PUNCHLINE
Ike Seneres
The bottom
line of the pork barrel issue is local governance. In theory, the purpose of
the pork barrel is to fund local development needs that could not be “seen” by
Congress as it approves the General Appropriations Act (GAA) for each fiscal
year.
Pursuing that theory, the Congress apparently came up with the legal
fiction that whatever could not be “seen” by them as a whole assembly could be
seen by the district Congressmen from their own local vantage point.
According to newspaper reports, the Lower House of the Congress has
already decided to “scrap” the old pork barrel system, apparently replacing it
with a new system that would focus more on line item budgeting, although it
seems that the Congressmen could still “recommend” their own local projects subject
to the approval of the appropriate House Committee and the corresponding
implementing line agencies, i.e. the National Government Agencies (NGAs).
As it is now, most if not all of the NGAs have their own branch offices
at the local levels. What that means is that all of these branch offices are in
a position to “see” the local development needs from their own vantage point,
at least in theory. You can add to that the theory that the career NGA
officials in these branches are probably more technically competent to “see”
these needs, with a better “sight” than the Congressmen.
The prerogative given to the district Congressmen to “see” local
development needs seems to be based on the assumption that on their own, acting
as individual observers, they could “see” the needs better than anyone else,
presumably better than the career NGA officials, supposedly acting as a team of
experts. In reality however, there are Local Development Councils (LDCs) that
could work together collectively to “see” these needs.
As it turns out, all district Congressmen, together with the career NGA
officials and the Local Government Unit (LGU) officials are all members of the
LDCs, meaning that there is already an existing venue or forum where all of
them could collectively “see” all of the local development needs, putting
together all of their eyes and brains.
As a matter of fact, there is a separate Executive Order that empowers
all district Congressmen to become de facto members of these LDCs, in addition
to what the Local Government Code (LGC) already stipulates.
The idea of allowing the district Congressmen to “recommend” their own
projects seems to be based on the reasoning that they could identify local
development needs subjectively on their own, acting as individuals, without
consulting with the LDCs.
The ideal and logical option of course is for them to work collectively
with the LDCs, thus they would be acting objectively with the other LDC
members. If the proper process is to be followed, it should be the branch
offices of the NGAs that should recommend projects to their head offices, so
that these projects could be included in their line item budgets.
Going straight to the point, all provinces should have their own Medium
Term Development Plans (MTDPs) that should be based on their own Comprehensive
Land Use Plans (CLUPs). That is about as objective as everyone at the local
levels could get, using a process that is very transparent. More so if
Geographic Information Systems (GIS) are used, it would already be possible to
“see” all local development needs, without anyone missing out on anything.
We know what really happened in the pork barrel scam and we should deal
with that reality. For the most part, the pork barrel was used not to deliver
projects to the local levels, but to deliver kickbacks to the pockets of
corrupt Congressmen. It was almost a rule of thumb, that politicians would
“invest” money in their political campaigns, expecting that they could earn,
yes earn “profits” in the form of pork barrel kickbacks. Hopefully, the shift
to line item budgeting would change all that.
What should be declared as local priorities should depend on the
consensus of the LDC members. That is the advantage of many council members
thinking and acting collectively, rather than just one Congressman doing it for
everyone else. On my part, I believe that all priorities should be based on the
MTDPs. What I mean is that there should be a process of elimination, meaning to
say that what should be submitted for priority funding should be those projects
that could not be funded under the line budgeting approach.
As I see it, there should be a differentiation between public services
and development needs in the planning process. Public services should be
intended for the present, whereas development needs should be intended for the
future. The prevailing thinking is that all public service needs should already
be provided for in the usual and regular budgets of the LGUs, and other than
that, their extra development needs would then need additional funding from
national sources.
Technically, the GIS database should only be part of a broader LGU
database that should include both the public services data and the development
needs data. Since most LGUs could not afford to maintain these databases on
their own premises, it may be best for them to already consider the option of
cloud computing, so that they could enjoy the advantages of data center
virtualization and big data.
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