The Philippine Star

More than meets the eye

- MARY ANN LL. REYES

Just recently, the Department of Transporta­tion said that it will impose sanctions against the private contractor that was able to bag the lucrative P3.6-billion contract covering the supply of vehicle license plates which was awarded in 2013.

According to Transporta­tion Secretary Art Tugade, the Land Transporta­tion Office is currently computing the penalties that should be imposed on Power Plates Developmen­t Concepts Inc. and J. Knieriem BV Power Plates (PPI-JKG) for its late deliveries.

Based on the contract, PPI-JKG is supposed to supply 15 million new plates within a five-year period. But only four million had been distribute­d so far.

Despite the delayed deliveries, Tugade said that the contract with PPI-KPG under the Motor Vehicle License Plate Standardiz­ation Program will remain, as he emphasized that there is no legal basis to cancel the contract.

It now appears that Tugade and LTO chief Edgar Galvante are in fact trying to defend this contractor, to the point of downplayin­g the faults of PPI-KPG.

Negros Oriental Rep. Arnolfo Teves Jr. earlier said that he will file a resolution so that Congress can look into DOTr’s decision to reconsider this alleged anomalous contract.

Teves pointed out that aside from the company’s alleged violation of the Government Procuremen­t Act (Republic Act 9184), the car plate supplier has violated critical provisions of its multi-billion contract, including subcontrac­ting the work that has resulted in the delivery of substandar­d products.

It will be recalled that about 700,000 license plates arrived at the Manila Internatio­nal Container Port in 2015 but PPI-JKG refused to pay P40 million in taxes and duties. The plates were then donated by the customs bureau to the LTO.

The Commission on Audit has also said in 2015 that the contract is in violation of procuremen­t laws. It said that PPI-JKG failed to submit their tax clearance, latest income and business tax returns, among other documents required for government contracts.

LTO in a memorandum circular (2014-1895) required operator and owners of four-wheeled motor vehicles renewing their registrati­on to apply for the replacemen­t of old license plates, at a cost of P450, with the new standardiz­ed LTO-approved plates last January 2015. But the COA disallowed the extra fee in December 2015.

It was only early this year when the Supreme Court lifted the temporary restrainin­g order which prevented the release of the 700,000 plates. This was after the High Court dismissed the petition filed by some members of Congress who questioned the legality of BOC’s move to donate the plates to LTO. They cited COA’s disallowan­ce on the MVLPSP.

The MVLPSP was to be implemente­d from July 2013 to June 2018.

Tugade and Galvante have announced that they have met recently with the suppliers of the license plates and they are now conducting discussion­s to ensure that plates from as far back as 2013 will be distribute­d to registered owners.

Yes, the Supreme Court lifted the TRO and the COA removed the disallowan­ce. But this only covers the P487 million that was advanced by the Aquino administra­tion to PPI-JKG. It does not cover issues like sub-standard plates (thin plates and faded color) and the fact that the work was subcontrac­ted to India.

Tugade has even announced that DOTr and LTO are now capable of producing the plates and that the machines are already in the LTO compound in Diliman. So how come they still want to resume talks with the previous erring contractor­s?

To justify the government’s deal with the previous supplier, we can expect Tugade and Galvante to defend their act in honoring the deal as the best and quickest way to resolve the supply problem of vehicle license plates.

Already, LTO executive director Romeo Vera Cruz has said that the resumption of PPI-JKG’s contract will address the backlog from 2013 to 2018 and beyond. The total backlog of plates for motor vehicles from July 2016 to March 2018 has reached 3.8 million and 5.2 million for motorcycle­s, according to news reports.

He added that discussion­s regarding amendments to the contract are being finalized, subject to the approval of the DOTr, even as he said that PPI-JKG still has to deliver about 11 million plates.

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