Philippine Daily Inquirer

COA QUESTIONS OSG ALLOWANCES, DEALS

Solicitor General Jose Calida and 14 lawyers of the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG) got P10.8 million in excess allowances and the OSG illegally paid P800 million to foreign law firms over the past nine years.

- STORY BY MELVINGASC­ON

Solicitor General Jose Calida and 14 lawyers in his agency last year collected P10.8 million in excess allowances in violation of Commission on Audit (COA) regulation­s and the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG) itself illegally paid P800 million to foreign law firms from as far back as nine years ago, according to the state accounting agency.

In its 2017 audit report, the COA said Calida received a total excess in allowances of P7.5 million in 2017. Two Assistant Solicitors General who received the next largest amounts were Renan Ramos, who exceeded his allowances by more than P837,000 and Henry Angeles, who got an excess of more than P697,000, the COA said.

State auditors said the practice was irregular because OSG officials collected allowances whose amounts exceeded 50percent of their salary, the regulatory cap set by the COA.

“We recommende­d that management (OSG) refund the excess amount received and deposit the same to (a) trust fund,” the COA said.

‘Not new’

Calida on Friday said the questions raised by the COA over the excess allowances the Solicitor General and other OSG lawyers collected was “not new.”

“It has been on-going for the past five years since the time of Solicitor General Florin Hilbay,” Calida said in a statement. “The OSG has consistent­ly acted within the confines set by law. The honoraria and allowances were paid in accordance with law.”

The COA report, made public on Thursday, said the hiring of foreign law firms by the OSG was illegal because it did not have the concurrenc­e of the state auditing agency.

“The engagement of private lawyers and law firms for legal services and profession­al fees was unauthoriz­ed due to the absence of prior acquiescen­ce of the OSG and written concurrenc­e of the COA,” it said.

The contracts also were not submitted within the required five working days “from execution” while the selection and terminatio­n of the private lawyers and law firms were not clearly recorded and transmitte­d to the COA, it said.

Other findings

Other COA findings in the 2017 OSG audit report:

Of the more than P116.2 million appearing on record to have been paid to Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher (GDC) LLP, only about P101 million was ac- tually disbursed.

Excessive claims for expenses for local and foreign travels, amounting to P132,000 last year.

Computer networking equipment worth P20.3 million, bought in December 2016, was unused and rendered useless.

Failed implementa­tion of the rehabilita­tion of the OSG building, worth P13.9 million.

Net take-home pay of seven employees fell below the minimum amount of P4,000 because the OSG allowed payroll deduction of employees’ obligation­s.

Foreign law firms

Data showed that the OSG paid some P417.9 million to White and Case LLP for its legal services in the Philippine government’s arbitratio­n case against a Belgian company from 2012 to 2017.

The OSG also spent P200 million for the payment of services of foreign law firms Paul Hastings, Janofsky and Walker in the dispute concerning the Metro Rail Transit Corp. Project that started in 2009. Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher (GDC) LLP later took over from the Paul Hastings firm.

The OSG, then under Hilbay, spent P149 million for the legal services of Foley Hoag LLP in the arbitratio­n case initiated by the Philippine­s in its maritime dispute with China, which was filed in January 2013 and settled in favor of Manila in July 2016.

Failure to present contracts

In all these engagement­s, the OSG failed to present the contracts or agreements with the foreign law firms, and documents showing prior consent by the Solicitor General and government auditors, the COA said.

In their reply to auditors, OSG officials said the COA’s approval of their engagement­s with the foreign law firms was not mandatory, a claim dismissed by the COA.

“It was made clear that the intent of the (COA) circular was to curb unauthoriz­ed and unnecessar­y disburseme­nt of public funds, thus, the nature of engagement of lawyers/law firms and the procuring agency is immaterial,” the audit body said. —

The OSG has consistent­ly acted within the confines set by law. The honoraria and allowances were paid in accordance with law Jose Calida Solicitor General

 ?? —JOANBONDOC ?? FOR STABLE SUPPLY President Duterte (center) joins officials of Aboitiz Power and TeaM Energy at the inaugurati­on of the 420-megawatt Pagbilao 3 power plant in Quezon province on Thursday. Seated with Mr. Duterte are (front row, from left) Jera Co. Inc. Senior vice president Toshiro Kodama, Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi, Aboitiz Power chair Erramon Aboitiz; and Marubeni Corp. senior executive officer Yasuo Hirota.
—JOANBONDOC FOR STABLE SUPPLY President Duterte (center) joins officials of Aboitiz Power and TeaM Energy at the inaugurati­on of the 420-megawatt Pagbilao 3 power plant in Quezon province on Thursday. Seated with Mr. Duterte are (front row, from left) Jera Co. Inc. Senior vice president Toshiro Kodama, Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi, Aboitiz Power chair Erramon Aboitiz; and Marubeni Corp. senior executive officer Yasuo Hirota.
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