Monday, August 30, 2021


Gov’t ain’t a family business: Lacson bats for reinvention of bureaucracy


The Philippines needs to reinvent the bureaucracy to combat some of the biggest scourges facing the nation, particularly the pandemic and corruption, Sen. Panfilo Lacson said.

Lacson said the current bureaucracy must be reshaped to one that empowers the citizens and commits to doing more with less.

“As one nation, we must reinvent our bureaucracy – one that innovates and empowers its citizens, and commits to doing more with less. Make no mistake: our government is not just any family business, it is our nation’s business,” he said in his speech before the Rotary Club of Parañaque North on Saturday evening.

“The first agenda is addressing the pandemic. We cannot see it ending soon. The second is addressing corruption, which has been on the top of my list ever since I started my public service – when you address corruption, you are halfway to solving the nation’s problems,” he added.

Lacson reiterated the need to adopt the practices of successful business corporations such as the zero-based budget planning, instead of handing down a budget ceiling on the different departments to work on.

The current system “consistently results in so much unutilized appropriations in the country’s national budget brought about by poor, inefficient and even lack of planning,” he noted.

Lacson also said the bureaucracy must do away with overregulation, which presents temptations “to make money through intimidation and suppression.”

“I believe it is time we should depart from the ‘more of the same’ mentality. It is time for the government to treat the business sector as partners instead of competitors,” he stressed.

He added policies based on science, research and development should be prioritized, with more resources going to research and development, which he lamented got only a miniscule 0.4 percent from our 2016 to 2021 annual national budgets.

Meanwhile, Lacson said digitization is needed to boost the economy and lessen opportunities for corruption by minimizing if not eliminating human intervention in government transactions, particularly in revenue collection.

“With things as they are, I have no doubt whatsoever that with science and evidence-based policies and decisive leadership, we will eventually see the light at the end of the tunnel, where COVID-19 will no longer be a scare,” he said.

Lacson said he wants to pursue these to leave a legacy where the next generation of Filipinos will regain their self-respect and dignity.

“How will we achieve this? Good government,” he said.


 

 Lacson: Reinventing Bureaucracy Needed to Combat Biggest Problems


The Philippines needs to reinvent the bureaucracy to combat some of the biggest scourges facing the nation - namely the pandemic and corruption, Sen. Panfilo M. Lacson said.

Lacson said the current bureaucracy must be reshaped to one that empowers the citizens and commits to doing more with less.

"As one nation, we must reinvent our bureaucracy – one that innovates and empowers its citizens, and commits to doing more with less. Make no mistake: our government is not just any family business, it is our nation’s business," he said in his speech before the Rotary Club of Parañaque North on Saturday evening.

"The first agenda is addressing the pandemic. We cannot see it ending soon. The second is addressing corruption, which has been on the top of my list ever since I started my public service - when you address corruption, you are halfway to solving the nation's problems," he added.

Lacson reiterated the need to adopt the practices of successful business corporations such as the zero-based budget planning, instead of imposing the traditional and impractical practice of handing down a budget ceiling on the different departments to work on.

The current system "consistently results in so much unutilized appropriations in the country’s national budget brought about by poor, inefficient and even lack of planning," he noted.

Lacson also said the bureaucracy must do away with overregulation, which presents temptations "to make money through intimidation and suppression."

"I believe it is time we should depart from the 'more of the same' mentality. It is time for the government to treat the business sector as partners instead of competitors," he stressed.

He added policies based on science, research and development should be prioritized, with more resources going to research and development, which he lamented got only a miniscule 0.4 percent from our 2016 to 2021 annual national budgets.

Meanwhile, Lacson said digitization is needed to boost the economy and lessen opportunities for corruption by minimizing if not eliminating human intervention in government transactions, particularly in revenue collection.

"With things as they are, I have no doubt whatsoever that with science and evidence-based policies and decisive leadership, we will eventually see the light at the end of the tunnel, where COVID-19 will no longer be a scare," he said.

Lacson said he wants to pursue these to leave a legacy where the next generation of Filipinos will regain their self-respect and dignity. "How will we achieve this? Good government," he said.

*****




 

This is being circulated and i think, it’s directed to us. Let us counter this. 


Here is a more exact tally from the Last 2016 Election

Duterte won ONLY by PLURALITY Votes 

of only 16M i.e. Only 39%

NOT by a Majority!


Dυtεrtε ------------ 16.6M  ( 39.02%)

Mαr Roxαs --------  9.98M ( 23.45%)

Grαcε Poε ---------  9.10M ( 21.39%)

Jεjomαr Binαγ ----  5.42M ( 12.73%)

Miriαm Sαntiαgo ---- 1.46M (3.42%)

===================================

Totαl ----------------42.55M (100%   )


If you noticed from these figures, 

the MAJORITY who did NOT want Duterte

was a total of 25.95M (60.98%) 


But it is a fact, that MAJORITY's votes 

were fragmented into several aspirants.


The votes alone for Mar and Grace (9.98M + 9.1M)  

could have combined for an 19.08M Votes bigger than duterter's 16M

had they all voted just for one single candidate.



