Officials barred from printing names on public infrastructures
>> Wednesday, July 18, 2012
By Aileen P. Refuerzo
BAGUIO
CITY – The days of naming public work projects are over.
The
city council on Monday approved on final reading an ordinance prohibiting
public and private persons from affixing their names, initials, images or
pictures on any public structure and property, equipment, vehicle and program
or project of the city government.
Authored
by Vice Mayor Daniel Farinas and Councilor Fred Bagbagen, the measure dubbed
“The No-Naming and No-Signage of Public Works and Property Ordinance,” “makes
it unlawful for politicians, public officials or private individuals to affix
their names by way of inscription, painting, engraving, sculpting or
superimposing one’s name, symbol, sign, using paint, metal or plastic craft,
wood or cement structure, including but not limited to all projects funded by
public funds such as buildings, roads, bridges, overpasses, gymnasium,
classrooms, waiting shed, terminals and markets.”
The
prohibition will also cover public equipment, vehicles, movable properties such
as construction equipment, trucks, ambulances, police cars, buses, office
equipment, hospital equipment communication equipment, sacks of goods for
distribution and the like.
The
authors said it is misleading and unethical for government officials and
politicians to affix their names on these government projects which are
supported by public funds and not by these officials’ personal money.
Violators
face penalties of fines ranging from P3,000 to P5,000 and 30-day imprisonment.
The
ordinance was based on a similar memorandum circular issued by the Dept. of
Interior and Local Government (DILG).
“In
keeping with the (DILG directive), it is therefore necessary to pass stringent
obligatory measure to strictly implement and enforce the very purpose of the
directive to deter and penalize violators and would-be violators and other
similar minds and no one should go scot-free,” the measure notes. – Aileen
P. Refuerzo
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