Senate oks creation of 44 new regional courts
>> Thursday, August 6, 2015
The Senate approved on third and final
reading last week a bill establishing 44 new Regional Trial Courts, five
Metropolitan Trial Courts, 15 Municipal Trial Courts in Cities and three
Municipal Trial Courts.
To be
created are three Regional Trial Courts in the cities of Alaminos, Dagupan and
San Carlos, Pangasinan; five Regional Trial Courts and five Metropolitan Trial
Courts in Pasay City; one Regional Trial Court in San Jose, Nueva Ecija; one
Regional Trial Court in the Science City of Munoz, Nueva Ecija; one Regional
Trial Court in Initao, Misamis Oriental; one Regional Trial Court Meycauayan,
Bulacan; two Municipal Trial Courts in the cities and two Regional Trial Courts
in Baguio, two additional Municipal Trial Courts in Cities for Angeles, one
Municipal Trial Court in for Malagalng and one Municipal Trial Court in Cities
for the city of Mabalacat, all in Pampanga; one Regional Trial Court in
Sorsogon, one Regional Trial Court in Guihulngan, Negros Oriental; 19 Regional
Trial Courts in Quezon City; five Regional Trial Courts in ParaƱaque City; one
Regional Trial Court in Vigan, Ilocos Sur; three Regional Trial Courts in Bacolod,
Negros Occidental and one Regional Trial Court in San Jose, Del Monte, Bulacan.
The proposed
bill would also convert the existing 5th Municipal Circuit Trial Court of
Carmona-Gen. Mariano Alvarez, Cavite into a Municipal
Trial Court and creating a new Municipal Trail Court in the same
Sen.
Aquilino “Koko” Pimentel III, chairman of the Committee on Justice and Human
Rights, said the creation of additional courts across the country aimed to
unclog the bulk of cases currently pending in the
Senate
President Franklin M. Drilon for his part, said the measure was part of the
Senate’s efforts to speed up the dispensation of the law everywhere in the
nation: “We are taking all initiatives to ensure that the wheels of justice is
turning at a diligent pace for every Filipino, across every province, and
across every city.”
Pimentel
agreed that “no Filipino should be denied justice because of delay in the
disposition of his case.”
He said he
foresaw an increase in the number of legal conflicts as the country advances in
development and economic activities.
“While the
members of our judiciary are some of the most brilliant, professional, and
diligent luminaries in the legal community, the sheer number of cases that are
filed in our courts makes it almost an insurmountable task to dispose of the
same in a timely and orderly manner,” he said.
He cited the
Pasay City Regional Trial Court as an example, which he said had a combined
caseload of 7,329 in 13 branches as of June 2014. The figure, he said, equated
to an average caseload of 565 cases per branch and exceeded the manageable
caseload of 300 for second level courts.
He said that
it was “regrettable how all courts nationwide were in the same bind as those in
Pasay City.”
Pimentel
said the establishment of additional courts took into consideration not only
the present case volume of existing branches but also the geographical
situation of these areas to “make justice more accessible to the people.”
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