So Do not wonder 

if there will be more TROJAN Candidates

--- who will pretend 

to be ALTERNATIVES or OPPOSITION

-- who were intended 

to do the create the same FRAGMENTATION of votes, 

and _to SNATCH AWAY votes of those who did not like Duterte_ 

*away from the Legitimate Opposition*


Let us not be FOOLED because they all belong 

-- to one and the same camp,

-- working for the same purpose of retaining the grab to power.


Let us not be DECEIVED by their zarzuelas and deceptive statements

-- that they are independent candidates

-- that they were ejected from their party, or had party intramurals

-- that they came from the solid north or solid south

-- that one will not run or have no intention to tun.


Their ploy now is "The More, The Merrier!"

-- again to fragment the votes away from the Opposition, and 

-- to hope that at least one of the many pairs they are fielding-in will win.

Saturday, August 28, 2021

 

Inauguration of Bloomberry Donated Hospital in Tacloban Sometime in 2015!


Barangay Captains, Other Local Officials in Davao Del Norte Join the Partido Reporma lead by 
Gov Edwin Jubahib

 

Lacson calls for probe to unmask gov’t backers of favored supplier

MANILA, Philippines — Sen. Panfilo Lacson on Saturday called for a full-blown investigation of an obscure company and the people who were helping it “hit the jackpot” by cornering P8.7-billion worth of contracts to provide allegedly overpriced medical supplies needed in responding to the pandemic last year.

Lacson said the focus of the senators’ ongoing inquiry, which took off from the Commission on Audit’s report on the deficiencies in the handling of COVID-19 response funds by the Department of Health (DOH), should now shift to the Procurement Service of the Department of Budget and Management (PS-DBM) and Pharmally Pharmaceuticals Corp.


The former national police chief made the call after Sen. Richard Gordon played a video during Friday’s hearing showing Michael Yang, a former “economic adviser” of President Rodrigo Duterte, and officials of Pharmally meeting the President in Davao in 2017.


Gordon, chair of the Senate Blue Ribbon committee, said he showed the video to allow the public to “make the connectivities” on how Pharmally managed to bag deals despite its small capitalization.


Lacson said the Senate should look into the involvement of government officials in awarding of contracts to Pharmally, a “virtually unknown” company with a P625,000 capitalization.


“Those behind the plot were aiming to hit the jackpot in procuring supplies,” he said in a radio interview.


“It is clear that we are looking at large-scale corruption here. What makes it worse is that this is happening with some unscrupulous parties making gains for themselves right in the middle of a pandemic,” Lacson said.


Malacañang did not respond to the Inquirer’s request for comments on Yang’s role and the contracts with Pharm ally.


The PS-DBM had awarded contracts amounting to P8.7 billion to supply the DOH with face masks, personal protective equipment, and COVID-19 test kits to Pharm ally using P42 billion transferred to it by the DOH.


Senators were told on Friday that the company, which was incorporated in September 2019, had a fictitious office address. The Inquirer learned that the Pharm ally received its license from the Food and Drug Administration to operate as an importer-wholesaler of pharmaceuticals and medical devices only in January.


In June, the DOH awarded the company another to supply it with 2,005,860 million pieces of face shields, worth P37.9 million, or P18.88 each, according to a document on the health department’s website.


‘Who ordered transfer?’


Lacson said the reasons for transferring P42 billion in DOH funds for the purchase of “common-use supplies and equipment” such as face masks and shields to the PS-DBM should be thoroughly scrutinized.


“Who ordered the transfer of the P42 billion to PS-DBM? Is it not the DOH that has the competence to select the suppliers? Why pass that task to the PS-DBM?” he said. “We should continue to pursue this to its logical conclusion.”

The senator expressed his disgust at people in government and the private sector trying to make money while the country was struggling against the pandemic.


“Making matters even worse is that the money involved came from loans. Shouldn’t we taxpayers get angry over this?” he said.


According to Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon, the Blue Ribbon committee should require Pharm ally officials to appear in its hearings to “unravel the mystery of these multi-billion peso transactions.”


“[Pharm ally] is the biggest supplier of the PS-DBM, so we need to find out who their government connections are,” he said.


A key personality that the senators are looking at for his involvement in concluding the supply contracts is former PS-DBM chief and Budget Undersecretary Lloyd Christopher Lao, who said during Friday’s he had no “backer” in getting that position, not even Sen. Bong Go, the president’s longtime aide under whom he had previously worked.


“I don’t want to speculate because we are really being fooled by Lao. He is saying he did not have a backer, and that he applied for the job, which of course, is rubbish. Senator Go, on the other hand, says he does not know anything, and Lao was not his aide,” Drilon said. “So, that’s the mystery. Something is being hidden, and someone is being shielded.”


Drilon questioned the deals for “overpriced” medical supplies.


Zero to P300M


In the case of face masks, he said the Philippine Red Cross buys them for only P5 pesos apiece, compared to P22 to P27 under those contracts, he said.


