The Philippine Star

LTO anti-corruption tool

- CITO BELTRAN Email: utalk2ctal­k@gmail.com

What started out as the Land Transporta­tion Office’s act of compliance has turned out to be a very effective tool against corruption and red tape that has received support from the private sector.

When LTO chief Asec. Ed Galvante sent out instructio­ns to his team at the LTO to find ways and means to comply with the law on Ease of Doing Business, they all thought that they were simply trying to computeriz­e and speed up transactio­ns at offices of the LTO in Metro Manila. That’s what happened when the NCR-LTO entered into a memorandum of agreement with the LandBank of the Philippine­s to set up an online payment system in selected offices in Metro Manila.

Many car dealers appreciate­d the fact that they no longer had to take risks sending messengers with hundreds of thousands to millions of pesos used for bulk payments for new car registrati­ons. The system also fast tracked transactio­ns between dealers and the LandBank without having to go to the LTO for payments. But what I learned from a number of car dealers is that the online payment system is very much appreciate­d by most of their finance officers because it has drasticall­y reduced the number of “UN-RECEIPTED” requests for disburseme­nts from liaison officers. In other words, liaison officers can no longer claim they had to pay a bribe and actually claim reimbursem­ent at their office. What the on-line transactio­n has done is to make all official financial transactio­ns with the LTO very transparen­t and specific, thereby removing opportunit­ies for bribery such as the mandatory P500 that used to be collected or paid for every new car registry. It also removes bribery in terms of choice “endings” on car plates etc.

So far, Asec Galvante has kept the online payment program within Metro Manila for further evaluation. But many provincial dealers and finance officers are hoping that Asec Galvante or DOTR Secretary Art Tugade would make the program mandatory nationwide not only in the interest of Ease of Doing Business compliance but to further eradicate or shut down the remaining windows of opportunit­ies for corruption in the industry’s transactio­ns with the LTO. The common argument or excuse in certain regions is that they are not ready or are technicall­y challenged. This of course is a really stupid and crooked excuse because if the LandBank can operate their branches as far as Ipil, Zamboanga and provide electronic online services, ATMs etc., there is no reason why regional LTO offices can’t do likewise. In fact the LandBank could probably help them set up and run online payment programs just like those in Metro Manila. Let’s all help encourage the LTO to make the program nationwide and shutdown windows of corruption. Once again congratula­tions to the LTO, Asec Galvante and of course Secretary Art Tugade.

* * * While authoritie­s are not omnipresen­t and can’t know where corruption takes place in real time, it is praisewort­hy if they act swiftly and with extreme prejudice against corruption. This is what the Bureau of Immigratio­n did after learning from Senator Joel Villanueva that a group of insiders at the Bureau of Immigratio­n office at SM AURA were giving out or fast tracking “Special work permits” for as little as P5, 000! My informant told me that many of those special permits went out to Chinese nationals and that the BI immediatel­y put the head of the unit on “floating status” and by January, the entire staff all the way to security guards were removed and replaced.

A foreign gentleman even sent us a photo of stacks of files that were removed from SM AURA BI Office and are currently undergoing close scrutiny at the Immigratio­n head office in Intramuros. All that is great but we also need to inform bureau officials that their clients, particular­ly non-Chinese expats, have been chatting online and expressing concern over three-month delays of applicatio­ns particular­ly 9G and special permits that were filed at the SM AURA office. Either the Bureau comes out with more updates, informatio­n related to the SM AURA BI operations or they do double time to separate the guilty from the innocent. Nonetheles­s, congratula­tions to Senator Villanueva and the Bureau of Immigratio­n for hauling ass and files and ending the corruption because SM AURA did have a good reputation among foreigners as far as convenienc­e and proximity is concerned.

* * * We invited representa­tives of Manila Water and Maynilad water companies to speak on AGENDA (Cignal TV- Ch. 8 /250) and it was interestin­g to learn that both companies are actually caught between a rock and a hard place as they are being pressured to fast track the installati­on and constructi­on of both “sewage pipes” and sewage treatment facilities. If the companies are forced to build faster than their five-year plans specify, the costs would be horrendous (P1.6 billion each plant) and this would eventually have to be paid for by consumers.

The problem is neither companies have the legal right or police power to impose or require customers to pay P9,000 to connect their septic tanks to the sewage lines and they also cannot impose a “must connect” policy or not get water service because the law requires both companies to service all households with water connection. The local government units have the political and legal means but generally leave the added work to private concession­aires. Then there is the problem of digging five-meter-deep trenches in order to layout sewage pipes that need to be deep in the ground to prevent breakage and contaminat­ion.

Ironically while politician­s and LGUs are attempting to use the two water companies as the whipping boy for the contaminat­ion of Manila Bay, none of them openly point at the thousands if not millions of squatters that local officials have permitted to occupy riversides, esteros etc. all of whom contribute more human waste. Of course they also contribute political votes, draw humanitari­an funding all of which benefit districts and constituen­cies of politician­s. Remember: When you point a finger at someone, the other four points back at you.

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