The Philippine Star

Duterte signs 153 laws in 5 months

- By JESS DIAZ

President Duterte signed a total of 153 laws over a five-month period this year, or an average of 30 a month or one a day.

Copies of laws that Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea sent to the House of Representa­tives showed that the President affixed his signature on the Congress-approved bills between April and August.

The President allowed an additional 17 bills to lapse into law, bringing to 170 the total of legislativ­e measures enacted within the five-month period.

Most of the bills signed by the Chief Executive are what lawmakers call local laws, as they are of local applicatio­n.

Many of them authorize the creation of barangays, conversion of local schools or roads into national schools or highways, creation of additional courts, changing the names of roads, conversion of local hospitals into national health facilities or establishi­ng district offices of national agencies like the Land Transporta­tion Office (LTO).

The purposes of the laws entail the appropriat­ion of hundreds of millions – perhaps, billions – of taxpayers’ money, but since there are no funds for them in the national budget, they are just an addition to an already long list of unfunded laws.

No one knows when a provincial road converted into a national highway, a new regional trial court, a local hospital transferre­d to the national government for funding and better management or a new LTO office in a congressio­nal district will ever be funded.

A number of the new laws are of national applicatio­n, including Republic Act 11346, which increased excise taxes on tobacco and vapor products.

Among the 153 laws signed by the President were several franchise bills, mostly involving radio and television broadcasti­ng, and telecommun­ications.

The Chief Executive, however, chose not to sign 16 broadcasti­ng and telecom franchises and just allowed these to lapse into law.

Among the 16 are renewals for TV-5 and the broadcasti­ng network run by Catholic bishops.

Only one local bill became a law when Duterte did not sign or veto it within 30 days from its submission to his office: one about the search for the presidency of the Palompon Institute of Technology in Leyte and its conversion into a state university.

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