The Philippine Star

‘Sereno paid P12 M to IT consultant in 5 years’

- By DELON PORCALLA

The Supreme Court (SC), through instructio­ns from the office of Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno, paid a total of P12 million to a female informatio­n technology (IT) consultant for five years’ service.

This was among the startling discoverie­s made by the committee on justice during the resumption of hearing yesterday on the impeachmen­t complaint against Sereno at the House of Representa­tives.

The high tribunal purportedl­y paid roughly about P2.4 million a year – or P200,000 a month – to its IT consultant Helen Macasaet.

Deputy Speaker Ferdinand Hernandez wanted to know from SC officials the “real extent” of Macasaet’s work in improving the IT network of not just the SC, but the entire judiciary as well, demanding that “monthly assessment reports” be given to the committee.

He said they need documents that would show Macasaet’s “accomplish­ments.”

Deputy Court Administra­tor Raul Villanueva, head of the SC bids and awards committee (BAC), testified before the committee of Oriental Mindoro Rep. Reynaldo Umali that Macasaet’s consultanc­y fee was the “highest for an individual contract.”

Villanueva disclosed that Macasaet was initially given a P100,000 monthly fee that was later upgraded to P250,000 which they did not sanction but ended up in a “negotiated procuremen­t,” where the “main criteria was the trust and confidence of the procuring agency” or end-user, who was Sereno.

The BAC, according to Villanueva, considered two other names for the position but the name of Macasaet was supplied by the Office of the Chief Justice, which is the procuring office along with the Management Informatio­n System Office (MISO).

Villanueva also testified that the BAC only considered the October 2013 and May 2014 contracts of Macasaet, who served at the SC from 2013 to 2017. Subsequent renewals were done by Sereno’s office.

Villanueva revealed Macasaet’s consultanc­y contract was renewed six times, each time for P1.5 million, or a total of P9 million. There were other payments also made to the IT consultant.

Deputy Speaker Gwen Garcia noted that Villanueva’s testimony belied the claims of Sereno that Macasaet’s contract was endorsed and approved by the 15-man SC, since the hiring has always been done solely by the office of the chief magistrate.

For his part, Umali read a report made by a SC committee that conducted an investigat­ion on the issue, noting that procedural requiremen­ts in the Government Procuremen­t Act (Republic Act 9184) have not been fully complied with in Macasaet’s case.

He said the consultanc­y fees for the first to seventh contract of services of Macasaet exceeded the ceiling of compensati­on under Circular 2000-11 of the Department of Budget and Management.

Another finding was that there was “no basis to determine the reasonable­ness of the fees on the consultanc­y services for lack of data” on prevailing July 2017 market rates for IT individual consultant­s with the same qualificat­ions and expertise as those of Macasaet.

Among the recommenda­tions were to declare as “void” the eight contracts for having been procured not in accordance with RA 9184 and other pertinent rules and regulation­s and violative of other statutory rules and auditing rules on certificat­e of availabili­ty of funds.

The SC committee likewise ordered Macasaet to “pay the difference.”

Associate justices’ SALNs sought

In a related developmen­t, a group advocating good governance has asked the SC for copies of the statement of assets, liabilitie­s and net worth (SALN) of five of its associate justices who testified in the impeachmen­t hearing against Sereno.

The PinoyAksyo­n for Governance and the Environmen­t (PAGE) yesterday requested for the SALN copies of Associate Justices Diosdado Peralta, Lucas Bersamin, Noel Tijam, Teresita Leonardo-de Castro and Francis Jardeleza for the last 10 years.

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