The Philippine Star

DOT chief apologizes over attached agency exec’s behavior

- By MARC JAYSON CAYABYAB – With Cecille Suerte Felipe, Janvic Mateo

Tourism Secretary Christina Frasco yesterday apologized to senators over the inappropri­ate behavior of an official who texted the senators to ask for VIP treatment for the Department of Tourism (DOT) in the budget deliberati­ons.

Frasco personally apologized during the Senate plenary deliberati­ons at past midnight yesterday after Cynthia Lagdameo Carrion, general manager of the DOT-attached agency Philippine Retirement Authority (PRA), drew senators’ ire for her barrage of text messages demanding that the DOT be fielded first in the interpella­tion.

The final stretch of the government budget deliberati­ons started last Monday morning and ended before dawn yesterday, apparently getting on the nerves of Carrion, who is more known in the sports sector as president of the Gymnastics Associatio­n of the Philippine­s.

Carrion is also a close friend of former president and incumbent Pampanga 2nd District Rep. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, serving as the latter’s tourism undersecre­tary and also commission­er of the Philippine Sports Commission.

“We’ve been working here waiting for all department­s to be deliberate­d upon. We are doing our job. No one has the right to tell us to stop talking here. Who are you to tell us to stop asking questions?” Sen. Jinggoy Estrada said, addressing Carrion, who was made to sit on the plenary floor.

“It was very surprising that this person, who was a family friend of mine, has been texting insulting messages, like to Sen. Risa Hontiveros, to stop asking questions, because you want the DOT to be next in line,” Senate President Juan Miguel Zubiri said, referring to Hontiveros’ interpella­tion of another agency before the DOT.

“That is not proper. That is inappropri­ate,” Zubiri added.

A fuming Hontiveros also took the floor to manifest her disappoint­ment at Carrion’s “sense of entitlemen­t” to demand that the senators adjust their time to accommodat­e the DOT.

“This is about respect. We are just doing our mandate here. I take offense that our institutio­n is being texted such messages,” Hontiveros said.

When allowed to speak on behalf of the agency, Frasco said she was also appalled at the “highly inappropri­ate, unacceptab­le and outof-line actions” of Carrion, whom she described as a newly appointed official at the PRA.

Frasco added that when Carrion approached her that the DOT should be first fielded for interpella­tion, the DOT chief told the latter: “We cannot do that, because the Senate is an independen­t body, and we must fully respect their schedule, their discretion, their time. We wait like everybody else, because we are in their house.”

The PRA chief defied Frasco’s orders when sent the text messages to the senators, according to DOT chief.

While Carrion had already apologized to the senators on the sidelines of the budget sessions, Frasco said she has ordered an investigat­ion “to mete out the appropriat­e penalty that is appropriat­e to the impropriet­y of her actions.”

“Since I am the head of the DOT, of which the PRA is an attached agency, I would just like to emphasize our due respect to the Senate and to your exercise of your duty,” Frasco added.

Non-teaching personnel

To help decongest teachers’ workload and improve the quality of their teaching, Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian is proposing the allocation of P1.9 billion for the hiring of non-teaching personnel.

Gatchalian, who chairs the Senate committee on basic education, noted that the proposed 2024 national budget has no allocation for the hiring of non-teaching personnel.

“We recommende­d an allocation of P1.9 billion, I know it’s a substantia­l amount to hire 5,000 administra­tive officers and 3,000 project developmen­t officers to help our teachers unload their administra­tive responsibi­lities. This is one of the low-hanging fruits in terms of improving efficiency in our classrooms,” he said.

The senator is specifical­ly seeking augmentati­on under the Department of Education (DepEd)’s Personnel Services for the creation of 5,000 positions for Administra­tive Officer II and 3,000 for Project Developmen­t Officer I, citing the Legislativ­e Budget Research and Monitoring Office.

Gatchalian pointed out how the congestion of teachers’ workload has affected the quality of teaching in public schools.

In 2019, the Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies (PIDS) showed that actual teaching is sidelined by other administra­tive and student support roles of teachers, which include their participat­ion in programs like mass immunizati­ons, deworming and elections, among others.

Last year, Gatchalian urged the DepEd to study the recommenda­tion of the PIDS to conduct evidence-based studies on teacher workload, which will rationaliz­e the job functions of public school teachers, allow them to balance their workload and allocate more of their time to improve learner outcomes.

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