Philippine Daily Inquirer

DAR chief: P12-B projects completed by yearend

- By Dona Z. Pazzibugan

AGRARIAN Secretary Virgilio de los Reyes said the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) could complete within the year the P12 billion worth of projects funded by two foreign grants, which state auditors found mostly unfinished as of 2013 even if most of the funds for it had been released.

De los Reyes claimed that in the year since the Commission on Audit (COA) investigat­ion in 2013, the DAR was able to speed up project implementa­tion.

He said the DAR was able to do this by prodding the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) and the National Irrigation Administra­tion (NIA) and by relaxing required counterpar­t resources from local government units (LGUs).

95% accomplish­ed

“We worked double time since then,” De los Reyes told the INQUIRER over the phone on Thursday.

As of last year, De los Reyes said the Agrarian Reform Infrastruc­ture Support Project Phase III (Arisp III) funded by the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (Jica) had achieved a “physical accomplish­ment” of 95 percent.

The Agrarian Reform Communitie­s Project 2 (ARCP 2) funded by the Asian Developmen­t Bank and the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries has a physical accomplish­ment of 76 percent, he said.

De los Reyes said the DAR could complete 100 percent of the Arisp projects and meet the deadline in August 2015 and complete 95 percent of the ARCP projects by December 2015, their deadline.

The projects consist of rural infrastruc­ture meant to help farmer-beneficiar­ies of agrarian reform in their livelihood.

Released funds

In a report released on Tuesday, the COA said the DAR had already spent P7.76 billion out of the P8 billion appropriat­ion for Arisp but only 42 percent of the infrastruc­ture projects had been completed as of 2013.

The COA doubted whether the target projects could be completed by deadline.

In the case of the ARCP, state auditors found that the DAR had used up P3.6 billion out of its P4.8-billion allocation but only 2.25 percent of the projects had been completed.

De los Reyes blamed the delay in the implementa­tion of Arisp on the DPWH and NIA, to which the funds had been released.

“In 2012, we talked to the DPWH and NIA since they would be the ones who will build” the roads and bridges, and the irrigation projects, he said.

As the lead agency, [the] “DAR’s role is [to] identify the sites for the project plus the enterprise developmen­t,” the agrarian reform secretary said.

LGU equity

For the ARCP, he blamed the delay on the difficulty of municipali­ties, especially the poorer ones, to shoulder half the cost of the project, as required by the Department of Finance under the original terms of the loan.

De los Reyes said the DAR had to revise this loan provision and in 2012 brought down the equity to 10 percent.

He said the department also had to hire accountant­s to assist LGUs in reporting accomplish- ments and fund disburseme­nts so they could avail themselves of the next tranche of funds.

Delays addressed

The funds that had been disbursed so far were used by DAR personnel for enterprise developmen­t and for subdividin­g the collective certificat­e of land ownership awards (CLOAs), he added.

“While it is true that there have been delays in the implementa­tion of the three foreignass­isted projects as pointed out in the COA 2013 audit report, the [the DAR] had already taken steps to address these,” De los Reyes said in a statement.

Change in Italian gov’t

The third project he referred to was the P2.5-billion Italian government-assisted Agrarian Reform Community Developmen­t Support Project in Mindanao.

The COA reported that as of December 2013, none of the target farm-to-market roads and bridges and other infrastruc­ture projects had been completed despite the release of P20.7 million for the project since April 2011.

De los Reyes said while the loan was signed in 2011, it took effect only in August 2013. He blamed the delay in the implementa­tion on the change in the Italian government’s technical adviser as well as the delay in hiring consultant­s.

De los Reyes also attributed the delay in the implementa­tion of the Jica-assisted Mindanao Sustainabl­e Agrarian Assistance Developmen­t Project (Minsaad) to the hiring of engineerin­g consultant­s.

He said their public bidding for consultanc­y services for Minsaad had already failed twice.

 ??  ?? DE LOS REYES: We are working double time.
DE LOS REYES: We are working double time.

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