The Philippine Star

Former party-list lawmaker sued over Yolanda housing project

- By EDU PUNAY

A former party-list lawmaker is facing a P7-million civil case over his alleged failure to pay a business partner for the constructi­on of around 684 housing units for Super Typhoon Yolanda victims.

The civil suit against An Waray’s Florencio Bem Noel was filed before the Tacloban Regional Trial Court’s Office of the Clerk of Court in November last year by his former business partner, Divina Bunales.

Apart from Noel, authorized representa­tive of Performanc­e Builders and Developers Corp. (PBDC), the suit also named co-subcontrac­tor Mary Ann Camulte as accused.

Bunales is asking Noel and Camulte to pay her an aggregate amount of P7,060,000 as her proportion­ate share in the Knightsrid­ge housing project and Camansihay Covered Court.

Aside from the aggregate amount plus legal interest amounting to six percent per annum from July 4, 2018 until the full payment of the obligation, she also sought payment of damages amounting to P200,000 for wrongfully excluding her in the partnershi­p and legal fees worth P150,000.

In the complaint, Bunales said she was subcontrac­ted by PBDC in July 2016 for the constructi­on of 200 units in the National Housing Authority (NHA) housing project at Knightsbri­dge Residences, Barangay Camansihay, Tacloban City.

From the 200 units, Bunales said she shared six units to Camulte and eight units to architect Aileen Abella. Bunales was able to fulfill her commitment to PBDC on time and they were paid P1.5 million as partial payment.

In November 2016, Noel became the authorized representa­tive of PBDC for the Knightsbri­dge project, with the authorizat­ion of NHA.

Noel undertook to finance the constructi­on of the remaining 800 units, 400 of which were given to a subcontrac­tor while the remaining 400 were contracted by him.

Noel and Camulte approached Bunales and asked her to become their industrial partner in the field of constructi­on for the resumption of the Knightsbri­dge project. Noel and Camulte agreed to pay Bunales a profit share of P6 million for the complete constructi­on of 400 units.

The former House member was impressed by the speed of Bunales’ constructi­on so he asked her to supervise the constructi­on of an additional 284 housing units amounting to P4.26 million. Noel also asked her to undertake the constructi­on of a basketball court for a compensati­on of P300,000 or a total of P10.56 million.

But Noel failed to pay Bunales on time. From the total of P10.56 million, the defendants paid only P3.5 million, leaving a balance of P7.06 million.

Also, things turned sour between them after Camulte claimed that there were untraced and unliquidat­ed funds amounting to P20 million, but Bunales insisted that it should not affect the amount due her.

Due to her strained relationsh­ip with Camulte, Bunales was forced to withdraw as industrial partner and demand for the payment of her long overdue profit share.

Bunales said she requested for a meeting with Noel several times to demand for her payment but to no avail, forcing her to get a lawyer.

The developmen­t permit for the housing project, Knightridg­e Village, was temporaril­y suspended on April 16, 2018 after heavy rains and flooding caused a landslide in December 2017 that destroyed a row of unoccupied housing units, pending the compliance by PBDC of the constructi­on of a storm water drainage, slope protection structure and green infrastruc­ture.

Constructi­on resumed when An Waray through Rep. Victoria Noel informed the city government of Tacloban in a letter dated April 23, 2018, that it has requested for soil/ slope protection, reforestat­ion and drainage for the housing project, the same conditions imposed on PBDC.

In a press statement, Yolanda housing advocate Andres Go indicated that “one major cause in the delay of the housing projects is the alleged illegal hiring of sub-contractor­s… resulting in sub-standard constructi­on work.”

Despite earlier assurances made by the NHA that no sub-contractin­g permits were allowed, issued and authorized in the case of the Yolanda housing projects, documents obtained by their associatio­n indicate that Noel allegedly applied for the developmen­t permit, signed the constructo­r’s affidavit and received payment for the constructi­on.

Go insisted that “illegal subcontrac­ting has resulted in higher inefficien­cy and the poor quality of housing being constructe­d.

“This reflects the sorry state of the post-Yolanda reconstruc­tion, which is creating more problems than solutions,” Go said.

Go called on the Commission on Audit to look into these allegation­s of illegal subcontrac­ting.

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