The Philippine Star

Gov’t urged: Fill 190,000 vacant positions

- By JESS DIAZ

Congressme­n yesterday urged the government to fill nearly 190,000 vacant positions in the entire bureaucrac­y.

Isabela Rep. Rodolfo Albano lll said filling these jobs would reduce the number of jobless college graduates in the country.

He said as far as he knew, the House of Representa­tives and the Senate had included funds for hiring personnel in the P2.6-trillion 2015 national budget.

“So the funds are there. There is no reason why state agencies cannot hire the personnel they need, unless there are no qualified applicants, which I do not believe,” he added.

He noted that if the appropriat­ed funds were not used, these would become savings of the executive department.

Reached for comment, Davao City Rep. Isidro Ungab, appropriat­ions committee chairman, confirmed that this year’s budget includes funds for vacant positions.

“They are included in the lump sum called Miscellane­ous Personnel Benefits Fund, which amounts to P117.4 billion,” he said.

Once agencies have qualified applicants, they can request the release of the necessary funds from the Department of Budget and Management (DBM).

Based on budget documents submitted to the appropriat­ions, the bureaucrac­y has 188,255 job vacancies. Albano said there are a total of 1,433,186 permanent and budgeted positions, of which 1,244,931 are filled.

He said critical frontline agencies have the most number of vacancies with the Department of Education having the largest: 59,464 out of 702,916 permanent positions.

The Department of Health has 11,166 vacancies, Department of Agrarian Reform, 6,096; Department of Agricultur­e, 3,659; Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources, 8,893; Bureau of Internal Revenue, 3,756; Bureau of Customs, 2,767; and Department of Transporta­tion and Communicat­ions, 1,272.

The Philippine National Police has 164,410 permanent positions for uniformed personnel. Of that number, 15,592 are vacant.

The Supreme Court and lower courts have 7,201 vacancies out of 32,448 positions, while the Commission on Audit has 14,102 permanent positions, out of which 7,731 are filled.

Rep. Arnel Ty of party- list group Liquefied Petroleum Gas Marketers Associatio­n said it is “shameful” that tens of thousands of positions in the bureaucrac­y remain amid the high unemployme­nt rate, especially among college graduates and young profession­als.

“We reckon many of these vacant items are for public elementary and high school teachers. Yet, we have tens of thousands of licensed teachers who are totally jobless,” he said.

“In fact, some of these registered teachers have become so desperate that they’ve been driven to work in private schools for as low as P7,000 a month,” he added.

Unlike executive agencies, the judiciary and independen­t constituti­onal bodies receive their funds for vacancies. The money becomes savings if not used and could be spent for other purposes like additional incentives.

Ty suggested that the DBM, Department of Labor and Employment, Civil Service Commission and state agencies work together to remove obstacles in the filling of vacancies.

He said he is worried that the money meant for the unoccupied positions could end up getting “DAPped,” referring to the controvers­ial Disburseme­nt Accelerati­on Program, the funds for which came from state agencies that failed to spend their appropriat­ions, and which Malacañang diverted to other projects, including those proposed by senators and congressme­n.

“The government, which is the country’s biggest employer, must take the initiative in reducing unemployme­nt,” Albano stressed.

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