Philippine Daily Inquirer

OCD: 15 OUT OF 22 LOCAL GOV’T ISOLATION FACILITIES COMPLETED

- By Dexter Cabalza @dexcabalza­INQ

The Office of the Civil Defense (OCD) has clarified that it had complied with the recommenda­tions of the Commission on Audit (COA) after state auditors flagged the agency over its unfinished COVID-19 facilities last year as well as the use of quick response funds (QRFs).

In a statement on Wednesday, the OCD said the COA resident auditor gave the agency “unmodified opinion” on the presentati­on of its financial statements, which means it strictly adheres to all relevant and applicable accounting and auditing rules and regulation­s.

It said the informatio­n on the COA report was as of December last year only, and was “no longer up to date.”

The OCD is an agency under the Department of National Defense and serves as the implementi­ng arm of the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council.

As of June 21, the OCD said it had 15 facility constructi­on projects already completed.

These are the projects in Jala-Jala, Rizal; Corcuera, Romblon; Sofronio Española, Cagayancil­lo and Cuyo in Palawan; Concepcion, Iloilo; Malaybalay City and Valencia City in Bukidnon; Kidapawan City and Midsayap in Cotabato; Isulan and Bagumbayan in Sultan Kudarat; and Surallah and Koronadal in South Cotabato; and the Provincial Government of Sultan Kudarat.

The status of constructi­on of other facilities were Torrijos, Marinduque, at 99 percent; Santa Cruz, Marinduque, 97 percent; Malungon, Sarangani, 96 percent; Taytay, Palawan, and Tacurong City, Sultan Kudarat, both at 90 percent; Magsaysay, Palawan, 85 percent; and Libacao, Aklan, 47 percent.

79% of funds used

Of the total funds provided by the OCD for local government facility constructi­on and conversion projects and support to local government isolation facilities, 79 percent or P769.5 million have been utilized.

The remaining P164.3 million were unutilized and reverted to the National Treasury.

According to the COA report, only four of the 22 local government­s completed the constructi­on of the isolation facilities.

“The noncomplet­ion of these isolation facilities within the target completion date deprived the intended beneficiar­ies of the needed facilities to curtail the spread of the virus during the pandemic,” it said.

According to the OCD, the project implementa­tion in local government­s were affected by the COVID-19 situation in their localities.

“Such situations include occurrence of surges in COVID-19 cases and varying community quarantine classifica­tion which affected procuremen­t processes and project timelines, issues on the location of the facility which led to the selection of another project site, compliance to mandated revision of plans in compliance to Department of Health directive, and some projects starting during the height of the rainy season which affected constructi­on schedules,” it explained.

The COA also flagged the OCD’s low utilizatio­n rate of funds for its humanitari­an and disaster relief operations transferre­d to its regional offices.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines