LETTERS
FROM THE AGNO
March L.
Fianza
BAGUIO CITY -- It’s an unforgiving job.
Nurses claim that they belong to the “overworked and underpaid” sector. If the
ratio of nurses to patients in hospitals abroad where the pay is much higher is
one to six or eight, it is one to 30 or more in the Philippines where the basic
or first salary is P22,000 minus deductions.
Ironically, that is
why college students enroll in nursing courses, not to serve in Philippine
hospitals but to take their chances abroad where the take home pay is better
and the working conditions are healthier.
Records show that
prior to the Luzon-wide COVID-19 lockdown, around 150,000 were able to take
flight. Even while, hospitals are in need of nurses during this pandemic
period, health authorities that previously disallowed nurses to travel abroad
decided to ease the restriction and let the nurses go, especially those who
already signed work contracts.
Because of this,
government is bent on increasing the take home pay of our remaining nurses,
otherwise healthcare during a pandemic will see a repeat of history with the
resignation of medical workers. That was what happened during the Spanish flu
pandemic in 1918.
It is primarily the
fault of government, particularly the executive and legislative branches that
do not put enough importance to healthcare – proof of which are the unevenly
distributed budget apportionments that are approved for each line department.
Most of the time, the
public works department gets the largest cut in the budget pie where a big
percentage of it is pocketed by those who approved it. Before his term ends in
two years, President Duterte said he will fulfill his promise to increase the
pay of nurses, especially during this time of a world health crisis. Let us
wait and see.
***
I give space this time
to talk about public works which is always a contentious topic in many circles,
if not scandalous. As I start to write this article last Thursday, I received
information of a shooting incident at Sitio Gotang, Balintaugan, Bauko in
Mountain Province.
A police report sent
by a friend landed on my Facebook messenger account and identified the shooting
victim as one Salvador Guitabao Liked, 44; single, a barangay kagawad who was
reportedly shot to death by still unidentified assailants. I extend my
sincerest condolences to the family of Mr. Liked and may his killers be caught
and punished.
The police report
signed by Police Major Bernardo K. Wong of the Provincial Investigation and
Detective Management Unit of Mountain Province narrated that the incident
occurred at around 8:55 in the evening of September 2, 2020 in front of the
victim’s house.
One of the
unidentified killers served as lookout while another person was wearing a black
bonnet, black jacket, black pants and farm boots as narrated by a witness who
said that he heard at least three shots fired.
An initial
investigation by the police provincial mobile force company and Bauko Municipal
Police Station disclosed that Mr. Liked sustained two gunshot wounds at the
back and nape leading to his instant death. Two caliber .45 shells and a slug
were found at the scene.
The name Salvador
Liked is familiar to public works contractors and officials of the Department
of Public Works and Highways because he is the secretary of an anti-corruption
organization in the Cordillera region called the Citizens Crime Watch
(CCW-CAR).
In one instance in
2017, he filed an affidavit-complaint with the Office of the Ombudsman about
the failure of two DPWH officials in the Cordillera to file their Statement of
Assets and Liabilities and Net Worth for several years.
Then in 2018, he wrote
Sec. Mark Villar to check infrastructure projects implemented by the DPWH-CAR
from 2015 to 2017 that were reported as “100% completed” with corresponding
amounts collected but were actually discovered as “not completed”.
That was how bold
Salvador Liked was before he decided to continue his public service by becoming
a Kagawad of Barangay Balintaugan in his hometown of Bauko. This makes us
recall some of the corrupt practices perpetrated by the parties involved in
implementing government projects and the penalties applied.
In some cases, the
license of a contractor is suspended for a year and cannot join a public biding
of projects just because of the first offense of submitting false information
or falsified documents – a violation of RA 9184 or the Government Procurement
Reform Act.
The other offenses
range from failure to complete the project to abandonment of the project;
intolerable negative slippage; failure to comply with contractual obligations;
falsification of public documents; the quality of material is not in compliance
with approved plans and specifications; and unsatisfactory quality of work.
There are corrupt acts
done by a collaboration of DPWH engineers and the contractor of a project. In
many instances, project engineers bow down to a politician’s influence to a
point that the contractor dictates the specifications of the project, including
the site or kilometer station where the project would be built.
For example, instead
of constructing a project along the Halsema Guiweng-Nawal-Tickey roadline, it
was built along the Camangaan-Balabak-Liboong roadline. Worst, the violation of
implementing the project on a wrong roadline was committed twice. Two projects
were allowed to be built on the wrong roadline.
Meanwhile, concerned
citizens are alarmed over multi-million worth of projects being proposed by
unscrupulous contractors who have close ties with a lawmaker in the Cordillera.
The information
forwarded to me is that projects that are not essential at this time of the
COVID-19 pandemic are the ones that are being included for funding in next
year’s General Appropriation Act.
One project that was
mentioned was “rock netting”. This requires the use of nets that are pinned and
held by bolts on mountain slopes to stop erosion and protect roads. However,
mountain slopes above roads in the Cordillera are stable and not so many are
prone to slides unless battered by continuous rains.
Allegedly, the
motivation for such project proposals is the profit, not the benefits that
these can provide the public. And if these acts go unchecked, then President
Duterte’s build, build, build (BBB) program is bound to be
unsuccessful.
Infrastructure
development is claimed to be the country’s drawback. That is why President
Duterte initiated the BBB Program to accelerate infrastructure spending to
develop industries that would create jobs and improve the lives of Filipinos.
Public spending on
infrastructure projects is targeted at P8 to 9 trillion from 2017 to 2022. But
if a percentage of the money is lost to corruption, then the program is counter-productive.
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