The Philippine Star

More than 100 key bills approved in 15th Congress

- By PAOLO ROMERO

The outgoing Congress had approved more than 100 key pieces of legislatio­n, mostly on promoting human rights as well as strengthen­ing the economy and the campaign against crime and corruption, Speaker Feliciano Belmonte Jr. said yesterday.

Belmonte issued the statement as the House of Representa­tives moved its final session to today for approval of some bills, whose passage last night was aborted by the suspension of session in the Senate.

The final session of the 15th Congress was supposed to be yesterday but the Senate suspended work following the resignatio­n of Sen. Juan Ponce Enrile as Senate president.

The 16th Congress will convene on July 22 coinciding with the State of the Nation Address of President Aquino.

“Not without adversitie­s and diversitie­s, the 15th Congress has lived up to its mandate as a catalyst of reforms, and serving as the crucible of our people’s aspiration­s,” the Speaker said in a statement.

“Crucial laws were enacted to adapt to demands of these changing times in those vital areas of developmen­t. We must have sustainabl­e developmen­t in mind as we consider our future policies to ensure consistent growth,” he said.

“Under challengin­g circumstan­ces and finite resources, we have laid the foundation­s of genuine societal reformatio­n. We remained steadfast to our mandate as representa­tives of our people and did what was required of us,” the Speaker said.

He described the 15th Congress as “a union of diverse individual­s united in the goal of pursuing policy reforms needed to benefit the greater majority of our people.”

“Human limitation­s may have prevented us from achieving all that we had hoped, but collective determinat­ion to institute reforms promoting transparen­t and responsive governance never fell short,” Belmonte said.

Data from the House committee on rules showed that from July 26, 2010 until mid-May this year, 392 vital measures were enacted into law, 104 of which were national in nature and 283 for local concerns.

Of the 104 statutes, 10 cover economic and fi scal reforms. These are General Appropriat­ions Act from 2011 to 2013, Further Strengthen­ing the Anti-Money Laundering Act, Restructur­ing the Excise Tax on Alcohol and Tobacco Products, Rationaliz­ing the Taxes on Internatio­nal Air Carriers in the Philippine­s, and the Extension of the Implementa­tion of the Lifeline Rate under the Electric Power Industry Reform Act of 2001.

Laws promoting political and governance reforms include: the GOCC Governance Act of 2011, requiring all government offices to ensure the release of the retirement benefits of employees within 15 days from retirement; Conferring upon a member of the Sanggunian­g Bayan, Sanggunian­g Panlunsod and Sanggunian­g Panlalawig­an the Appropriat­e Civil Service Eligibilit­y, the Amendments to the AFP Modernizat­ion Act, and the Strengthen­ing of the National Electrific­ation Administra­tion.

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