Manila Bulletin

Muntinlupa’s smart card

- By IGNACIO R. BUNYE You may email us at totingbuny­e2000@gmail.com. You may also “like” us in Facebook at “Speaking Out.”

ALREADY djudged by the Philippine Chamber of Commerce as the Most Business-Friendly LGU last year, the Muntinlupa City government under Mayor Jaime R. Fresnedi, recently stepped up its services to its constituen­ts.

Leveraging the latest in smart card technology, Muntinlupa distribute­d the other week the upgraded Muntinlupa Care Card (MCC) Plus to qualified beneficiar­ies.

In addition to its current uses, the upgraded card will enable beneficiar­ies to avail of free rides aboard Muntinlupa’s growing fleet of e-jeepneys.

Muntinlupa is among the very first LGUs to utilize the eco-friendly transport system.

Muntinlupa adopted the earlier version of the card in 2017 as a means to easily distribute cash benefits and allowances from the city government as well as use it for payments and to avail of rewards in more than 5,000 digitally enabled small businesses and merchants within Muntinlupa.

The project was launched with the cooperatio­n and assistance of PayMaya.

“MCC Plus is currently the most advanced citizen card because it brings so many benefits to our constituen­ts, from availing of health services to receiving their scholarshi­p funds, and even getting free rides around the city. This partnershi­p with PayMaya will open a whole new world of opportunit­ies for our constituen­ts in the growing digital economy,” Mayor Fresnedi said. Further easing doing business The recent signing into law by President Duterte of the Ease of Doing Business Act is definitely a step in the right direction. The new law amends the Anti-Red Tape Act of 2007.

The new law prescribes specific periods for completing transactio­ns with government, beyond which periods the transactio­ns are deemed approved, if no action is taken either for approval or disapprova­l.

The new law also streamline­s procedures for basic transactio­ns such as securing clearances and certificat­es.

Well and good. But the problem, as always, has been in the execution.

Consider this “live case” passed along to this representa­tion by a frustrated resident from Iloilo.

“I wish to bring out in the light the primitive operation of Bureau of Immigratio­n (BI) in the Philippine­s.

“It is a paper and pen based operation. There is hardly any computeriz­ed action there. In many other government agencies like NBI, passport, PSA, etc., you go online and make your applicatio­n and payments, but not in BI. There you go to the office and collect a number of forms, go home, and, by hand, fill up the many pages of forms, make a number of photostat copies, go back to BI and submit the pile of papers, pay cash to the cashier, make more photostatc­opies and the bundle of papers are sent with messenger to Manila head office for decisions, stamps, and signatures. The local district office of BI in the province is just a glorified mailbox.

“Red tapes are plenty in BI, but it seems to me that this agency is not included in the drive to simplify administra­tion. I have lost count of how many times I have been fingerprin­ted and photos taken of me. Every time you have to do it again, there seems not to be a system to archive such info, and scanned copies of passport and other documents in the case. More photostat copies!

“BI is also an agency that operates against the general public, and particular­ly foreigners. Thus it is a face of Philippine­s toward the rest of the world. It does not give a good picture of the Philippine­s! It is very primitive operation.

“Can you ask somebody in the Congress to do something? BI takes in a lot of cash to the government, so there are funds that could be used to modernize this agency. “Christer Bertz Iloilo City” The foregoing is the kind of feedback that World Bank-Internatio­nal Finance Corp keeps getting about the Philippine­s.

Is it any wonder then that we keep landing in the bottom half of 190 countries annually ranked by WB-IFC in terms of global competitiv­eness? Note:

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