The Manila Times

Velasco must prove his worth through judicious allocation of 2021 budget

- TITA C. VALDERAMA

CIVIL society and nongovernm­ent organizati­ons as well as the media and the public at large ought to be more vigilant on how the House of Representa­tives will shape the proposed P4.5-trillion budget for 2021.

Amid strong perception that the leadership dispute between Rep. Alan Peter Cayetano of Taguig-Pateros and Rep. Lord Allan Velasco of Marinduque was primarily over billions of pesos in pork barrel allocation­s, the need to guard against wasteful spending becomes more crucial.

The ouster of Cayetano subsequent to Velasco’s election as House Speaker on October 12 highlighte­d the fact that political patronage is very much alive in government, and Velasco’s repeated expression of gratitude to President Rodrigo Duterte for settling the leadership squabble belies the claimed independen­ce of the legislatur­e from the executive.

The 2021 budget serves as an election- year budget because it will be allotted to projects and programs that will have impact on the 2022 elections, notably infrastruc­tures and dole-outs for which the proponents could claim credit, as if they are spending their personal money for those.

However, in view of the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (Covid-19) pandemic, a significan­t chunk of the budget needs to be set aside for measures intended to respond to the health crisis and to rehabilita­te industries and sectors heavily affected by the economic lockdown.

So much money has already been disbursed for dole-outs this year through the Social Ameliorati­on Program (SAP) under Republic Act 11469 or the “Bayanihan to Heal as One Act.”

According to the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t, it had released 99.91 billion to 17.69 million families during the SAP’s first tranche from April to June, and P83.05 billion to 13.90 million families for the second tranche. Each family received 5,000 up to 8,000.

The Department of the Interior and Local Government was reported to have been investigat­ing more than 400 local executives linked to anomalous disburseme­nts of the SAP. The investigat­ions of SAP anomalies must be pursued relentless­ly and erring officials held accountabl­e as soon as possible to at least demonstrat­e that the Duterte administra­tion is serious in its fight against corruption.

Given the alarming number of reported anomalies, the government should stop giving dole-outs and provide funds instead to ventures that can generate employment so that displaced workers can find work again and help resuscitat­e the economy.

Public vigilance is most important in monitoring projects proposed by legislator­s for funding in the 2021 budget to make sure that these are indeed what the communitie­s need, and not only for personal gratificat­ion of the proponents.

Although the Supreme Court declared the pork barrel system as unconstitu­tional in November 2013, legislator­s have found a way to go around the ruling by way of the so-called “insertions” in the allocation­s of various agencies, instead of the old practice of having a lump sum amount in a Priority Developmen­t Assistance Fund.

Many of those who elected Velasco Speaker were previously behind Cayetano. Their switch of support will not go unrewarded, and the accommodat­ion of their priority projects for pork barrel funding has been the usual way of paying for those votes, apart from positions and other perks in major standing committees.

Velasco’s ally, Rep. Arnolfo Teves Jr. of Negros Oriental, revealed two weeks ago that Pateros and Taguig’s two districts that Cayetano shares with his wife Lani stand to get P11.1 billion in infrastruc­ture funds from the P4.5trillion national government budget for 2021. Perhaps that was the reason Cayetano tried to railroad approval of the budget on second reading and wanted to cling on to the speakershi­p until the end of December when the General Appropriat­ions Act should have at least passed third reading or been ratified by the bicameral conference committee.

If Velasco wants to prove that he could be a better leader than Cayetano, he should apply a fine-toothed comb in scrutinizi­ng the proposed 2021 budget to make sure that every peso is judiciousl­y appropriat­ed. It’s not too late to do that, but he needs to work overtime with the appropriat­ions committee to go over the proposed “insertions.”

He should see to it that there would be no wasteful spending for cosmetic projects, such as the P389-million “white sand” project on Manila Bay, so that funds would go where those are urgently needed.

Velasco may have won the speakershi­p fight, but he has yet to win public support as the fourth highest official in government. He can take the 2021 budget as a tool to prove that he is worthy of the position despite his inadequate experience and track record.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines