The Philippine Star

Missing out on matters that count

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Your editorial on Dec. 7, entitled “Legislativ­e Priorities” was very apt and timely. The 3rd Session of the 17th Congress, which is about to end, concentrat­ed on political matters and relegated to the “last two minutes” even the General Appropriat­ions Act.

Aside from the investment measures you pointed out in the editorial, Congress also missed out on matters that concern very much with the senior sector of Philippine society. Even President Duterte, himself a senior, did not give a beep for seniors in his SONA.

There are many bills and resolution­s, too many to enumerate here, filed in the House of Representa­tives by Senior Citizens Party-List Rep. Francisco Datol Jr. seeking to give benefits to seniors in terms of employment opportunit­ies, healthcare and welfare, financial benefits, particular­ly pension increases, but they are still mired in the legislativ­e pool of processing and hearings.

The undersigne­d had been participat­ing in these hearings as representa­tive of the Philippine Associatio­n of Retired Persons (PARP) and only one bill, seeking to create the National Seniors Citizens Commission, is on second base, waiting for the approval by the committee on appropriat­ions of the House of Representa­tives. Having worked in the House for 24 years (I wrote a book, “How Bills Become Philippine Laws”) I am concerned, specially because Congress will adjourn sometime in February 2019, the start of the campaign period, that the bills unacted upon by Congress will, in words of a former congressma­n, “will lie there and will die there, in the Archives Division of Congress.”

Unless both Houses work overtime in January 2019 to finish the remaining bills during the “last two minutes” in the legislativ­e calendar. – Atty. MAFEO R.

VIBAL, vice president – external affairs and legislativ­e liaison officer (PARP)

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