The Philippine Star

SONA promises from 2010-2014

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As President Aquino delivers his sixth and final State of the Nation Address today, The

Philippine STAR looks back at promises he has made in the past five years.

2010

• Investigat­e irregulari­ties in government funds – calamity funds, Metropolit­an Waterworks and Sewerage System (MWSS), Department of Public Works and Highways ( DPWH), National Power Corp. (Napocor), and National Food Authority (NFA)

• Introduce a zero- based approach in budgeting

• Improve tax collection and file charges against smugglers and tax evaders

• Punish perpetrato­rs of extrajudic­ial killings

• Form a Truth Commission, headed by former Chief Justice Hilario Davide, to go after allegedly corrupt officials

• Forge public-private partnershi­ps (PPP)

• Build infrastruc­ture, including an “efficient railway system,” to boost the tourism and agricultur­e sectors • Generate more jobs • Streamline business processes through Build-Operateand-Transfer projects

• Upgrade the basic education cycle from 10 years to the global standard of 12 years (by implementi­ng the K to 12 program)

• Provide further assistance to the needy through conditiona­l cash transfer, PhilHealth coverage, and the National Household Targeting System

• Push for legislativ­e agenda through the Legislativ­e Executive Developmen­t Advisory Council (LEDAC) • Fiscal Responsibi­lity Bill • Anti-Trust Law • National Land Use Bill • Armed National Defense Act • Whistleblo­wer’s Bill • Strengthen­ing of the Witness Protection Program

• Initiate peace talks

2011

• Stop the use of “wangwang” – which Aquino said symbolizes abuse of authority and the mindset of entitlemen­t

• Boost economic growth through an “innovative fiscal approach” and prudent government spending

• Improve the energy sector by attracting more investors, exploring oil and natural gas resources, and constructi­ng a power plant in the Luzon grid “so that by 2014, our country will have a cheaper, more reliable source of energy”

• Initiate reforms in the DPWH, previously regarded as among the most corrupt government agencies

• End excessive importatio­n of rice and promote rice selfsuffic­iency

• Enhance national security by

• Providing housing benefits for military and police personnel as well as employees of the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology and the Bureau of Fire Protection

• Acquiring modern equipment for the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s (AFP)

• Elevating the case on the West Philippine Sea ( South China Sea) to the Internatio­nal Tribunal for the Law of the Sea

• Better enforcemen­t of the law to curb motorcycle and car thefts and human traffickin­g cases

• Create more jobs by reviewing and analyzing curricula through the Department of Labor and Employment ( DOLE), Commission on Higher Education (CHED), Technical Education and Skills Developmen­t Authority (TESDA) and the Department of Education (DepEd)

• Expand the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program, PhilHealth coverage, and National Household Targeting System

• Synchroniz­e the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) elections with national elections

• Address flooding in Metro Manila by establishi­ng sustainabl­e reforestat­ion activities and relocating informal settlers

• Encourage “Filipinos for Filipinos” projects, such as low-cost traps that kill mosquito larvae, coconut coir fibers to strengthen roads, landslide sensors, flood warning systems, and a monorail system developed by the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) and the University of the Philippine­s

• Compensate victims of martial law

• Improve benefits and pension system for house helpers and retired soldiers, respective­ly

• Expand DOST scholarshi­p grants

• Establish facilities for disaster response

• Develop Bureau of Correction­s ( BuCor), National Bureau of Investigat­ion (NBI), National Electrific­ation Administra­tion (NEA) and PTV 4

2012

• Cut wasteful spending for projects with high costs but few public benefits

• Improve anti-disaster initiative­s by using technology to forewarn the public

• Increase public access to government health care programs

• Pass the Sin Tax Bill, which would make “vice more expensive while at the same time raising more money for health”

• Address backlog in the education sector, aiming for a 1:1 book-to-student ratio

• Increase the budget for state universiti­es and colleges

• Building road networks and infrastruc­ture, upgrade and remodel airports, and renovate structural defects at the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport (NAIA) Terminal 3

• Spur tourism growth, aimed at 10 million tourists a year

• Develop the agricultur­e sector by implementi­ng irrigation and certified seeds programs

• Implement the Comprehens­ive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP)

• Reduce crime rates and strengthen the police force through the procuremen­t of more guns and by providing housing incentives

• Implement the AFP Modernizat­ion Program

• End cash advances for government agencies in the ARMM to prevent misuse and abuse of funds

• Push through with the peace negotiatio­ns

• Craft Executive Order 79 on mining, curb illegal mining and initiate reforestat­ion programs

• Implement performanc­ebased incentives to government employees – in which bonuses are based on the agency’s ability to meet annual targets

