Voting 13-0 with no abstention, the
Senate approved the P2.606 trillion proposed national budget for 2015 on Nov.
26.
The
Department of Education (DepEd) got the largest share of the budget pie with
P323.56 billion followed by the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH)
with 292.57 billion, Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) with
P109.34 billion, Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) with
P104.57 billion and the Department of National Defense (DND) with P99.92 billion.
Senator
Francis Joseph “Chiz” G. Escudero, chair of the Senate Committee on Finance,
said the Senate increased DepEd’s budget by P3.636 billion, representing
allocations for feeding programs, the Quick Response Fund and chalk allowance.
Senate
President Franklin M. Drilon explained that the hike in the funds for the
education sector is part of the Senate’s on third reading goal to
improve the delivery of educational services in the country. “The youth are the
most important asset our country has to nurture, and part of it is by giving
education the highest priority in the budget," he said.
In
September, the upper chamber had passed a package of inclusive education
bills geared towards the poor, including bills on open and distance learning,
and the “Iskolar ng Bayan Act.”
In
turn, Mr. Drilon said that the greater budget in 2015 will help government
address pressing challenges to the educational sector, the need for new
classrooms, including the repair of facilities damaged by previous calamities.
For
his part, Senate President Pro-Tempore Ralph Recto introduced the amendment for
the chalk allowance, increasing it to P1,500 next from the present P1,000.
“Chalk
allowance” is the popular term for the amount given to teachers at the start of the school year
for the purchase of “chalk, pens, erasers, cartolinas
and other school supplies” they use in teaching.
Mr. Escudero said the Senate’s version of the 2015 national
budget had also addressed the concerns raised by Senator Miriam Defensor
Santiago in her privilege speech last November 24.
“The concerns she [Ms. Santiago] had, we addressed them in the
Senate version. We had improved the other points she raised,” Mr. Escudero said
in an interview.
He
said the Senate’s version of the 2015 national budget had followed the Supreme
Court’s
decision on what was allowed or disallowed in the national budget to a dot.
To
ensure transparency, Mr. Escudero said, the Senate had included a provision in
the 2015 General Appropriation Act (GAA) that would prohibit government
agencies to use “lump sum funds” without submitting a report or itemized
listing to Congress and the Commission on Audit.
He
said heads of government agencies will be penalized if they violated the
provisions.
“We
provided a penalty of six months suspension or imprisonment of one year or a
fine equivalent to six-month salary if they fail to submit the report,” Mr. Escudero
said during an interview.
While
the Senate had realigned P96.58 billion of the proposed 2015 national budget, Mr.
Escudero said, senators were very transparent on where the money was
reallocated.
For
instance, he said, the Senate allocated P19 billion for the Rehabilitation and
Reconstruction Program to cover past disasters, including super typhoons
Yolanda, Glenda and Mario.
He
said the Senate had also realigned P2.67 billion under the Information and
Communications Technology Office for the implementation of free Wi-Fi internet in
public places. The budget will be sourced from the Digitization Empowerment
Program.
The
Department of Science and Technology will set up 50,872 Wi-Fi hotspots next
year, including 7,910 public high schools, 38,694 public elementary schools,
113 state colleges and 1,118 public libraries and public areas in 1,490 towns.
“We have restored the House cut on the DPWH amounting to P242.6
million under the MFO3 or the ‘Maintenance and Construction Services of Other
Infrastructures’ and P1.318 billion under MFO1 under the ‘National Road Network
Services.’ In addition, an increase of P1.130 billion will be provided for the
Quick Response Fund of the DPWH to bring it to P2 billion,” Mr. Escudero explained.
Likewise,
he said, the Senate had also increased the Quick Response Fund of the
Department of Health by P500 million.
At
the same time, he said the Senate had increased the Supreme Court’s budget by
P715.36 million for the Enterprise Information System Plan or the IT for
e-courts and reallocated and restored P1 billion of the Philippine Children’s
Medical Center, particularly for hospital modernization, to be sourced from
their budget for Land Acquisition pending the Department of Justice’s (DOJ)
opinion on the land swap transaction between the DOJ and the National Housing
Authority (NHA).
Other
highlights of the Senate version of the 2015 national budget include:
Increase
of P421.5 million for the Bureau of Customs for Workplace Modernization and
various equipment to counter the perennial problem of smuggling;
Additional
budget of P362.472 million for the Department of National Defense as buildings
outlay for the National Defense College of the Philippines as well as for Force
Sustainment or Enhancement of the various Engineering Brigades of the
Philippine Army, Philippine Air Force and the Philippine Navy;
Increase
of P300 million for the modernization program and faculty development of the
Philippine Normal University;
Increase
of P108.907 million for Jail Facilities under the Bureau of Jail Management and
Penology to be sourced from the cut in Monitoring and Evaluation Cost of PAMANA
and the Grassroots Participatory Program of the DILG-OSEC;
Realignment
of P2.915 billion in the budget of the Department of Social Welfare and
Development, specifically from the Pantawid Pamilya Pilipino Program and the
KALAHI-CIDSS projects to Social Pension for Indigent Senior citizens which will
benefit 460,647 senior citizens at a total cost of P2.770 billion in line with
Republic Act No. 9994 or the Expanded Senior Citizens Act of 2010; additional
funding of P50 million will also be provided for the Comprehensive Project for
Street Children, Street Families and Indigenous Peoples-especially Badjaos, as
well as an additional P95 billion for protective services for individual and
families in difficult circumstances;
Increase
of P15 million for the National Commission on Muslim Filipinos for the Hajj
Travel Assistance and Endowment Administration Services.
Mr.
Escudero said the Senate provided a special provision which would allow the
fund for athletes shall be used solely for the benefit of the athletes and that
it cannot be realigned for any other purposes.
He
said the Senate had also provided for a special provision under the DPWH for
the construction of projects that might impinged on heritage sites requiring
consultations with all stakeholders concerned.
“We also provided a provision in so far as the National Museum,
National Historical Institute and National Commission for Culture and Arts,
allowing such agencies to use its income to maintain the existing heritage
sites and their facilities,” Mr. Escudero stressed, adding: “We
also added a special provision mandating the Land Transportation Office (LTO)
to pay its obligations in accordance with the contracts it entered into and a
provision in so far as DOH, DPWH, Department of Transportation and
Communications (DOTC) and DepEd are concerned, providing for the utilization of
their Quick Response Fund to procure insurance policies in accordance with the
Government System Insurance Service (GSIS) laws as well as the procurement law
to cover infrastructure facilities and other equipment in danger zones and other
areas as they may deem feasible.”
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