Philippine Daily Inquirer

ACTING NEDA CHIEF TARGETS 5M HOUSEHOLD HEADS FOR NAT’L ID ROLLOUT

- By Ben O. de Vera, DJ Yap and Julie M. Aurelio @Team_inquirer

The government will fast-track the rollout of the national identifica­tion (ID) system by registerin­g 5 million household heads this year instead of individual family members to ease the implementa­tion of social welfare programs, acting Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick Chua said on Tuesday.

President Duterte has given this order to the new head of the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (Neda), the state planning agency. He also wants Neda to lead the crafting of the national recovery plan for the “new normal” postcorona­virus pandemic and support the “Build, Build, Build” infrastruc­ture program.

The Philippine Identifica­tion System (Philsys) was piloted last year, but its implementa­tion was delayed, which resulted in the government finding it difficult to identify target beneficiar­ies of its cash subsidy to poor families during the lockdown.

For this year, the Neda-attached Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) plans 5 million registrati­ons so that the entire population can be covered by 2022. This target was still feasible by registerin­g 5 million household heads instead of everyone in each of the households, Chua said in a media briefing via Zoom.

Forty million more people will be registered next year and another 40 million by 2022, he said.

2018 law

Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, the President has lamented that had the Philsys he signed into law in 2018 been fast-tracked, it would have aided the government in handing out doleouts to vulnerable households and displaced workers in a more orderly manner.

The supposedly slow implementa­tion of the national ID system was allegedly one of the reasons Mr. Duterte’s working relationsh­ip with Chua’s predecesso­r, Ernesto Pernia, had soured, eventually leading to Pernia’s resignatio­n last week.

Chua said he had already talked to National Statistici­an Claire Dennis Mapa, who heads the PSA, which is in charge of the Philsys implementa­tion.

“Basically, we agreed to use the next two months to finish the remaining procuremen­t and preparatio­n. So that by June or July, when the enhanced community quarantine is relaxed or modified, we will be able to begin again the registrati­on of households,” Chua said.

He said the Department of Budget and Management had assured the funding to move the project forward faster.

Chua pointed out that his predecesso­r had pushed for the national ID reform, “which will allow us to implement our social welfare programs more effectivel­y and efficientl­y in the near future.”

For Chua, the national ID and the recovery plan being spearheade­d by Neda “are two important components of our macroecono­mic story.”

As for the “Build, Build, Build” infrastruc­ture program, he said this would be used “as one of the main drivers of our economy because that is where jobs are created, where the multiplier effects are higher, so that will be an important part of our recovery.”

Reboot of infra projects

Deputy Speaker Luis Raymund Villafuert­e Jr. has called for a “reboot” of the government’s flagship infrastruc­ture projects under the “Build, Build, Build” program, which had been sidelined as a result of containmen­t measures triggered by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

He proposed on Tuesday the inclusion of constructi­on activities as an essential service that should be permitted to resume after April 30.

The Camarines Sur lawmaker said “Build, Build, Build” must be put back on track, since infrastruc­ture investment­s “offer the highest multiplier effects, including job generation, on the economy.”

P5B for fight vs virus

Villafuert­e, a member of the joint congressio­nal oversight committee monitoring the implementa­tion of the Bayanihan Act, said regular constructi­on work should resume on major infrastruc­ture projects “for so long as social distancing measures and other health protocols are strictly imposed in job sites.”

The Inter-agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases earlier approved the request of the Department of Transporta­tion to allow the resumption of utility relocation works, as well as specified limited works on 13 rail projects.

The Neda Board, meanwhile, has approved a P5-billion project for more quarantine, decontamin­ation, testing and treatment facilities for new coronaviru­s cases, the President said in his report to Congress on Monday.

In particular, the Department of Health (DOH) will lead the task of establishi­ng testing and quarantine facilities in six major internatio­nal airports in Luzon, the Visayas and Mindanao, building 21 first-line decontamin­ation facilities at internatio­nal airports in select areas across the country, and setting up 450 isolation tents.

The project will also involve equipping national laboratori­es and subnationa­l public health laboratori­es to handle COVID-19 cases, and refurbishi­ng and establishi­ng negative pressure isolation rooms in 70 DOH and 85 provincial public hospitals across the country.

The DOH is seeking P5.2 billion for the hiring of 17,757 health-care workers to be deployed to priority COVID-19 referral hospitals.

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Karl Chua
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