By Freddie G. Lazaro
BANGUED, Abra — The National Electrification Administration’s alleged
inaction on a P20-million loan for the financially-strapped Abra Electric
Cooperative (Abreco) here has affected
the power cooperative’s rehabilitation efforts to stop further losses.
To fully implement rehabilitation efforts for Abreco and provide stable
electricity to more than 40,000 Abrenians, the P20-million loan is imperative
for the payment of retirement benefits of retrenched Abreco employees, its
officers said.
Local power cooperatives, especially those facing financial
difficulties, have been expecting much from the NEA with its new charter signed
by President Aquino in May 2013. With its new charter, NEA will have better
supervision over electric cooperatives, some of which are incurring heavy
losses.
However, Abreco general manager Loreto Seares, Jr. bewailed that the
loan, being an apparent “non-priority of the NEA up to this time, poses a
situation in which “Abreco is left hanging in thin air.”
With the retrenchment scheme as the main feature of Abreco’s
rehabilitation plan approved two years ago by the Department of Energy, the
National Labor Relations Commission ruled versus such retrenchment. “So we
reinstated the retrenched employees and paid their back wages,” Seares Jr.
said.
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