The Freeman

House to pass two more priority bills this week

- — Philstar.com with reports from Cristina Chi

MANILA --- The House of Representa­tives is set to pass on final reading two more bills, marked as priority by President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr., this week, Speaker Martin Romualdez said.

In a statement Sunday, the House leader said the proposed Philippine Salt Industry Developmen­t Act, and the Bureau of Immigratio­n Modernizat­ion Act may be approved on third and final reading this week.

These bills, Romualdez said, “would sustain our economic growth and create more job and income opportunit­ies for our people.”

If passed, this would bring the total bills passed as pushed by the Legislativ­eExecutive Developmen­t Authority Council (LEDAC) to 33 out of 42.

Three other LEDAC priority bills— Natural Gas Industry Enabling Law, National Employment Action Plan, and Philippine Ecosystem and Natural Capital Accounting System Bill—are set for secondread­ing approval before adjourning sine die, the statement from Romualdez’s office read.

Philippine Salt Industry Developmen­t Act

The Philippine Salt Industry Developmen­t bill aims to draw up a government strategy that will boost local salt production and eventually inch the Philippine­s closer towards salt selfsuffic­iency—a goal that salt producers said can shield the country from global supply chain vulnerabil­ities.

The bill also seeks to give salt farmers and producers enough funding, training, technical support, and trade and export assistance from the government to achieve salt production targets and decrease reliance on imports.

On the draft Philippine Salt Industry Developmen­t Act, Romualdez said: “We have to help the industry and the thousands of Filipinos and their families who depend on it for their livelihood. Our country is surrounded by seas. We can produce a lot of salt for our consumptio­n and even for export.”

Bureau of Immigratio­n Modernizat­ion Act

The Bureau of Immigratio­n Modernizat­ion Act meanwhile seeks to update the 83-year-old Commonweal­th Act 613 or the Philippine Immigratio­n Act of 1940.

“The bill aims to modernize and streamline our immigratio­n system to encourage internatio­nal tourism and foreign investment­s that would boost the economy,” Romualdez said.

The passage of the bill is also expected to update the country’s law to “cover recent challenges in immigratio­n and migration and cross-border crimes, including smuggling, illegal recruitmen­t and human traffickin­g,” he added.

The proposed bill also seeks to update the compensati­on of immigratio­n personnel who are among the lowest paid government officers.

Immigratio­n Commission­er Norman Tansingco last week thanked the House members for approving the said proposed measure on second reading, which the BI chief counts as a win for the Marcos Jr. administra­tion.

He said: “We operate on an 82-year-old law, and many of its provisions are no longer applicable in modern times.”

 ?? The STAR / KJ ?? House Speaker Ferdinand Martin G. Romualdez. Rosales
The STAR / KJ House Speaker Ferdinand Martin G. Romualdez. Rosales

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