Philippine Daily Inquirer

DRILON: ‘BUILD, BUILD, BUILD’ DISMAL FAILURE

- STORY BY LEILA B. SALAVERRIA AND JULIE M. AURELIO

The Senate minority leader says only nine of the 75 flagship projects have begun constructi­on, but Malacañang says the administra­tion has done much more, including finishing 9,845 km of roads.

With only nine out of 75 flagships projects under constructi­on halfway into the Duterte administra­tion, its “Build, build, build’’ infrastruc­ture program is a “dismal failure,” according to Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon.

The projects were supposed to usher in the golden age of infrastruc­ture in the country and help spur developmen­t, but economic managers have since aired their plan to revise the list.

Drilon questioned the accomplish­ment rate of the program during plenary deliberati­ons on the proposed 2020 budget on Tuesday.

“It is sad to say that the BBB program of the administra­tion is a dismal failure. Out of the 75 flagship projects that were proposed at the start of the administra­tion, exactly nine started constructi­on. That is only 2 percent of the total,” he later told reporters.

In Malacañang, presidenti­al spokespers­on Salvador Panelo dismissed Drilon’s claim as “baseless,” saying the administra­tion had done so much.

9 mostly in Manila

“Not just nine,’’ Panelo said at a press briefing as he proceeded to read a briefer containing updates on the BBB program, which involves 75 infrastruc­ture flagship projects worth P2.4 trillion.

Some of the projects under constructi­on are the LRT 1 Cavite extension, MRT 3 rehabilita­tion, Metro Manila subway, MRT 7 common station, LRT 2 East extension, PNR Tutuban-malolos, Sangley airport, Naia Terminal 2 rehabilita­tion and Clark Airport expansion.

The Department of Public Works and Highways also reported the completion of 9,845 kilometers of roads, 2,709 bridges, 4,536 flood control projects, 82 evacuation centers and 71,803 classrooms.

Panelo took a swipe at Drilon, alleging that the previous Aquino administra­tion did not accomplish even a single infrastruc­ture project.

But Drilon doubted that the country could expect a significan­t amount of projects in the remaining years of the Duterte administra­tion.

“We only have two years and a half left in this administra­tion. I don’t think any substantia­l progress insofar as that program is concerned will be achieved. I repeat, the execution is simply dismal,” he said.

He also noted that the projects were supposed to be part of the economic relationsh­ip between the Philippine­s and China, with Beijing providing funds for some of these.

“Apparently, that aspect of relation between the two countries is a total failure,” he added.

New list of projects

Sen. Sonny Angara, chair of the finance committee and main sponsor of the budget bill, said the list was set to be revised, with some of the projects to be replaced by those that would be “less ambitious” and “more doable,” and could begin constructi­on under the Duterte administra­tion.

The new list would consist of some 100 projects, Angara said.

Quoting figures from the economic team, he said 12 projects were supposed to be completed by 2020 and an additional 17 in 2021. In 2022, 26 are supposed to be completed and 43 would be finished beyond 2022.

Angara told reporters that revising the list would have a positive effect. “Instead of pinning your hopes on projects that may not push through, you replace it with projects that you know will push through,” he said.

He also said this showed that it was not easy to implement projects and this challenge was not unique to the present administra­tion.

Ambitious, ROW problems

The flagship projects included ambitious ones that would really be a challenge to get off the ground, he noted.

Right of way (ROW) problems have also added to delays.

Angara said that while some BBB projects have not commenced, infrastruc­ture spending is almost 5 percent of GDP, which is what the World Bank recommends.

Six or seven years ago, infrastruc­ture spending was just 1.5 percent of GDP, he noted.

‘Haphazardl­y done’

Drilon said the fact that the list of 75 projects was being reviewed indicated that it was “haphazardl­y done.”

He said the number of projects could be increased, but this would mean nothing until funds were disbursed for their implementa­tion.

“Otherwise, it does not help the economy, because the disburseme­nt is the one that could provide job, build roads, not a feasibilit­y study,” he said.

The BBB projects would only be able to contribute to the GDP if there were actual disburseme­nts for these, he added.

Problems of underspend­ing, bureaucrac­y, ill-advised projects and being unable to respond to needs must be threshed out, Drilon said.

He noted that the economic team was unable to immediatel­y provide details of the projects during the interpella­tion.

“If simply on informatio­n, which they could not provide us, you can imagine the capacity to actually implement the project,” he said.

 ?? —GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E ?? SUBWAY PROJECT Public Works Secretary Mark Villar, Transporta­tion Secretary Arthur Tugade and Japanese Ambassador Koji Haneda lead the groundbrea­king ceremony in February for the Japanese-funded subway project in Metro Manila. Before them is a scale model of a tunnel boring machine.
—GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E SUBWAY PROJECT Public Works Secretary Mark Villar, Transporta­tion Secretary Arthur Tugade and Japanese Ambassador Koji Haneda lead the groundbrea­king ceremony in February for the Japanese-funded subway project in Metro Manila. Before them is a scale model of a tunnel boring machine.

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