'Power grab' hounds Abra electric coop
BANGUED, Abra – An official of the Abra
Electric Cooperative on Monday said a "power grab" is imminent at the
Abra Electric Cooperative, following the move to create an ad hoc crisis
intervention committee by the Abra provincial board.
Already in the drawing board is an ad hoc committee
to be created purportedly to assist Abra Gov. EustaquioBersamin in resolving
the electricity crisis in the northern province allegedly spawned by financial
debts the past months which caused a 27-hour black-out last December and power
cut-off notices from Abreco’s supplier -- Aboitiz Power Renewables Inc.
(APRI).
Loreto Seares Jr., Abreco general manager, said the
move is illegal and will be deemed as “thumbing their noses on the respective
charters of the Cooperative Development Authority (CDA) and the National
Electrification Administration (NEA), and abrogating upon themselves the
mandate of the Department of Energy (DOE).”
Abreco, a 47,000 member-consumer cooperative is
registered since 2012 at the CDA.
The ad hoc crisis management team, which would be
led by Bersamin, was proposed by provincial board member Allen Bachiller
to end power crisis in the province in six months.
According to the proposal, Abreco's failure to pay
its debts caused "public discomfort, business losses, paralysis of public
and private transactions and other different economic and social consequences
in the distraction of power supply” in Abra.
The continued failure of Abreco to pay its debts
also poses a threat to the stability of supply of electric service to the
consumers in Abra.
La Paz town mayor Joseph Sto Nino Bernos confirmed
ongoing talks about the crisis management team being proposed to answer woes
besetting the province like blackouts as a result of the power firm’s financial
problems.
“We sought the governor to move to resolve the
issue,” said Bernos, who is the president of the town mayor’s league of
Abra.
Seares said such move “might be setting an alarming
precedence in big government that kills the private sector and stifles the
growth and development of empowered civil society organizations.”
Their intention to take matters into his own hands,
he said, “runs counter to the established laws of the land.”
Bersamin has denied that he is abusing his power by
intervening into the affairs of the cooperative.
The proposal was discussed Jan. 15 for
third and final reading by the AbraSangunniangPanlalawigan.
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