Drilon said Pharmally went from zero income to nearly P300 million in just one year after bagging the contracts. This was a clear indication that some people raked in profits, he said.


Yang, is another personality that the senators could investigate because of his links to Pharmally as shown in the 2017 video.


In November 2018, Malacañang confirmed that Yang, a Chinese national also known as Yang Hong Ming, was one of the President’s consultants on “particular matters” a month after denying that he was.


Then presidential spokesperson Salvador Panelo said Mr. Duterte was consulting Yang “every now and then.”


“He has a technical love on running [a] business and also because he is Chinese, he knows a lot of people the Chinese government. And he knows the psychology of China. On that aspect, the President needs people like him,” Panelo said.


Yang became controversial after he was linked to illegal drugs, but the President himself cleared his adviser of any involvement in the narcotics trade and that he was close to then Chinese Ambassador Zhao Jianhua.


In March 2019, Eduardo Acierto, the dismissed deputy director for administration of the police Drug Enforcement Group, linked Yang to the illegal drugs trade.


He accused the president and Sen. Ronald Dela Rosa, a former national police chief, of dismissing an intelligence report about Yang’s supposed links to illegal drugs.


But Malacañang maintained that Yang was not involved in illegal drugs.


A few days later, Malacañang announced that Yang was no longer an economic adviser of Mr. Duterte as his one peso per annum contract ended on Dec. 31, 2018.


—WITH A REPORT FROM INQUIRER RESEARCH



 

 


Lacson: Plot Thickens on PS-DBM Role in Large-Scale Corruption amid Pandemic

The plot thickens on the large-scale corruption by some parties exploiting the COVID-19 pandemic - and the Department of Budget and Management Procurement Service (PS-DBM) is turning out to be a major player.

Sen. Panfilo M. Lacson thus stressed Saturday the need for the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee to dig deeper on the role of the PS-DBM as it continues to investigate irregularities at the Department of Health (DOH).

"Maliwanag naman may tinutumbok tayo rito na large-scale corruption. What makes it worse, sa gitna ng pandemya, may kumikita (It is clear that we are looking at large-scale corruption here. What makes it worse is that this is happening with some unscrupulous parties making gains for themselves right in the middle of a pandemic)," Lacson said in an interview on DWIZ radio.

"At ang perang ito galing sa utang. Di ba magagalit ka (Making matters even worse is that the money involved came from loans. Shouldn't we taxpayers get angry over this)?" he added.

"Hindi natin dapat ito tatantanan (We should continue to pursue this to its logical conclusion)!" Lacson stressed.

Lacson said the Senate's investigation so far points to a plot to profit greatly from the pandemic, with Lloyd Christopher Lao getting the top post at the PS-DBM by applying for the job, with the knowledge that it was about to be vacated soon due to qualification issues of its former head.

Also, Lacson reiterated his observation that Lao - a lawyer - failed to conduct due diligence on Pharmally Pharma Corp., which got a whopping P8.6-billion contract despite being incorporated only in September 2019 and with a capital of some P600,000. "If he did not do due diligence and he is a lawyer, one will presume it is deliberate. Definitely one cannot consider it an oversight," he said.

Lacson questioned as well the possible role of Michael Yang, former presidential adviser for economic affairs who was shown in a video played during Friday's Senate Blue Ribbon Committee hearing, with officials of Pharmally.

"We want to focus on this particular issue. Sino ang involved sa napakalaking halaga na na-award sa virtually unknown company na ang director di mahagilap kasi fictitious ang address? Yun pa lang that’s already a crime (Who are involved in the awarding of a contract involving huge sums to a virtually unknown company whose director cannot be located after giving authorities a fictitious address)," he said.

"May target silang malaking pera para sa supplies (Those behind the plot were aiming to hit the jackpot in procuring supplies)," he added.

On the other hand, Lacson said they want to look deeper into the reason behind the transfer of P42 billion in DOH funds for the purchase of "common use supplies and equipment" to the PS-DBM in 2020.

"Who ordered the transfer of the P42 billion to PS-DBM to procure? Is it not the DOH that has the competence to select the suppliers? Why pass that task to the PS-DBM?" he said.

*****




Friday, August 27, 2021


 


Manggagawa sa Batangas City Pabor kay Lacson sa 2022

Pinangunahan ng The Forks - TASI sa Barangay Libjo, Batangas City ang pagsuporta ng mga manggagawang Pinoy kay Senator Lacson para sa 2022 presidential election.

Ang mahigit na 200 forklifters, wheel loaders, welders at scaffolders sa Batangas City na naka kontratang magtrabaho sa mga kompanya sa New Zealand at Australia ay nagkaisang si Lacson ang lider na kailangan ng ating bansa. May paninindigan, may isang salita at may pusong maka mamamayan anila. 

Suportado ng Batangas City ang panukalang gawing mandatory sa LGUs ang pagkakaroon ng National Registry of Workers sa antas ng mga barangay, munisipyo at syudad. Magiging accessible anila ang serbisyo mula sa mga tubero, karpintero, mason, electrician kung kinakailangan.

-Photos courtesy of CGARR Network Calabarzon


 

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