No images? Click here NOW SHOWING Wearing face shields and protective masks and observing physical distancing, moviegoers start trickling into one of the cinemas at SM City Taytay in Rizal province on Wednesday as the shopping mall resumes film screenings after a seven-month lull due to the coronavirus lockdown. The province remains under modified general community quarantine. —RICHARD A. REYES NewsCebu, Bicol folk bear brunt of ‘OfelWide areas of Metro Cebu were flooded as Tropical Depression “Ofel” brought heavy rains on Tuesday evening and made three landfalls on Wednesday. Two deaths were reported in Cebu City while hundreds of families living in villages at the foot of Mayon Volcano in Albay province were evacuated. Heavy rains are expected over southern Luzon on Thursday, according to Pagasa. —STORY BY THE INQUIRER BUREAUS NewsPeralta ‘satisfied’ with DENR workChief Justice Diosdado Peralta is satisfied with efforts of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) to comply with a 2008 Supreme Court order to clean the polluted Manila Bay, noting the much reduced level of fecal coliform in the water. But he refused to comment on the artificial white sand beach built with pulverized dolomite because of a pending case in the court against it. —STORY BY THE INQUIRER STAFF Read more: http://philippinedailyinquirerplus.pressreader.com/philippine-daily-inquirer RegionsBaguio hosts local ‘Miss U’ amid virus Baguio City is hosting its first major event during the pandemic as Miss Universe Philippines candidates stay in the summer capital for 10 days for pageant activities that will culminate in the Oct. 25 coronation night. Local officials say the candidates and pageant staff, whose activities are restricted to the Baguio Country Club, have complied with health requirements. —STORY BY VINCENT CABREZA AND KIMBERLIE QUITASOL Read more: http://philippinedailyinquirerplus.pressreader.com/philippine-daily-inquirer Newsletter / Join usHas this been forwarded by a friend? Subscribe now to the Philippine Daily Inquirer Newsletter and get your latest news and important updates on COVID-19 and the enhanced community quarantine. Banner storyPing sees no virus response in P 67-B DPWH projects By Dona Z. Pazzibugan How can the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH)’s funding of P67 billion to construct “multipurpose buildings” next year help the country recover from the economic slump due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Sen. Panfilo “Ping” Lacson asked on Wednesday. During the Senate hearing on the DPWH’s P666.47-billion budget for 2021, Lacson questioned Public Works Secretary Mark Villar about the “pattern” of lopsided allocation for local projects to the detriment of national projects. Legislators’ intervention In the DPWH’s detailed budget proposal, the allocation for local infrastructure projects ballooned by P52.84 billion to P229 billion from the original allocation of P176.15 billion, while the allocation for national projects shrank significantly. Around 30 percent of the allocation for local projects, or P67 billion, will go to multipurpose buildings, Lacson pointed out. He asked Villar, a former Las Piñas representative, if the changes in the DPWH’s capital outlay next year were due to “intervention from some legislators.” “My question is, did your late [budget] submission involve intervention from some legislators? Or was it entirely [your] own doing?” Lacson said during the hearing conducted by videoconference. “I wonder how multipurpose buildings will contribute to the ‘Reset, Rebound, Recover’ theme of the budget,” continued Lacson, the Senate’s unrelenting pork hunter. Villar said his department’s budget was “adjusted based on “priority projects.” “With regards to your question regarding the multipurpose [buildings], we also receive many requests from various sectors for these [structures]. If you look at local communities, there is a need to service them somehow,” he said. “We also want to do pump-priming in the countryside,” he added. The new budget the DPWH submitted on Sept. 7 was a “mangling” of the original budget contained in the National Expenditure Program (NEP) submitted by Malacañang in August, Lacson said. “I can’t recognize it anymore,” he said. ‘Haggling’ by House members On Sunday, Lacson said the delay in the submission of the DPWH budget could be due to the squabble for the speakership in the House of Representatives. “They (House members) themselves said there was no equitable distribution of budget in the [congressional] districts,” he said. Lacson said certain representatives were “haggling” with the DPWH to “preinsert or embed” in the national budget their chosen infrastructure projects to “avoid being detected during deliberations in Congress, especially in the Senate.” During the hearing on Wednesday, Lacson decried how the DPWH cut the funding originally earmarked for national roads and bridges by billions of pesos, saying such infrastructure projects will impact on national development. The allocation for bridge projects was cut by P6.5 billion to P23.18 billion from P29.73 billion; for flood management projects by P4.5 billion to P84.37 billion; and for asset preservation by P9.81 billion to P46.29 billion. Lacson also questioned the huge increase in the allocation for right-of-way payments by P24 billion to P36.63 billion from the original P12.6 billion, saying past allocations did not reach this much. He said he would question the DPWH budget during the plenary session for amendments. Pork parking in DPWH budget For years, Lacson has been watching the DPWH budget for pork, funds that lawmakers “park” in the agency’s spending plan to be channeled to their districts to finance projects designed by favored contractors to give them sizable cuts. Before the P67 billion for multipurpose buildings, Lacson had flagged P8.2 billion for various military infrastructure projects in the DPWH’s budget. While the placing of funds for military projects in the DPWH budget was not unusual, he said, he found it “quite irregular” that the same item was placed under two agencies. It creates confusion, he said. He said similar incidents had happened before, such as the earmarking of funds for public school buildings in the budgets of the DPWH and the Department of Education. “I had questioned it because it’s confusing, only to be told, although off the record, that allocations for school building repairs and construction were insertions made by some legislators, both congressmen and some senators,” Lacson told the Inquirer on Sunday. “I can only venture an explanation: It’s contractor-driven,” he added, hinting that the lawmakers may be getting kickbacks from the contractors of the projects. Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net Editorial‘Unintended misinformation’The Philippine Sports Commission is probably wishing it could hose off a viral issue that began supposedly with the noblest of intentions. After Alex Eala, the country’s fastest rising tennis star at present, made a run to the girls’ semifinal round of the prestigious French Open at Roland Garros in Paris, the PSC posted a congratulatory message for the young ace. But in an apparent effort to take some credit for Eala’s steady improvement in the international scene, the PSC also mentioned the financial assistance it ostensibly extended to the Filipino teenager, who has now risen to No. 2 in the world girls’ ranking. Read full story: opinion.inquirer.net |
Wednesday, October 14, 2020
Ping sees no virus response in P 67-B DPWH projects. Inquirer Newsletter. October 15, 2020
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
How Thune and Schumer will navigate the new Senate
Presented by BAE Systems: An evening recap of the action on Capitol Hill and preview of the day ahead ...
-
insidecroydon posted: " Become a Patron! What's on inside Croydon: Click here for the latest events listing...
No comments:
Post a Comment