BusinessMirror

‘₧819-M PPE funds in ’22 must remain with DOH’

- Butch Fernandez

LIKENING the questioned outsourcin­g of pandemic-related supplies to two controvers­ial agencies to asking a “clueless male to buy the best woman’s bra,” Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph Recto has cautioned the Department of Health, which plans to spend P819 million to buy personal protective equipment (PPE) in 2022, not to repeat its mistake of transferri­ng billions to the Procuremen­t Service of the Department of Budget and Management or the Philippine Internatio­nal Trading Corporatio­n (PITC).

The PS-DBM is now the focus of a Senate inquiry into the wholesale transfer to that office of P42 billion in DOH funds in 2020, for buying PPES at the first peak of the Covid-19 pandemic. Senators are also looking into other funds lodged with PITC.

The PS-DBM and PITC are semiautono­mous agencies under the Department­s of Budget and of Trade and Industry, respective­ly, and this setup of outsourcin­g procuremen­t is seen to defeat the legal mandate to boost the capacity of the internal procuremen­t offices in state agencies. Senators also objected to the parking of billions in funding in PITC, especially, to skirt a requiremen­t to return unobligate­d funds to the National Treasury at year’s end.

On Tuesday, Recto recommende­d that the Duterte government order full disclosure of the specificat­ions and “buy Filipino.”

The Senate President Pro Tempore said DOH plans to buy 758,700 sets of personal protective equipment (PPE) next year at an average cost of P1,079 each.

The P819 million needed for the purchase has been included in the 2022 national budget.

In a statement, the senator prodded the DOH to “buy the PPES and shun the trend of paying the Procuremen­t Service of the Department of Budget and Management [PS-DBM] or the Philippine Internatio­nal Trading Corp. [PITC] to do the procuremen­t.”

The senator told the DOH itself to buy it, noting that its doctors and nurses are the ones that will use it, and therefore it is in the best position to know what exactly to buy.

Moreover, Recto noted that “asking PS [DBM] and PITC to buy is like asking a clueless male to buy the best woman’s bra.”

He added: “If DOH will do the procuremen­t, it will save money from not having to pay a commission to PS or PITC, which could jack up costs by 5 percent.”

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