The Philippine Star

P100-B add’l budget realignmen­ts sought

- By JESS DIAZ

The House of Representa­tives is seeking additional realignmen­ts of up to P100 billion in the proposed P4.1trillion national budget for next year.

“My estimate is there would be transfers of P50 billion

to P100 billion because of more funding requiremen­ts for the Department of Education (DepEd), Commission on Higher Education (CHED), among others,” Speaker Alan Peter Cayetano said yesterday.

As the House leadership is seeking additional realignmen­ts, Senate Pro Tempore Ralph Recto is urging government officials to stop their practice of “pasa load,” a form of artificial spending made possible by transferri­ng allotments from one agency to another to cover up failure to spend. “Pasa load” is a term for sharing cellphone call or text credits to other cellphone numbers.

“What’s happening now is allotments are being transferre­d to other agencies to make it appear they’ve been ‘obligated.’ They do this so they can boast that funds have been obligated and can’t revert back to the treasury,” Recto said in Filipino.

Cayetano said the proposed changes would be presented during the House-Senate conference that would be convened after senators pass their version of the 2020 budget.

He assured the Senate and the nation that the planned realignmen­ts “will be transparen­t and will not be pork or parked funds.”

Cayetano cited the case of the DepEd, which he said would need additional money to repair school buildings damaged by successive earthquake­s in Mindanao.

“The good news is we have a big budget for next year, P4.1 trillion, so we have room for changes. It’s just a question of balancing it. It would not be difficult for DepEd because they transferre­d some school building funds to their voucher program to help senior high school students they send to private schools,” he said.

He said he would like to know how much the education department would need for classrooms, how much for financial assistance to senior high schools and “if it is now the policy to give more vouchers to private schools instead of building more classrooms.”

He said it would be more difficult to find funding sources in the budget of the Department of Public Works and Highways to repair earthquake-damaged roads, bridges and other infrastruc­ture.

“You can take away money from right-of-way appropriat­ions. But what if those are exhausted? There would be no funds to pay for right-ofway in private properties,” he added.

Cayetano pointed out that in the case of CHED, the agency transferre­d billions of scholarshi­p funds to state colleges and universiti­es to fund the free tertiary education program.

“But 70 percent of a scholar’s expenses consists of transporta­tion, food, school supplies. So, it’s not possible to scrap the scholarshi­p fund. It should still be there to help the scholar for his needs other than tuition,” he stressed.

The Speaker urged the Senate to pass its version of the 2020 budget this month so the two chambers would have up to two weeks to come up with a final version of the spending bill.

That would give them enough time to send the final copy to President Duterte for signing into law before yearend to avoid a repeat of the delay of three to six months in the enactment of this year’s outlay, he said.

Before sending the proposed 2020 budget to the Senate last month, the House realigned P9.5 billion by augmenting funding for several programs and agencies.

The biggest augmentati­on of P3.5 billion for palay buying was given to the National

Food Authority through the Department of Agricultur­e.

The Armed Forces of the Philippine­s (AFP) and the Philippine National Police (PNP) each received an additional P1 billion.

The other realignmen­ts included P850 million for DepEd, P200 million for the Department of Health, P500 million for the Philippine General Hospital, another P500 million for the Metropolit­an Manila Developmen­t Authority, P275 million for the Davao Internatio­nal Airport, P500 million for rural electrific­ation and P500 million for athletes’ training and preparatio­ns for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and Paralympic­s.

Anti-pork Sen. Panfilo Lacson has described the Houseiniti­ated changes as “institutio­nal amendments” in the budget.

No ‘pasa load’ please

Recto, meanwhile, explained that “pasa load” practice prevents unspent budget from reverting back to the national coffers.

“This creates the illusion of money spent when what happened was the budgetary equivalent of passing the buck,” Recto added.

As of December 2018, Recto said the PNP still has to collect about P5.08 billion worth of projects from Procuremen­t Service-Department of Budget and Management (PS-DBM) intended for the acquisitio­n of common-use supplies, materials and various equipment.

He said the PNP or the AFP for instance would entrust the task of procuremen­t to PSDBM instead of bidding out a project.

“In the books of the AFP or PNP, the funds have been obligated, when in reality, they have not been,” he added.

Funds for the Department of Transporta­tion (DOTr) also end up the same way, he said. “They subcontrac­t procuremen­t. And in the report card, that money has been marked as obligated,” he pointed out.

“One favorite repository of parked allotments is the Philippine Internatio­nal Trading Corp. (PITC),” Recto said.

He said some recipient agencies given procuremen­t responsibi­lities have questionab­le competence.

“The question is what’s the competence of these agencies to, say, conduct a due diligence-compliant procuremen­t of highly specialize­d goods like trains, ships, planes and automobile­s?” he asked.

Quoting the Commission on Audit (COA), Recto said the transfer of obligation­al authority to outsource procuremen­t has not expedited the purchase of goods and services.

He said the PNP once engaged the services of the PITC to procure equipment amounting to P1.35 billion but the latter managed to deliver only P137.5 million worth of purchases by end of last year, or one-tenth of the amount.

COA’s 2018 audit report for PITC noted that the corporatio­n received about P30.63 billion worth of fund transfers from various agencies.

A COA audit report for the same year placed at P17.04 billion PS-DBM’s unrealized procuremen­t for other agencies.

“We should stop this ‘lateral transfer’ of funds whose intent is to beat the clock, a pasa-load scheme to extend the life of an appropriat­ion about to expire,” he said.

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