EDITORIAL
Here is one laudable law the Senate
crafted. The Senate approved last week on third and final reading a measure
which seeks to strengthen the Sangguniang Kabataan (SK) by, among other things,
barring family and relatives of elected officials from seeking SK elections,
adjusting the age of SK officials, and providing trainings to
professionalize and make the elected SK members aware of their
responsibilities.
Senator Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos,
Jr., sponsor of Senate Bill No. 2401, also known as the proposed Youth
Development and Empowerment Act of 2014, said that aprovision in the bill
prohibits family and relatives of any public official, from national,
provincial, city, municipality, and barangay levels, including appointed ones,
up to the second degree of affinity and consanguinity, from seeking any SK
position.
Originally, only family members and
relatives of provincial, city/municipal and barangay officials are prohibited
from running for any SK position.
“The anti-dynasty provision prevents
elected officials from exerting undue influence so that their sons or daughters
could be elected as ex-officio members in SK,” Marcos said.
Senate President Franklin M. Drilon
said the approved bill is an important reform initiative that will help
implement the anti-political dynasty provision in Article II, Section 26,
of the 1986 Constitution: “The ban on political dynasties at the youth
governance level is a good start in finally realizing the anti-political
dynasty stance of our Constitution, which is yet to be fully enabled in our laws.”
Among the other criticisms hurled
against the SK is that it exposes the youth to corruption. Comelec officials
alleged that some candidates had been engaged in poll fraud in 2013.
An offshoot of the Kabataang
Barangay, the SK which was established during martial law by then
President Ferdinand Marcos, was designed to give the youth a chance to be
involved in community affairs and to provide the government the means to inform
them of the government's development efforts.
According to Marcos, the proposed
measure also calls for the increase of age of the qualified SK applicants from
15 to 17 years old to 18 to 24 years old to allow the youth to have a “more
mature perspective on their roles and responsibilities as elected SK officials.
“Increasing the age of SK officials
from 15-17 years of age to 18-24 years old would provide them with
the necessary training to professionalize their skills and enable the
youth to be more accountable for their actions,” Marcos said.
He said elected SK officials would
also be provided with more training programs to “professionalize their
service and make sure that they would serve not on the basis of bloodline or
affinity but because of a dedication to serve.”
Marcos said the measure also calls
for the creation of the Local Youth Development Council (LYDC), a body composed
of representatives from different community-based youth organizations that will
be tasked to ensure wide and multi-sectoral youth participation in local
governance.
“This measure leads the way in
preparing a new generation of leaders, bringing with them new ideas and energy,
fired by a passion and idealism that burn strong in today’s youth,” Marcos
said.
The measure was co-authored by Sen.
Cynthia Villar and co-sponsored by Senators Aquilino “Koko” Pimentel III,
Francis “Chiz” Escudero, Paolo Benigno “Bam” Aquino IV, Joseph Victor “JV”
Ejercito and Ramon “Bong” Revilla Jr.
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