FOUR PARTYLISTS associated with the country’s
electric cooperatives want Congress to dip its hands into the controversy
surrounding the position of general manager of Benguet Electric Cooperative.
Rep. Presley de Jesus (Philreca), Rep. Adriano Ebcas (Ako Padayon Pilipino), Rep. Sergio Dagooc (APEC) and Rep. Godofredo Guya (RECOBODA) filed on May 19 a resolution urging the House Committee on Energy to conduct an inquiry in aid of legislation on the “overreach of the National Electrification Administration on the screening and selection of general managers of electric cooperatives.”
The resolution stemmed from the nationwide protest of the country’s 121 electric cooperatives which staged a “Black Friday Protest” last May 14 that condemned the manner the NEA Board of Administrators (BOA) processed the applicants for the general manager of Beneco.
Central to the issue is NEA BOA Resolution No. RB 2021-47 which endorsed only one applicant to the board of directors (BOD) of BENECO as GM instead of two applicants who were both qualified and who both passed the final interview by the BOA.
Rep. Presley de Jesus (Philreca), Rep. Adriano Ebcas (Ako Padayon Pilipino), Rep. Sergio Dagooc (APEC) and Rep. Godofredo Guya (RECOBODA) filed on May 19 a resolution urging the House Committee on Energy to conduct an inquiry in aid of legislation on the “overreach of the National Electrification Administration on the screening and selection of general managers of electric cooperatives.”
The resolution stemmed from the nationwide protest of the country’s 121 electric cooperatives which staged a “Black Friday Protest” last May 14 that condemned the manner the NEA Board of Administrators (BOA) processed the applicants for the general manager of Beneco.
Central to the issue is NEA BOA Resolution No. RB 2021-47 which endorsed only one applicant to the board of directors (BOD) of BENECO as GM instead of two applicants who were both qualified and who both passed the final interview by the BOA.
The resolution was
widely criticized since it only endorsed Ana Marie Paz Rafael Banaag of the
Presidential Communications Operations Office (PCOO) based on her score of 94%
in the final interview compared to Melchor Licoben, an engineer who is the
current OIC GM.
The Philippine Rural
Electric Cooperatives Association (Philreca), the country’s mother organization
of all electric cooperatives lambasted the resolution as illegal for having
violated NEA Memorandum No. 2017-035, the rules governing the selection of GMs.
Philreca echoed the
protest of Beneco employees and member consumers who said that there is nothing
in the rules that allow the BOA to endorse only the applicant with the highest
score in the final interview.
More than 14 allied
organizations of the electric cooperatives have also filed separate resolutions
assailing the BOA resolution as an attempt to clip the powers of the electric
cooperatives.
The call for a
congressional inquiry came after the Beneco BOD
rejected the BOA resolution in a special meeting last May 19.
In their resolution,
the four partylists, known as the “Power Bloc” in the House of Representatives,
said the act of the BOA amounted to usurpation of the powers of EC directors to
appoint their own GM.
“Such act gave
unwarranted benefit, advantage or preference in the discharge of their
functions through the manifest partiality and evident bad faith to one favored
applicant,” the resolution said.
The resolution scored
the NEA BOA for going beyond its mandate. “The NEA BOA, by law, should only
screen and validate if the applicants possess all the qualifications and none
of the disqualifications and it has no power to select and appoint a GM or the
power to designate a probable appointee for the position,” it said.
The resolution slammed
the BOA resolution for attempting to perform a function which does not belong
to it since the power to hire a GM belongs to the BOD of the ECs.
The resolution said:
“The NEA BOA cannot substitute their judgment over that of the BOD which has
the power to hire a GM.”
What the BOA did to
BENECO was an overreach of their powers and hence, ultra vires, the solons
said.
According to the power
bloc of Congress in House Resolution 1776, the
NEA BOA endorsement of Rafael
Banaag as general manager of Beneco gave her unwarranted benefit, advantage or
preference over the Licoben, who is
equally qualified to be a general manager of the electric cooperative (Beneco),
the congressmen said.
“The power granted to
the NEA BOA and to its own issuances is limited only to a mere screening of the
applicants for GMs of ECs and to validate if said officials possess all the qualifications
required by law and none of the disqualifications, based on established
guidelines,” the power bloc representatives said in HR 1776.
The solons added the
“NEA BOA have absolutely no power to select and appoint the GM or the power to
designate a “probable appointee” for the position of general manager of
Beneco.”
Lawyer Janeene
Depay-Colingan, Philreca executive director said Beneco followed the right
process from the very start. “Let it be known: Beneco management and employees,
Beneco MCOs, and our One EC-MCO Movement are not meddling with the mandate of
NEA. We are calling out the decision that did not go through the proper
procedure to be rectified. We thank Beneco for standing up for what is right,”
said Colingan.
“Despite the
provisions of the law giving independence to the electric cooperatives to
select and appoint its own general manager, the Board of Administrators of NEA
selected one candidate and approved a resolution endorsing only one of the two
qualified candidates for the position of general manager of Beneco,” added
Colingan.
Presley C. De Jesus, Philreca
president, said “the reason the entire 121 electric cooperatives are up in arms
is because the BOA of the NEA violated and breached the very clear processes in
hiring and appointing general managers that they themselves approved.”
“The NEA BOA should
not intervene in the affairs and mandate of the electric cooperatives’ board of
directors. The BOA committed grave abuse of discretion because the NEA BOA has
no power – neither by virtue of Republic Act 10531 nor by any existing
regulatory measures – to choose which of the qualified applicants they should
endorse to the EC’s BOD based on any arbitrary preference of the NEA BOA,” De
Jesus said.
In joint letter by Philreca
and Nagmec (National Association of General Managers of Electric Cooperatives),
also urged the NEA BOA to “rectify its error and set aside RB Resolution No.
2021-47 to spare itself from a deluge of serious legal actions and
unprecedented rant not just from Beneco’s member-consumer-owners but from the
entire electric cooperatives sector who have the same sentiment on this issue.”
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