Manila Bulletin

Why R95.4-B budget items were vetoed

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PRESIDENT Duterte vetoed 195.4 billon in public works projects in the 2019 General Appropriat­ions Bill of 2019 (GAB 2019) when he signed the bill into law last April 15, about three weeks after the Office of the President received the bill on March 26.

The President vetoed the 195.4 billion items, principall­y because they were “not consistent with the programmed priorities“of the national government, as spelled out in the administra­tion’s original budget proposal for the Department of Public Works and Highways.

The administra­tion had set aside funding for many major projects under the “Build, Build, Build” program – for new roads and bridges nationwide, airports and seaports, schoolbuil­dings and other needed government structures. Some congressme­n sought to include their own projects in their districts – schoolbuil­dings and gymnasiums, health centers, covered courts, drainage canals, etc., which were not in the overall plan but of special interest to the congressme­n’s constituen­ts.

In an earlier era, these local projects were allowed as part of the congressme­n’s unwritten benefits. It was even charged that they got percentage­s from the contractor­s they chose for the projects. But the whole system, called Priority Developmen­t Assistance Fund (PDAF) in its final years, was declared unconstitu­tional by the Supreme Court in 2013.

A second reason for the presidenti­al veto was that the vetoed items had been added by some House leaders after the appropriat­ions bill had already

been approved by the Bicameral Conference Committee, Thus Senate President Vicente Sotto III officially informed President Duterte that the Senate was approving the General Appropriat­ions Bill, but with reservatio­ns on the additions made by the House leaders, and urged him to veto them.

Senator Sotto was referring to 175 billion which some House leaders had itemized where there had previously been a lump sum. As President Duterte actually vetoed 195.4 billion, the difference of 120.4 billion could be unprogramm­ed projects that may have been inserted by some senators.

In any case, the presidenti­al veto effectivel­y removed 195.4 billion which was at the core of the delay in the 2019 national budget. Because the senators and congressme­n could not agree on this one issue, the General Appropriat­ions Bill for 2019 was delayed for three months – one entire quarter. Projects programmed for the year could not be started. There will be effects on the Gross National Product (GNP) at the end of the year.

We trust that all the officials concerned , particular­ly the members of Congress, will learn from this experience. First, they should coordinate from the beginning with national public works officials, if they hope to have their special projects included among the “programmed priorities” in the overall national public works plan.

Second, constituti­onal processes must be followed strictly, such as those specified in the approval of laws. Changes in a bill already bicamerall­y approved may have been tolerated in the past, but no longer, it seems, under the present administra­tion.

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