The Philippine Star

23 bills certified urgent by Duterte passed into law

- By ALEXIS ROMERO

Out of the 27 measures certified as urgent by the Duterte administra­tion, 23 have become laws, data from the Presidenti­al Legislativ­e Liaison Office (PLLO) showed.

Nearly all of the bills certified as urgent by former president Rodrigo Duterte have been passed by Congress but only 36 of his 75 priority measures, proclamati­ons and internatio­nal agreements were enacted into law or have secured the concurrenc­e of lawmakers, according to the PLLO.

If the President certifies a measure as urgent, Congress may approve it on second and third reading on the same day. As of June 27, three urgent measures that have not been enacted into law are the bill strengthen­ing the financing system for agricultur­e, fisheries and rural developmen­t in the Philippine­s; amendments to Continuing Profession­al Developmen­t Act of 2016; and the proposed act institutio­nalizing anti-drug abuse councils in every local government unit.

One of the items certified as urgent by Duterte was the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP), a free trade agreement among members of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations, China, Japan, South Korea, India, Australia and New Zealand. The agreement has to be ratified by the Senate before it takes effect in the Philippine­s.

Earlier this month, President Marcos ordered agricultur­e officials to come up with a memorandum enumeratin­g the advantages and disadvanta­ges of RCEP so the government could decide on whether it would push for its ratificati­on.

Meanwhile, the measure that aims to strengthen the financing system for agricultur­e, fisheries and rural developmen­t was ratified by both chambers of Congress last May and was transmitte­d to Malacañang for the President’s signature last June 27.

Under the Constituti­on, the President has 30 days to sign or veto a bill transmitte­d to his office. If the President does not act on the measure within 30 days, it would lapse into law.

The amendments to the Continuing Profession­al Developmen­t Act of 2016 were approved by the House of Representa­tives but remained pending in the Senate civil service committee.

The bill institutio­nalizing antidrug abuse councils in every local government unit was approved on final reading by the House but did not secure second reading approval in the Senate.

The rest of the priority bills were bypassed by Congress, including measures on property valuation system of local government units; the Department of Disaster Resilience bill; internet transactio­ns act; government financial institutio­ns unified initiative­s to distressed enterprise­s for economic recovery act; passive income tax and financial intermedia­ry tax reform; amusement tax on digital platform and offshore betting stations of licensed cockpits; stiffer penalties for illegal drag racing; the rental housing subsidy bill; medical reserve corps act; establishm­ent of a Disease Prevention and Control Authority; the Bureau of Immigratio­n modernizat­ion act; the advance nursing education act; creation of the Boracay Island Developmen­t Authority; institutio­nalization of e-governance; the Virology and Vaccine Institute of the Philippine­s bill; establishm­ent of evacuation centers in every city, province and municipali­ty; increasing the share of local government­s in the national internal revenue taxes; magna carta of barangay health workers; granting of amnesty to former communist rebels; amendments to the Continuing Profession­al Developmen­t Act of 2016 and the bill seeking to institutio­nalize anti-drug abuse councils in every LGU.

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