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DILG, provinces seek Senate restoration of P28.1-B BDP fund

MANILA – The Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) and the League of Provinces of the Philippines (LPP) have both appealed to the Senate to restore the PHP28.1 billion Barangay Development Program (BDP) for New People’s Army (NPA)-cleared barangays proposed by the National Task Force to End Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC) in the 2022 budget.


“The Support to the Barangay Development Program (SBDP) is a game-changer in our battle to end communist terrorism in the country. Unti-unti nang nararamdaman ng mga naninirahan sa mga barangay na sakop ng SBDP ngayong taon ang tunay na kahulugan ng pagbabago at pagkalinga ng gobyerno na hindi nila naramdaman sa nakaraan dahil sa mga Komunistang Terorista (People living in barangays covered by SBDP are slowly feeling the real meaning of change and care of government which they never experienced in the past because of communist terrorists,” DILG Secretary Eduardo M. Año said in a news release on Monday.


He said there is now momentum in the fight against communist terrorism and slashing the PHP28.1 billion will send a wrong signal to the Local Government Units who have been expecting these development projects next year.


“We must remember that the battle against the CTGs (communist terrorist groups) is not just a battle of arms, it’s also a battle for the hearts and minds of our people,” he said.


This was echoed by the LLP in its 8th General Assembly passed Resolution No. 2021-009, supporting President Rodrigo Roa Duterte’s anti-insurgency program and urging the Senate to approve in full the proposed Support to the Barangay Development Program in the 2022 General Appropriations Bill.


“The full and continued implementation of the BDP needs to be pursued in order to bring about and sustain progress and development in these identified conflict-affected barangays that urgently need government support and assistance,” LPP President and Marinduque Governor Presbiterio Velasco Jr. said.


Año said the proposed projects under the SBDP that were identified by the community residents themselves, “represent their collective aspiration towards genuine peace and development.”


He said cutting the proposed NTF-ELCAC budget next year will deprive these remote barangays of development and will make them vulnerable once more to the CTGs at a time when we have already gained significant strides in our whole-of-nation approach to defeat communist terrorism.


“Mahigit 50 taon nang naghihirap at napag-iwanan ang ating mga kababayan na nakatira sa mga bulubundukin at malalayong lugar na dati ay pinamumugaran ng mga communist terrorist groups. Nakikiusap po tayo sa ating mga Senador na huwag ipagkait ang pagkakataong maramdaman nila ang pagmamalasakit ng gobyerno at malasap ang tunay pagbabago (Our countrymen living in the far flung areas and mountains formerly under the CTGs control have been left behind for more than 50 years),” he said.


Año said the PHP16.44-billion development projects under the Support to Barangay Development Program (SBDP) this year are in full swing in the 822 insurgency-cleared barangays with several projects already completed and others in different phases of implementation.


Of the 2,318 SBDP projects funded this year, 19 are already completed, 557 are undergoing implementation, 783 are under procurement, and 959 are under pre-procurement.


Among the completed SBDP projects are livelihood projects in Barangay Mount Diwata, Monkayo, Davao de Oro; lot purchase for housing in Barangays Don Mariano Marcos, Tagbua, and Calapagan, Lupon, Davao Oriental; distribution of seed capital to poor farmers in Barangay Caduha-an, Cadiz City, Negros Occidental; livelihood project in Sangab, Maco, Davao de Oro; installation of 50 units LED solar street lights with solar panel in Barangay Darapuay, Bansalan, Davao del Sur; and purchase of rice harvesters in Carataya, Mahunodhunod, Putian and San Antonio in Cuartero, Capiz.


“Based on the current status of SBDP projects, we are expecting that majority of them will be completed by the first quarter of 2022 with some spill-over projects to be completed by the second quarter,” he said.


He added that some of the projects are still under procurement on the LGU level because it takes about one to two months for the preparation of pre-procurement documents like Detailed Engineering Design from the implementing local government units, Certificate of Pre-condition or Certificate of Non-Coverage (CNC) from the National Commission on Indigenous People, and Notice of Authority to Debit Account Issued from the Bureau of Treasury (BTr).


Año said completing these documentary requirements was even more challenging with the stringent Covid-19 restrictions. Another four to five months is likewise needed to complete the procurement process in compliance with the Republic Act (RA) 9184.


He added that the actual implementation of the SBDP projects on the ground takes about one to four months to complete depending on the nature of the project with non-infra projects usually completed faster than infra projects like roads and buildings. (PR)

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