By
Gina Dizon
BONTOC, Mountain
Province -- Seventy-five percent of the province’s P35.4 million
Bayanihan Grant to address Covid-19 was disbursed on maintenance and operating
expenses for eight control points in provincial borders and food, medicine and
repair expenses of four provincial hospitals here as of August 31.
This, as the
Sangguniang Panlalawigan answered allegations on “double funding” of the P35.4
million Bayanihan grant and the P41.7 million appropriation release order (ARO)
on the annual budget of the Provincial Heath Office following petition for
investigation and special audit on said funds by anti- corruption advocates
Juniper Dominguez and Salvador Liked.
Liked was
slain in his hometown in Balintaugan, Bauko on Sept. 2.
Provincial
records revealed 75% of the P35.4 million Bayanihan Grant equal to 97 percent
was disbursed for trainings, laundry janitorial, maintenance (food, personal
protective equipment, triage booths and decontamination supplies), drugs and
medicines, laboratory supplies, fuel expense, and repair and maintenance of
buildings.
Ninety
percent of a budgeted P9 million for medical supplies and 100% of a budgeted
P4.5 million on drugs and medicine supplies were disbursed to four provincial
hospitals of Bontoc, Barlig, Besao and Paracelis.
Other
maintenance and operating expenses of P4.6 million out of a budgeted P5 million
have also been disbursed to four provincial hospitals and eight control points
in provincial borders of Cassag in Paracelis, Sayapot in the Mankayan border,
Viewpoint in Banaue Ifugao, Sinto at Bangao Bauko, Burgos at the Ilocos Sur
border, Pakak Paracelis and the disaster risk and reduction management office
(DRRMO) control point in Bontoc.
For repair
and maintenance of buildings of the four provincial hospitals, P6.9 million out
of the budgeted P9.4 million was disbursed.
Items on the
P35.4 million Bayanihan Grant was specially meant to address Covid-19,
Provincial Budget Officer Florence Gut-omen said.
She answered
the issue on ‘double funding’ of the SP in the report of the committee on
budget and appropriations, public works and highways.
“While it is true that there are items
similarly provided in the annual appropriating ordinance budget of the
provincial government and seemingly resulted in double funding, said
expenditures were meant to augment existing appropriations already.
Double funding does not presuppose double payment. It cannot be said that the
utilization of funds will result in the payment of settlement of one single
item of expenditure or would result to double payment.”
A letter was
sent by Maria Matib audit team leader of the COA – Mountain Province forwarding
questions to the SP after COA received a petition on special audit on the
propriety of disbursements of the P35.4 million Bayanihan Grant from Dominguez
and Liked.
Said
Appropriation Ordinance No 2020-04 dated April 16, 2020 authorized Supplemental
Budget No 2 series of 2020 of the provincial government of Mountain Province
involving a total appropriation of P35,393,993 which is the Bayanihan Grant to
Provinces.
The P35.4
million Bayanihan Grant under the Sangguniang Panlalawigan’s Appropriation
Ordinance 2020-04 contained same items in Appropriation Release Order (ARO) for
maintenance and other operating expenses for fiscal year 2020 totaling P41.74
million.
Dominguez
alleged there was a “sinister plot’ to pass on the medical equipment, materials
and medicine from the ARO of FY 2020 and charge it to the P35.4 million
Bayanihan Grant or vice versa.
The SP in
their committee report stated, “There was no double funding as the items of
expenditure are entirely different from those funded by the general fund. While
the titles of the expenditures may be the same with titles used in the
appropriation ordinance for the general fund. The funds allotted under the
Bayanihan Grant was never intended to pay the same items that will be
paid or were already paid by the appropriation made for the general fund. The
appropriation made under Appropriation Ordinance 2020-04 are to augment the
existing funding of hospitals and other concerned offices to support them in
addressing the Covid 19 pandemic which is the very purpose of the Bayanihan
grant”.
Gut-omen said
items in said ARO are particularly meant for the operations of the Provincial
Health Office for the year 2020 and the items identified in the AO 2020-04
specially meant to address Covid- 19.
Said AO No.
2020-04 identified training expenses at P300,000; laundry at
P300,000; janitorial expense at P300,000; and other MOOE on
maintenance of duly established provincial checkpoints at P5
million, food supply at P1 million, drugs and medicine at P5 million,
medical supplies at P8 million, lab supply expenses at P3 million, X-ray
and ultrasound at P800,000, fuel oil and lubricants at P300,00; and
maintenance of buildings and other hospital facilities at P2 million; and
capital outlay on various hospital equipment at P9,393,993.
The ARO of FY
2020 identified same items with differing amounts – trainings at P444,000; food
supplies at P3.2 million; medical and surgical supplies at P5 million;
laboratory at P8.7 million; X-ray and ultrasound at P1.55 million; fuel oil and
lubricants at P1.1 million and repair and maintenance of building at P424, 752
totaling to P41.74 million.
Said AO
2020-04 identified maintenance and operating expenses including laundry,
training, medical supplies and fuel and repair and maintenance of buildings in
the amount of P26 million; and a capital outlay of P9.39 million of various
hospital equipment including nebulizers and bio-refrigerator, radio base and
sewing machine all totaling P35.39 million.
Dominguez in
his petition asked where the training, janitorial, and laundry expenses,
bio-refrigerator, podia, nebulizers, biosafety cabinet and cardiac monitor with
defibrillator be used when Bauko-based Luis Hora Memorial Regional Hospital is
the certified hospital to treat Covid patients in Mountain Province.
Dept. of
Health guidelines provide that Level 1 hospitals like some district hospitals
can accept Covid patients due to overflowing of Covid patients in Level 2
and 3 hospitals.
In a
separate petition, petitioner Liked asked the DILG asked what savings are there
to draw from as cited in AO 2020-04 when the fiscal year is not yet over.
Said
Appropriation Ordinance 2020-04 hinged on section 366 of the Local Government
code on use of appropriated funds and savings where “funds shall be available
exclusively for the specific purpose for which they have been appropriated.
Said
ordinance went on to say, “For this purpose augmentation implies the existence
in the budget an item, project, activity or purpose with an appropriation if
needed, resources determined to be deficient.
The SP
in their response to COA said savings being referred to in the AO 2020-04 are
“future savings that may be generated after the procurement of the funded items
which may be used to augment ay item in the budget that will need augmentation.
Section 4 of the ordinance was intended to give ready authorization to the
provincial governor to do realignments from possible savings whenever
necessary.”
Said
Bayanihan Grant shall be exclusively used for procurement of personal
protective equipment, reagents, and kits for Covid-19 testing, medicines and
vitamins, hospital equipment and supplies; disinfectants, sprayers, and other
disinfecting supplies and misting equipment as provided in Local Budget
Circular No. 126, dated 13 April 2020.
This among
other items as food, transportation, and accommodation expenses of health
workers; and expenses for the construction, repair or lease of additional
space or building to accommodate Covid-19 patients and persons under monitoring;
expenses for training of health personnel, other necessary Covid-19-related
P/A/Ps and expenses and operation and maintenance of duly established
provincial and municipal checkpoints such as provision of foods,
medicines/vitamins, personal protective equipment, and disinfecting supplies.
Said petition
was sent also to President Rodrigo Duterte, DILG Secretary Eduardo Ano, Inter
Agency Task Force (IATF) Francisco Duque, Secretary of Budget and Management
Wendell Avisado, Commission on Audit (COA) chairperson Michael Aguinaldo,
Ombudsman Samuel Martires, DILG, Senate Chairman on Committee on Health Senator
Christopher ‘Bong’ Go and 28 senators.
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