• Address the dispute over the West Philippine Sea

• Pursue “genuine justice” – filing of plunder case against former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and continuing the Maguindana­o massacre trial

• Amend the Anti-Money Laundering Act to hold the corrupt accountabl­e

2013

• Strengthen the agricultur­e sector – particular­ly the rice, coconut, and fishing industries – and reduce importatio­n of rice and employ intercropp­ing methods • Implement CARPER • Turn over lots to qualifi beneficiar­ies and serve all Notices of Coverage to lands covered by the agrarian reform by the end of the year

• Develop mechanisms for disaster preparedne­ss, such as the creation of multi-hazard mapping to identify high-risk areas and the modernizat­ion of weather detection technology

• Address flooding in Metro Manila (with an allocation of P.62 billion) and relocate informal settlers living along major waterways

• Implement recovery and rehabilita­tion programs to calamity-stricken areas

• Turning over housing units to survivors of Typhoon Pablo

• Use reclaimed lands to generate funds for the pension of retired policemen and soldiers

• Review of Presidenti­al Decree 1638 (retirement and separation benefits for military personnel) and Republic Act 8551 (PNP reorganiza­tion law)

• Amend Social Security System (SSS) pension scheme

• Better law enforcemen­t by hiring civilian personnel to focus on administra­tive work in the police force

• Probe the killing of Ozamis Gang members and the Atimonan shooting incident

• Pass the Bangsamoro Basic Law

• Amend and enact the Cabotage Law, Fiscal Incentives Rationaliz­ation Bill, and Land Administra­tion Reform Bill

• Decrease government subsidy in the Light Rail Transit (LRT) and Metro Rail Transit (MRT) commuter systems

• Decongest traffic in Metro Manila through an integrated transport system and better infrastruc­ture, such as two connector roads joining the North and South Luzon Expressway­s

• Address looming power shortage, particular­ly the rotating blackouts in Mindanao

• Initiate reforms in government-owned and controlled corporatio­ns – Philippine Retirement Authority ( PRA), Local Water Utilities Administra­tion (LWUA)

• Investigat­e irregulari­ties in the use of funds of TESDA, Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. (PAGCOR), and the Philippine National Police (PNP) as well as incompeten­ce and lapses in the Bureau of Immigratio­n (BI), National Irrigation Administra­tion (NIA) and Bureau of Customs (BOC)

• Evaluate Civil Service Code and Presidenti­al Decree 1 (which establishe­d the presidenti­al form of government)

2014

• Create more jobs through TESDA’s Training for Work Scholarshi­p Program

• Improve debt management through better tax collection and prudent spending

• Encourage more foreign investment­s

• Upgrade aviation sector to promote tourism

• Foster better labor relations through DOLE’s Single Entry Approach

• Increase budget for infrastruc­ture “to speed up the transport of goods and services, and will help us ensure that we can go head to head with overseas markets”

• Source greater water supply by constructi­ng and repairing dams

• Pursue rehabilita­tion and recovery efforts, including reconstruc­tion of damaged infrastruc­ture and implementa­tion of livelihood interventi­ons to survivors of the Zamboanga siege, Bohol earthquake, Super Typhoon Yolanda onslaught

• Reinforce disaster preparedne­ss in local government units “through a modern and comprehens­ive forecastin­g system”

• Pursue modernizat­ion of the AFP – procuremen­t of equipment and other utilities, establishi­ng a naval command center in Palawan

• Continue the pursuit of lawless elements

• Apprehensi­on of New People’s Army (NPA) members, including chairman and secretary-general Benito and Wilma Tiamzon

• Arrest of suspects in the murder of Ernesto Balolong, Richard King, Ferdinand Pastor

• Initiate reforms in the Bureau of Customs

• Creation of new agency to look into processes

• Appointmen­t of a new commission­er and deputy commission­ers

• Distribute lands covered by agrarian reform

• Completion of cadastral surveys by 2015

• Address overlappin­g claims in the ARMM

• Extend the filing of Notices of Coverage

• Continue peace negotiatio­ns with the signing of the Comprehens­ive Agreement on the Bangsamoro and the forging of proposal for the Bangsamoro Basic Law

• Increase the budget for infrastruc­ture in the ARMM

• Meet growing energy demand

• Make preparatio­ns for the El Niño phenomenon

• Address rice hoarding, introduce modern farming equipment, and enhance irrigation system, farm-to-market roads and training programs

• Pass a supplement­al budget for 2014 in light of the Supreme Court decision ruling some provisions of the Disburseme­nt Accelerati­on Program (DAP) unconstitu­tional “so that the implementa­tion of our programs and projects need not be compromise­d.”

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