The Philippine Star

DSWD to lead signing of rules for Centenaria­ns Act

- By Rainier Allan Ronda – With Marvin Sy

The Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t (DSWD) will lead tomorrow the ceremonial signing of the implementi­ng rules and regulation­s (IRR) of the Centenaria­ns Act of 2016, which will give P100,000 cash gift to Filipinos who reached the age of 100.

But the national government has no fund for the centenaria­n’s cash gifts in this year’s budget and even in the 2017 budget despite the enactment of the legislatio­n.

Sen. Ralph Recto, author of the Centenaria­ns Act, yesterday said that it is understand­able that there is no allocation for the centenaria­ns’ cash gifts in this year’s budget because former president Benigno Aquino III signed the law just seven days before he stepped down from office. “Nobody is at fault here.”

But he lamented that the proposed P3.35-trillion national budget for 2017 still has no item for the implementa­tion of the Centenaria­ns Act.

Recto said the Duterte administra­tion should do something about this so that the law could be implemente­d and the centenaria­ns would have something more to celebrate.

He pointed out that the DSWD has around P4 billion in savings this year from completed projects. And currently, there are 3,553 centenaria­ns in the country based on the database of the DSWD. This would require around P355 million for the grant of the cash gift.

“For as long as the transfer complies with recent Supreme Court ruling on budget augmentati­on, I suggest that it should be pursued. The money can also be taken from the Contingent Fund of the President,” Recto explained.

Recto said that since the government appears to have no plan of implementi­ng the Centenaria­ns Act this year, it should have included a provision in the proposed 2017 national budget for this purpose. But under the proposed P129.8-billion budget of the DSWD for 2017, there is still no item for the cash gift.

Recto said he would work for the inclusion of the cash gift in DSWD’s budget during the congressio­nal deliberati­ons on the 2017 national budget.

If this is adopted, Recto said, the DSWD should ensure that updated data is used to determine the actual number of beneficiar­ies.

He noted that the 3,553 cited by DSWD could just be one- fourth of the actual number of centenaria­ns in the country because the official 2010 Philippine population census counted 4,728 centenaria­ns in 2010 and their number was projected to increase to 9,195 in 2013 and to 12,775 by end of 2016.

“So let us give what we could this year and the balance, including those who will turn 100 years old in 2017, let us include this in the 2017 budget,” Recto explained.

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