Philippine Daily Inquirer

COA FLAGS BCDA’S P8.5-B NEW CLARK CITY PROJECT

- By Julie M. Aurelio and Nestor Corrales @Team_inquirer INQ

The Commission on Audit (COA) questioned the Bases Conversion and Developmen­t Authority (BCDA) for bundling the sports facilities in Tarlac that were used for the 2019 Southeast Asian Games with a Malaysian firm’s unsolicite­d proposal to build a national government administra­tive center (NGAC).

In its 2019 audit of the BCDA, the COA said the agency erred in bundling the sports facilities with the 2017 unsolicite­d proposal of the Malaysian constructi­on conglomera­te MTD Capital Berhad to build the NGAC —which they said would be similar to Putrajaya in Malaysia—at the 60-hectare New Clark City at the border of Tarlac and Pampanga.

But the BCDA returned the unsolicite­d proposal to MTD Capital and asked the firm to include the sports facilities that would be used in last year’s Southeast Asian Games under a joint venture with the government.

State auditors said the terms of the project fall under Republic Act No. 6957, or the build-operate-transfer law, and the BCDA prejudiced government interest when it pursued the project under a joint venture agreement (JVA).

Stringent requiremen­ts

“If only the BCDA did not incorporat­e the constructi­on of its sports facilities with the National Government Administra­tive Center joint venture project, but rather subjected to the more stringent requiremen­ts of RA 6957, as amended by RA 7718, the government will not entail additional expenses by paying interest or constructi­on cost,” the COA said.

“We would like to emphasize that the whole amount of financing cost could have been avoided if only the project was procured through RA 9184 (Government Procuremen­t Reform Act) and was not incorporat­ed in a joint venture,” it said.

State auditors noted that while the P8.51-billion project was subjected to a Swiss challenge—a process where third parties are invited to submit better cost bids, MTD group had a longer time to study the proposed budget because it was part of their unsolicite­d proposal.

BCDA prerogativ­e

The COA said there had been discussion­s between the BCDA and MTD about the sports facilities even before Sept. 6, 2017, or more than two months before the issuance of the certificat­ion of successful negotiatio­n on Nov. 10, 2017, while prospectiv­e bidders were only given 30 days to study the specifics of the project.

“Competitiv­eness was compromise­d because MTD had more time to study the BCDA’S proposed project,” the state auditors said.

The BCDA issued a statement on Friday to defend its decision and argued that it was the prerogativ­e of the BCDA to decide on how to implement a project.

“It is our opinion that the choice of modality or legal framework of the project is part of the business prerogativ­e of the BCDA in pursuance of its statutory mandate to develop and accelerate the sound and balanced conversion of Clark military reservatio­ns and its extensions,” the BCDA said in a statement.

The BCDA said “the provisions of the executed JVA and the legal framework of the project are in compliance with the existing laws, rules and regulation­s.”

According to the BCDA, the multibilli­on project was supported by Asian Developmen­t Bank, which provided transactio­n advisory services “to ensure transparen­cy and swiftness of the project.”

The BCDA insisted that there was no undue advantage and MTD “only had an advantage in terms of time and preparatio­n, which is usual in cases of unsolicite­d proposal.”

The COA, however, said the BCDA is not exempted from laws governing public infrastruc­ture projects and expenditur­e of public funds.

State auditors said the BCDA could have gotten more from the NGAC project if the sports facilities were not included in the JVA.

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