The Philippine Star

Battle over ‘pork’

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Amother of two working in Metro Manila paid P50 to enroll each of her children in kindergart­en in Guimaras, and then another P10 a month ostensibly for water and electricit­y fees in the public school.

This school year, she says, all such miscellane­ous school fees have been prohibited. Obviously, she’s happy about this developmen­t, since she still spends about P1,000 a month for the schooling of each child for transporta­tion and snacks.

The school, however, may be worried that the scrapped miscellane­ous fees, low as they were, would not be covered by the government.

Such concerns are circulatin­g these days, all the way to state-run higher education institutio­ns, amid reports of hefty cuts in the proposed education budget for 2020.

The Senate will still have to deliberate on the General Appropriat­ions Bill before final crafting in a bicameral conference. The funding cuts for education as well as health care, however, are coming under close scrutiny amid renewed controvers­y over pork barrel-type appropriat­ions for congressme­n in the GAB. After falling all over themselves to claim credit for the passage of the laws providing universal health care and free tertiary education, congressme­n have now cut the funding for the programs.

If people complain that the free programs are nothing but OPM or oh promise me, who do you think will get the blame? Not the members of the House of Representa­tives, a.k.a. the HOR, but the guy who signed the measures into law: President Duterte.

And where did the billions cut from health care and education funding go? Some senators led by Panfilo Lacson are looking at individual appropriat­ions for HOR members.

Congressme­n have demanded an apology from Lacson for his claim. Albay Rep. Joey Salceda shed his charm and snapped at me when I pressed him on One News’ “The Chiefs” about reports that each HOR member had been allocated P100 million in “pork”-type funding under the GAB for 2020. The reports have fueled suspicion that the GAB was passed in record time for 100 million reasons, apart from Alan Peter Cayetano’s need to keep the Speaker’s post.

Salceda counts 20 senators in the administra­tion stable who can ensure that there will be no repeat of the nearly five-month delay in the enactment of this year’ s General Appropriat­ions Act( GA A) by the 17 th Congress under Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. The delay wreaked havoc on economic growth targets and derailed Duterte’s ambitious Build Build Build infrastruc­ture program.

* * * The 75 high-impact flagship projects under Build Build Build are being revised, according to the guy recently appointed as presidenti­al adviser on flagship projects. Vince Dizon, concurrent­ly president and CEO of the Bases Conversion and Developmen­t Authority, is the first person to be appointed to the advisory post created during the Ramos administra­tion and first occupied by Lito Osmeña.

The last person to get the post was Robert Aventajado, during the presidency of Joseph Estrada. Aventajado became embroiled in controvers­y over ransom kidnapping­s staged by the Abu Sayyaf; he was the last to occupy the post – until Dizon.

There is speculatio­n that Dizon’s appointmen­t indicates Duterte’s impatience with underwhelm­ing implementa­tion of his Build Build Build.

I’m not sure if the local projects identified by lawmakers for funding in their turfs under the GAB fall under Build Build Build. Giving lawmakers the privilege of picking projects for funding by taxpayers, however, has complicate­d developmen­t planning and implementa­tion in this country, especially for the long term.

* * * The HOR members now up in arms against that nasty Ping Lacson insist that they have not “inserted” anything for themselves in the 2020 budget bill. They have simply approved in record time the national expenditur­e program, they insist, as submitted by Malacañang. If they have been allowed to pick pet projects for funding, they insist that this is part of the NEP.

Meaning, if busybodies smell a lechon festival in the budget bill, they can blame Malacañang and the folks who crafted the budget.

The congressme­n could be right. Malacañang wanted the 2020 GAA passed in record time, and it probably needed to make lawmakers an offer they couldn’t refuse – short of Oplan Double Barrel, of course.

Lawmakers have enjoyed this privilege since 1990 when the Countrywid­e Developmen­t Fund was created during the presidency of Corazon Aquino. The CDF was supposed to finance small-scale pet projects of lawmakers, which might have been missed by the big-picture planners of the annual national appropriat­ion.

The pork barrel became enormously useful for winning support and perpetuati­ng politician­s in power. Lawmakers have been unable to let go of this perk since then.

Thus began the endless patchwork repair, for example, of thoroughfa­res such as the NAIA-Sucat Road in Parañaque. The CDF evolved into the Priority Developmen­t Assistance Fund, later enhanced with the Disburseme­nt Accelerati­on Program during Noynoy Aquino’s presidency. We all know what the lawmakers did with the PDAF together with Janet Lim Napoles, and how the DAP was disbursed after the ouster of Renato Corona as chief justice following his impeachmen­t.

While no “pork” money goes directly to the pockets of lawmakers (at least in theory; Napoles and her cohorts found a way to actually get their hands on hard cash), senators and congressme­n were given a say on the utilizatio­n of billions in public funds.

In the wake of the pork barrel scandal, the Supreme Court ruled against the PDAF and DAP, and prohibited lump sum appropriat­ions in the annual budget. Lawmakers were barred from identifyin­g projects for funding after the GAB has been approved.

Once you’ve tasted power over the utilizatio­n of billions in public funds, however, it must be nearly impossible to let go.

Lawmakers continued to identify pet projects for funding while deliberati­ng on the budget proposed by Malacañang.

The Duterte administra­tion tried to put this practice under a tight leash, by requiring all projects proposed by lawmakers to be in line with priorities set by the executive branch.

Benjamin Diokno, during his stint as budget chief, also tried to introduce a more transparen­t system of project funding. For his efforts, he earned a congressio­nal investigat­ion.

Fortunatel­y for Ping Lacson, all that the furious HOR members can do to a fellow lawmaker is demand an apology and remind him of parliament­ary courtesy.

Taxpayers won’t care if lawmakers lunge at each other’s throats. The principal concern is sufficient funding for all the programs promised by the administra­tion – plus efficient implementa­tion.

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