The Philippine Star

National ID rollout completed by mid-2022

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

The government is set to complete the rollout of national ID within three years after the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) signed a P3.4 billion contract with the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) for the printing of the physical blank IDs.

BSP Governor Benjamin Diokno and PSA Undersecre­tary and National Statistici­an Claire Dennis Mapa signed the memorandum of agreement for the implementa­tion of Republic Act 11055 or the Philippine Identifica­tion System Act.

The law mandates the establishm­ent of the Philippine Identifica­tion System for all citizens and resident aliens of the country.

PSA’s roles under the MOA include managing the PhilSys database, ensuring the availabili­ty, confidenti­ality, integrity, accuracy, and readiness of the data that will be encoded in the BSP-produced blank cards, and undertakin­g the personaliz­ation, quality checking and distributi­on of the PhilIDs.

Under the MOA, Diokno said the BSP would produce 116 million pieces of blank cards for the PhilID for three years to be issued for free to all Philippine citizens or resident aliens registered under the PhilSys.

“We will also provide needed equipment and space for the embedding of personal informatio­n onto the blank cards, which will be done by the PSA,” Diokno added.

With this Philippine ID, Diokno said the BSP widens its area of cooperatio­n with the PSA.

“While our number-crunching agencies have a long history of interactio­n on statistics, the production of national IDs is a trailblazi­ng field for both institutio­ns,” the BSP chief said.

Diokno said the central bank entered into the government-to-government contract with the PSA and volunteere­d to print the national ID to avoid delays in the roll out.

“In this country if you bid this out, the losing bidder will sue the winning bidder, they will go to court. It will take forever before we complete this project.

Dahlia Luna, BSP senior assistant governor, said the printing cost of the national ID is about P30 per piece and the security features including a QR code would be better than that of the Philippine passport.

For his part, Mapa said the pilot testing started last Sept. 2 and would be completed by June next year, paving the way for the delivery of the physical national ID in July.

Mapa said the agency is coordinati­ng closely with the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t (DSWD) to identify the sectors to be prioritize­d in the registrati­on and distributi­on of the national ID.

The national statistici­an said PSA would target island barangays and municipali­ties in the nationwide roll out of the national IDs.

Mapa said the government hopes to release 14 to 15 million national IDs in 2020 before escalating it to about 50 million in 2021.

The balance, Mapa said, would be distribute­d to targeted individual­s by mid-2022.

 ??  ?? BSP Governor Benjamin Diokno (seated, 3rd from left) and National Statistici­an Claire Dennis Mapa (seated, 2nd from left) led the signing of the agreement on the production of 116 million blank cards for IDs under the Philippine Identifica­tion System. They were joined by (from left, seated) deputy national statistici­an for Philippine ID Lourdines dela Cruz, BSP senior assistant governor Dahlia Luna and BSP assistant governor and general counsel Elmore Capule, as well as (from left, standing) Monetary Board members Bruce Tolentino, Juan de Zuniga Jr., Felipe Medalla, deputy national statistici­an Rosalinda Bautista, and Monetary Board members Antonio Abacan Jr. and Peter Favila.
BSP Governor Benjamin Diokno (seated, 3rd from left) and National Statistici­an Claire Dennis Mapa (seated, 2nd from left) led the signing of the agreement on the production of 116 million blank cards for IDs under the Philippine Identifica­tion System. They were joined by (from left, seated) deputy national statistici­an for Philippine ID Lourdines dela Cruz, BSP senior assistant governor Dahlia Luna and BSP assistant governor and general counsel Elmore Capule, as well as (from left, standing) Monetary Board members Bruce Tolentino, Juan de Zuniga Jr., Felipe Medalla, deputy national statistici­an Rosalinda Bautista, and Monetary Board members Antonio Abacan Jr. and Peter Favila.

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