BAYOMBONG, Nueva Vizcaya– Officials of
Alfonso Castañeda town of this province have yet to fully account for the
municipality’s P130-million real property tax (RPT) share from last year’s
operation of the Casecnan multi-purpose and irrigation project by a American
firm.
The Commission on Audit said the municipal
government of Alfonso Castañeda has yet to settle its expenditures from the
multimillion-peso fund, contrary to claims by the town’s officials that they
have resolved their disallowed transactions with state auditors.
In fact, COA auditor-in-charge Rey Acosta
refused to issue a certification clearing the municipal government of its
expenditures, which state auditors had disallowed due to supposed deficiencies
and questionable spending.
“We readily issue notices of settlement if
indeed those disallowed and suspended transactions have already been resolved.
But the problem is, (they have failed to comply with) even the simplest
deficiencies noted by the COA audit,” Acosta said.
COA’s finding of alleged fund misuse against
the municipal government became the basis of the decision of Gov. Luisa
Cuaresma to withhold the RPT share of Alfonso Castañeda for the third quarter
last year.
For partly hosting the Casecnan project of US
firm California Energy, Alfonso Castañeda is entitled to receive quarterly RPT
share, and for the third quarter last year, it was expected to receive some P50
million.
Cuaresma, however, withheld the release of
the town’s RPT share unless the COA would issue a certification clearing the
town officials of alleged misspending.
Earlier this month, some 200 placard-bearing
residents and municipal employees of Alfonso Castañeda picketed the capitol
compound here to press Cuaresma to release their town’s RPT share.
The rallyists, who were transported by
municipal government vehicles all the way from the mountain town to the
capital, failed to meet Cuaresma though.
Cuaresma said she cannot simply ignore the
town’s apparent misuse of funds by allowing it “to further recklessly spend”
hard-earned taxes “without at least having an idea as to how the previous
taxes” had been utilized.
“I will be remiss in my duties if I will turn
a blind eye to the seeming lack of care in the manner by which the (town)
utilizes these taxes which we have worked long and hard to collect,” said
Cuaresma in her letter to Alfonso Castañeda Mayor Jerry Pasigian.
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