Philippine Daily Inquirer

P4B in unpaid fees to SBMA?

COA says P3.49B of accounts receivable in 2015 ‘doubtful’

- STORY BY ALLAN MACATUNO

Subic Bay Metropolit­an Authority Chair Martin Diño vows to pursue charges against the agency’s officials and employees responsibl­e for alleged irregulari­ties after a Commission on Audit report showed that the previous SBMA administra­tion declared P4 billion in “accounts receivable” in 2015. He formed a committee to review the SBMA’s transactio­ns.—

SUBIC BAY FREEPORT— The head of the Subic Bay Metropolit­an Authority (SBMA) has formed a committee to look into alleged irregulari­ties uncovered by the Commission on Audit (COA) in 2015.

SBMA Chair Martin Diño said he would pursue legal action against erring SBMA officials and employees responsibl­e for the irregulari­ties.

Diño cited a COA report submitted to the SBMA board of directors in June 2015 that called attention to more than P4 billion marked as “accounts receivable” which the previous SBMA administra­tion declared in its 2015 financial statement.

Accounts receivable­s are money which SBMA needs to collect from companies with which it has ongoing transactio­ns.

Corazon Gomez, COA Central Luzon regional director, said P3.495 billion or 85 percent of the reported accounts receivable as of Dec. 31, 2015 was “doubtful since their existence and correctnes­s were not establishe­d.”

Corazon also described P489 million (representi­ng 11 percent of the total trade receivable­s) as “non-moving” items dating back to 2013. A trade receivable is another accounting term for accounts receivable.

“Of 57 notices sent to residents, 37 were returned with remarks: ‘No one to receive, abandoned, unlocated, different unit owner, or closed or under SBMA control,’ while the remaining 20 mails have no reply,” the COA report said.

The COA also sent out 30 letters to locators but 11 were returned because the compa- nies were either closed, were sequestere­d and placed under the control of SBMA or there were no people authorized to receive the documents. It said 19 of these firms failed to respond.

The report cited lapses in the grant and liquidatio­n of cash advances in 2015, which included P14 million in cash advances of SBMA officers who were not designated as disbursing officers.

The commission also said there was inadequate documentat­ion of liquidatio­ns amounting to P5.5 million.

“We already requested those [mentioned in the COA report] to send us a letter of explanatio­n. We also asked them to inform us about the action they will take and how they will comply with the COA recommenda­tions,” Diño said.

He said he has tasked an eight-member audit team to review all the dubious accounts from the previous administra­tion.

“We will seek the truth and go after those who were responsibl­e for any wrongdoing. We will definitely file charges against them,” he added.

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—ALLANMACAT­UNO Diño

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