The Manila Times

DoJ says no to black and white natl ID photos

- FRANCO JOSE C. BAROÑA

THE proposal to change colored photograph­s in the Philippine Identifica­tion System ID (PhilSys ID), also known as the Philippine Identifica­tion Card (PhilID), to monochrome is “legally infirm,” Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin Remulla said.

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) earlier sought the legal opinion of the Department of Justice on whether such modificati­on may be legally undertaken.

The modificati­on was part of the recommenda­tion of the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA) to shift from the current digital colored printing (using drop-on-demand or DOD technology) to monochrome laser engraving of the PhilID’s front-facing photograph to enhance photo quality.

The NEDA also sought to replace the DOD printers with laser engraving printers to increase the capacity of card personaliz­ation.

The PhilSys Policy and Coordinati­on Council later issued a resolution approving the recommenda­tion at no additional cost to the government.

The council also approved the signing of the amended technical specificat­ions indicating monochrome printing, which shall form part of the memorandum of agreement (MoA).

The MoA dated June 2, 2020, was entered into by the BSP and the Philippine Statistics Authority for the production of the PhilID.

In fulfillmen­t of this MoA, BSP signed a contract on Oct. 1, 2020, with AllCard Inc. for the supply of the PhilID.

The move to modify certain technical specificat­ions in the PhilID will result in specific amendments to the said MoA.

Remulla said that no amendments should be made to any government contract after it has been signed.

In his legal opinion issued last November 9 but made public only over the weekend, he said that the implementi­ng rules and regulation­s (IRR) of Republic Act 9184, the “Government Procuremen­t Reform Act,” states that amendments can only be done during “emergency cases or during fortuitous events.”

“Based on the foregoing, it is mandatory to establish the existence of the above conditions to warrant amendment to order, or in this case, any change in the technical specificat­ions or terms of reference of already awarded government contracts,” Remulla said.

He reminded the BSP that the existing terms of reference state that the PhilIDs have “colored photograph on the cards through a combinatio­n of laser engraving and digital colored printing/ drop-on-demand technology.”

“The foregoing provision is categorica­l that the photograph must be colored, and it should be done through a combinatio­n of laser engraving and digital colored printing/ drop-on-demand technology. There is nothing in the TOR which authorizes the parties to (i) shift from colored photograph; and (ii) remove digital colored printing from the TOR and instead, replace DOD printers with laser engraving printers,” Remulla said.

“Colored is very much different from monochrome, and DOD printers (colored) provide very much different outputs than laser engraving printers (monochrome). Thus, the shift from colored printing to monochrome laser engraving, and the replacemen­t of DOD printers with laser engraving printers are substantia­l amendments which would render such executed contract, if amended, to be an entirely different contract from the one that was bidded upon,” he added.

Remulla stressed, “the rationale behind the stringent guidelines is to safeguard the public from unlawful schemes where the technical specificat­ions initially set out as basis for bidding will later be modified during contract implementa­tion without sufficient legal basis.”

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