The Philippine Star

Officials want 18th Congress to prioritize passage of FOI Bill

- By CHRISTINA MENDEZ

Communicat­ions Secretary Martin Andanar is hoping that members of the 18th Congress will prioritize the passage of the proposed Freedom of Informatio­n (FOI) Act, a bill that mandates full disclosure of official public government records.

“We need a partner for this in Congress and the Senate. So we’re praying they take action towards making this a law,” he said in Filipino.

Andanar said he wants to strengthen the practice of transparen­cy by allowing the public access to government transactio­ns and documents. This also aims to eliminate incidences of corruption in government offices.

In a radio interview, Andanar noted the FOI, if passed into law, will grant access to public records not only in the executive branch but in the legislativ­e and judiciary branches as well.

Andanar said they implemente­d Executive Order 2, which is the government’s policy of “full public disclosure of all its transactio­ns involving public interest, subject to reasonable conditions prescribed by law,” signed by President Duterte prior to his first State of the Nation Address in 2016. This FOI mechanism, however, only applies to the executive branch.

“This Executive Order is very important because it made our national government and executive branch very transparen­t,” he added.

The FOI bill was one of the priority measures of the administra­tion that was approved by the House but failed to hurdle the Senate in the 17th Congress due to lack of time.

Sen. Grace Poe, chair of the Senate public informatio­n committee, has refiled the FOI bill, citing the importance of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in government.

Rep. Raul del Mar of Cebu City also filed a counterpar­t FOI measure, House Bill 12, that seeks to put in place the enabling law necessary to implement the constituti­onal provision on the right of the people to informatio­n on matters of public concerns. The 18th Congress starts tomorrow. “Transparen­cy is essential to accountabi­lity. Without transparen­cy, citizens cannot access the informatio­n needed to collective­ly discern the fitness of public officials, elected or otherwise, to hold public office,” Poe said in the explanator­y note of her bill.

“I appeal to our colleagues to give this bill one big push this 18th Congress so we will finally have an FOI law,” She added.

Under her proposal, Poe said all government agencies will be mandated to upload on their respective websites “updated copies of transactio­ns, records or documents of public interest.”

The bill states that no request for informatio­n shall be denied, except for matters involving national security, law enforcemen­t, foreign affairs and trade secrets.

All informatio­n exempted from disclosure shall undergo mandatory review every three years by the head of office or agency in custody or control of the informatio­n for “reclassifi­cation and possible disclosure.”

Presidenti­al Communicat­ions Operations Office (PCOO) Assistant Secretary and FOI Program Management Office director Kristian Ablan also joined Andanar in the call to hit the ground running so that the FOI bill will be enacted into law by 2020.

Currently, the PCOO said all national government agencies are 100 percent FOI-compliant.

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