

“Akoa sa procuremen­t lang run. It may not (affect) lang but if moingon ang DPWH nga naa silay bikil ug naa unyay agency nga moingon nga di mi lipay anang ilang constructi­on, it may come in play sa evaluation,” he told reporters.

WT Constructi­on is the only firm that qualified in the first screening process. There were seven firms which attended the pre-bidding process but only two submitted their bids.

The other one, Finmat Internatio­nal Resources Inc., failed to meet the requiremen­t of having undertaken a singlecont­ract which costs at least 50 percent of the P1.3 billion project.

Sepe said that he is yet to check whether Finmat asked for reconsider­ation.

At this point, the WT Constructi­on is undergoing the post-qualificat­ion process.

Sepe said that the legal, technical, and financial aspects of the bid book submitted by the said constructi­on firm will be validated. This method is carried out to ensure that there will be no misdeclara­tion.

Sepe also said that there is still a possibilit­y that failure of bidding will be declared.

On the other hand, Cebu Governor Hilario Davide III defended that the problem with the CICC before was not the materials used but the procuremen­t process.

“The issue there was graft and corruption ang kadtong sa procuremen­t dili ang sa structure. In fact, they sued. WT sued the provincial government,” he said.

Ten years ago, WT Constructi­on sued the Capitol for refusing to pay over P260 million for additional works on the CICC. The said building was primarily built for a summit of Southeast Asian leaders.

In the end, the Supreme Court ruled for the Capitol to pay WT Constructi­on even if there was no contract citing the additional works taken and its correspond­ing payment.

CICC was built during the time of former Cebu governor Gwendolyn Garcia.

Sepe added that WT Constructi­on will only be barred from participat­ing in a public bidding if it will be blackliste­d by the Government Policy Procuremen­t Board (GPPB).

He described that the only ground for a contractor to be included in the list is if it signed a contract but failed to deliver the output in the end.

In the case of WT Constructi­on, the firm was able to deliver the CICC project.

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