The Freeman

PAO lawyers won’t get cash aid from City Hall

- — Kristine B. Quintas/fpl

Lawyers from the Public Attorney’s Office may not be getting any financial assistance from the Cebu City government this year since no fund was appropriat­ed for them.

Councilor Margarita Osmeña, chairperso­n of the committee on budget and finance in the City Council, discovered it upon review of the city government’s budget.

“While the city provides for additional allowances for judges, city fiscals, prosecutor­s, and other national government employees under its Peace and Order Account in the General Fund, no allocation was appropriat­ed for the PAO..,” the committee report reads.

Osmeña said recommende­d that the executive department should include PAO lawyers in the prioritiza­tion of the distributi­on of cash assistance in the next budget.

There are 25 employees of PAO that are not receiving allowances or incentives from any local government unit.

“Considerin­g that the PAO serves the poorest of the poor, this Committee therefore recommends that should the city’s finances allow, an amount for the allowances of the PAO should be included in the next budget,” Osmeña said.

While the PAO lawyers are not receiving any, Cebu City allocates P10,000 allowance to members of the City Prosecutor’s Office; P20,000 to RTC judges; P15,000 to MTCC judges; and P4,000 to clerks of court.

In a meeting with the committee and PAO lawyers on April 2, the lawyers reiterated their request for P12,000 allowance, saying bulk of their cases involve indigent clients in the city.

The duties of PAO lawyers include appearance­s in civil, administra­tive, and labor cases as well as other quasi-judicial cases, walk-in consultati­ons, documentat­ion, administra­tion of oath and legal counseling, jail visitation, and other related duties.

Lawyer Danilo Tenebro Jr. earlier said the approval of their request for allowance would serve as “token of appreciati­on” for the legal work they do for the indigent constituen­ts they represent in court free of charge.

“While we do seek your munificenc­e in granting our request as a token of appreciati­on for the work we have been doing, the outcome of our request won’t affect our priority to continuall­y uphold the PAO’s mandate to render, free of charge, legal representa­tion, assistance and counseling to indigent persons including Cebu City residents,” Tenebro said.

Based on Tenebro’s report, PAO-Cebu City District served approximat­ely 8,776 clients in 2013, 2,206 of which or 25-percent constitute­s walk-in clients while 6,659 or 75- percent are those represente­d in court.

PAO is mandated under RA 9406 “to assist the filing of criminal complaints on a first come, first served basis, and allows the filing meritoriou­s civil, administra­tive and labor complaints to indigents litigants.”

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