Philippine Daily Inquirer

Iloilo ‘pork’ scholars sue college execs

Civil suits filed after school stopped students from enrolling, getting records due to unpaid fees

- By Nestor P. Burgos Jr.

ILOILO CITY— Students of a state college in Iloilo province, have filed class suits against top school officials who barred them from enrolling or securing school records due to supposed unpaid fees.

In a five-page civil complaint filed in the Barotac Viejo, Iloilo Regional Trial Court Branch 66, five students of the Northern Iloilo Polytechni­c State College (NIPSC) sought a temporary restrainin­g order and prohibitor­y and mandatory injunction to compel NIPSC president Ma. Theresa Palmares and vice president Hilda Magtiza to allow them to enroll in the coming school year even without clearances for their unpaid accounts.

Rica Segaton, Rovely Bermejo, LeahMaeJar­deleza, Joyce Ann Gaspar, and Meljohn Barredo, incoming third and fourth year students, filed the complaint in their behalf and of “other similarly situated students.”

They said they were unable to enroll because they were required to submit clearances for unpaid fees.

In a separate complaint, NIPSC graduates Mykha Grace Buaya, Remar Ojas and Jiezl Ferenal also asked the court to stop school officials from requiring them to settle unpaid tuition and other fees prior to the release of their transcript of records and school credential­s.

The complainan­ts are among the former scholars of the “Iskolar sang Quinto” (ISQ) program, a project of former Iloilo Rep. Niel Tupas Jr. that was funded by his Priority Developmen­t Assistance Fund (PDAF) or pork barrel.

The funding was discontinu­ed in 2013 after the Supreme Court declared PDAF as unconstitu­tional. The scholars, however, were allowed to continue to enroll on the assurance of Tupas that funds would be provided to cover the scholarshi­p program.

Tupas’ third and last term as representa­tive of Iloilo’s fifth congressio­nal district ended in 2016. He was replaced by his younger brother, Iloilo Rep. Raul Tupas, who defeated Niel’s wife, lawyer Angeli Lee-Tupas.

Palmares, in an earlier interview, said NIPSC received an Audit Observatio­n Memo, dated Feb. 23 and issued by the Commission on Audit in Western Visayas, showing that receivable­s from the ISQ scholarshi­p reached P74,739,380.

Tupas said that from 2007 to 2013, the ISQ and the government paid NIPSC more than P100 million for the scholars. He said P67.6 million (P37 million in 2014, P14 million in 2015 and P16.6 million in 2016) were also released for the scholarshi­p program.

The court, on April 8, issued two separate 20-day temporary restrainin­g orders (TRO) against NIPSC officials. The TROs were released on April 10.

One of the orders bars the school from requiring incoming senior students, who were scholars of ISQ, to settle back accounts prior to enrollment. The other order prohibits the school from withholdin­g copies of transcript of records and other documents of scholars who had graduated but left outstandin­g accounts.

Tupas, however, said the school officials failed to comply with the court orders.

The INQUIRER sought Palmares on Thursday but she did not reply to text messages and telephone calls.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines