Why the is FOI Bill not gaining ground?
>> Friday, February 28, 2014
EDITORIAL
With the series of
exposes and Senate investigations on misuse of the PDAF (priority assistance
development funds by senators and congressmen among other government officials,
concerned sectors are pressing both Houses to finally implement Freedom of
Information (FOI) law.
Earlier in
2013, the Right to Know, Right Now! Coalition, a multi-sectoral alliance
pushing for passage of the Freedom of Information Bill, filed its own version
of the measure through indirect initiative provision of Republic Act No. 6735
or the Initiative and Referendum Law.
More than
half a year later, the House Committee on Public Information has yet to
schedule a Technical Working Group (TWG) to consolidate different versions of
the FOI bill, which includes the one filed by the coalition.
However,
amid the delay in processes in the House, the group scored a victory by being
appointed as member of the TWG.Former Quezon Rep. Lorenzo “Erin” Tañada III and
Coalition convenor Nepomuceno Malaluan, a lawyer, wrote to Public Information
Committee Chairman Jorge Almonte saying “petitioners should be accorded
recognition as authors of a pending FOI bill, pursuant to Section 11 of RA 6735
which states in part that: The procedure to be followed on the initiative bill
shall be the same as the enactment of any legislative measure before the House
of Representatives except that the said initiative bill shall have precedence
over the pending legislative measures on the committee.”
Almonte
granted the group’s request to be invited to the TWG. “We thank the Chairman of
the Committee and we look forward to working with him and his members. We
sincerely hope that our proposed People’s FOI Act will be given the same treatment
and recognition that it got in the Senate,” said Malaluan.
“Our
involvement shows our intention to strengthen people’s participation in
legislation. With this, we commit to engage the process constructively in order
to finally pass a law that will institutionalize transparency and
accountability in government,” he added.
“This
is one step forward for the People’s FOI,” said Tañada, who was the principal
author of the bill in the 15th Congress. “Our role here is to emphasize that
this measure is not only for a particular sector, but for each and every
Filipino.”Tañada said “it is high time for the FOI to be passed.”
“We’ve
waited long enough. Let us not repeat the same excuses from previous
Congresses. With the different issues involving the misuse of public funds, we
need the People’s FOI Act to shine a cleansing light on the darkest nooks and
crannies of government,” he said.
If the FOI
Bill is not being ratified, the answer is obvious -- in a senator or a
congressman’s SUV, mansion or high end mistress.
0 comments:
Post a Comment