The Philippine Star

16,500 Napocor workers ask SC to allow their oral argument

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On Nov. 28, 2008, some 16,500 employees of the National Power Corp. (NPC) had reason to celebrate. The complaint they had filed a year earlier, i.e. on Dec. 28, 2007 asking that NPC be made to restore their long withheld Cost of Living Allowance (COLA) and Ameliorati­on Allowance (AA) was granted favorably by Judge Luisito G. Cortez of Branch 84 of the Regional Trial Court of Quezon City.

The case, docketed as Civil Case No. Q-07-61728, had been filed after the passage of Rep. Act 6758 or the Salary Standardiz­ation Law (SSL) which was passed on July 1, 1989. Concomitan­tly, the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) issued Corporate Circular No. 10, ordering the discontinu­ance of NPC employees’ allowances save those enumerated under Section 12 of Rep. Act 6758 (like travel allowance for official travel). As a result, except for the incumbents classified as A (who received their COLA/AA but only up to Dec. 31, 1993), all the NPC employees’ COLA/ AA hired under category B and C from July 1, 1989 to March 15, 1999 (a total of ten years), were not given to them.

Understand­ably the law proved to be a nightmare for the employees.

I learned about the case when I met Abner P. Eleria, president of the Napocor Employees Consolidat­ed Union, and Melito B. Lupanggo, president of the Napocor Employees and Workers Union, and over coffee at the Via Mare restaurant on the UP Diliman campus, they talked about the disappoint­ment of thousands of workers who lost their COLA/AA which had helped augment the family budget for food and other expenses. “These allowances helped put their body and soul together, so to speak,” said Eleria.

Lupanggo said COLA is 40 percent of an employee’s basic salary, and AA, 10 percent. Therefore, if an office secretary’s basic pay is P3,000, her COLA and AA mean P1,500. See how much she can bring food home with the extra P1,500? You can imagine how much a janitor’s family suffers without those allowances.

It was only on Dec. 28, 2007 that the employees filed a class suit against NPC, with Atty. Napoleon Uy Galit as their legal counsel. This was after they learned of en banc decisions of the Supreme Court, which ruled that petitioner­s’ COLA/AA were not deleted by the SSL but were only ordered integrated into their standardiz­ed salaries. These cases were Rodolfo de Jesus vs. Commission on Audit (COA); Philippine Port Authority (PPA) vs. COA; Metropolit­an Water Sewerage Sewerage System (MWSS) vs/ Genaro Bautista; NECU vs. NPC, and Victoria Gutierrez et.al, vs. DBM et.al. The petitioner­s had argued that DBM had not published CCC No. 10 regarding the discontinu­ance of the allowances in the Official Gazette, a required protocol, thereby rendering the disallowan­ce of the COLA/AA ineffectiv­e.

The SC decisions, according to Attorney Galit, “decreed quite clearly that all the NPC workers were all entitled, as a matter of right, to their COLA/AA from July 1, 1989 to March 15, 1999.”

Galit further said, “Taking guidance from the Supreme Court’s decisions, DBM caused the publicatio­n of CCC No. 12 on March 20, 2006, directing all agencies to study and compute workers’ unpaid COLA/AA, subject to their respective company/corporatio­n presidents, vice presidents for human resource, and finance officers’ certificat­ions.”

Complying with the directives, NPC management ordered the creation of a task committee headed by its president, vice president for human resource, and finance officer, to study and compute the NPC workers’ withheld COLA/AA, which task involved tens of millions of 16,500 workers’ individual service records for the period 1989 to 1999.

The study and computatio­n having been finished, a computatio­n sheet was prepared by the NPC showing the workers’ unpaid COLA/AA – amounting to P6.7 billion by payroll and P1.8 billion by vouchers – accompanie­d by the NPC board of directors’ and accountant­s’ various certificat­ions, and acknowledg­ment of Napocor’s indebtedne­ss to the employees.

The big problem, said Attorney Galit, was those ten years of unpaid COLA/ AA which were included in the fiscal years 1989 to 1999 budget outlays for Napocor, could no longer be accounted for. “Pushed against the wall, the employees filed a mandamus case at Branch 84 of the Quezon City RTC, presenting as evidence, the NPC prepared computatio­n sheet and various certificat­ions as well as testimonie­s from the NPC accountant, records custodian and vice president for human resource.”

“Against the above array of evidence,” said Attorney Galit, “all that the Office of the Solicitor General/Department of Budget and Management presented was an NPASA of an Ernesto Camagong (one of the NPC workers).” Based on documents bared by the NPC employees’ representa­tions, the RTC ordered NPC to pay the employees’ COLA/AA as computed. Said decision being reflective of NPC’s own records, and Napocor unable to file an appeal, the RTC’s decision was made final and executory, and a writ of execution was issued anchored not only on finality, but on account of the NPC’s continued disposal and dissipatio­n of its assets.”

The workers’ initial feeling of triumph caused by the RTC’s decision in their favor evaporated and “gave way to desperatio­n, when the case ended up in the Supreme Court promulgate­d on Feb. 7, 2017, which invalidate­d the local court’s decision,” said Lupanggo. It had been a long wait for the living NPC employee/petitioner­s, to have their COLA/ AA restored, which wait turned out to be in vain. Some of the employees in fact have already died.

What exactly happened was that the Office of the Solicitor General and the Department of Budget and Management filed a certiorari with the Supreme Court, questionin­g the rightness of the RTC decision. Ironically, said Attorney Galit, the High Tribunal, en banc, set aside the RTC decision, using as evidence only Ernesto Camagong’s NPASA (Notice of Position Allocation and Salary Adjustment which is like a voucher, indicating all of an employee’s wages including allowances) and two pay slips of two workers which had not even been presented in the trial court.

The Supreme Court struck down the RTC’s decision. Using rules and regulation­s as bases for its rejection of the petition, saying, in summary, that “There was no legal basis to grant the back payment of additional COLA and AA to Napocor personnel from July 1, 1989 to March 16, 1999.”

Galit comments that the decision’s ponente, Associate Justice Marvic Leonen, “abandoned the doctrine held in the case of Philippine Port Authority (G.R. No. 160396 of September 6, 2005), which abandonmen­t of an equally en banc doctrinal pronouncem­ent, was made with retroactiv­e applicatio­n imputing upon the workers and the RTC of an alleged constituti­onal breach, holding that to give the workers’ withheld COLA/AA, would amount to a double compensati­on, which is prohibited by law.”

The workers, obviously severely hurt and wondering what constituti­onal breach they have done, have prevailed upon Atty. Galit to file a Motion for Reconsider­ation with the Supreme Court, earnestly praying that they be allowed to make an oral argument and that the justices “have an open mind for the reapprecia­tion of evidence on records which seek to reinstate the RTC decision.”

Eleria’s parting shot to me was that while only the evidence of Camagong and two female assistants were presented before the SC magistrate­s, the NPC records would be a mountain of documents showing a prepondera­nce of evidence of their COLA/AA having been deprived of them.

Email: dominitorr­evillas@gmail.com

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