By Mortz C. Ortigoza
BINALONAN, Pangasinan – The nephew of a former
president and House Speaker was receptive to the call to refile her bill that
will open the country for more business competition and employment.
Pangasinan Fifth District Congressman- Elect Ramon “Monmon” V. Guico III said that as long as the bill will be pro - Filipinos he will support it.
His
pronouncement ensued after this newspaper exhorted him that he refiles the
amendment of the Public Service Act filed in 2017 by Pampanga Representative Gloria
M. Arroyo when he joined the 18th Congress on July 1 this year.
“Ya, anything that will help the people to include the district for more
development. But as long as it is not at the expense of the environment of the
taong maliit na masasagasaan we will be supportive of this bill,” stressed by Guico.
The solon’s father and namesake the mayor elect of
this Eastern Pangasinan burgeoning town is a cousin of the former Philippines
president.
The eight towns and one city’s district has 324,319
registered voters as based on the November 2018 data acquired by this writer at
the Commission on Election.
Espino, a nine years’ governor of the huge province,
routed in the same district then Representative Kimi Cojuangco when they
tangled in the 2016 congressional derby.
This newspaper has been badgering Senators Grace Poe, Bam Aquino, Risa Hontivereos, JV Ejercito, and others during interviews with them about the necessity of expediting the amendment of the economic magic bullet PSA.
In September 7, 2017 Congresswoman Arroyo and
Congressmen Arthur Yap, Joey Sarte-Salceda, Jose Christopher Belmonte, and
Manuel Monsour Del Rosario filed a consolidation of bills they respectively
authored on the new PSA and saw its approval in the third and final reading by
the almost 300 members' House of Representatives.
The new law will gallop significantly the Philippines economy, just like in Mainland China, Singapore, and Vietnam, as foreign and Filipino investors will own up to 100 percent control of public utilities like transportation, electricity, telecommunications, mining, oil, gas, and others.
These utilities are mentioned in Section 11 of
Article 7 of the 1987 Constitution where the law says they could be amended,
altered, or repealed by Congress.
As the term of the members of the Senate under the 17th
Congress ends on the last day of June this year, political kibitzers doubt that
the members of the Committee on the Public Service will pass it.
“Gusto ko. Kasi siyempre pag naipasa iyon mas
maraming pagkakataon na ang mamumuhunan dito galing sa iba’t ibang bansa, di
ba? Pag dumami namumuhunan dito mas maraming trabaho,” Senator Poe, the chair
of the committee told this writer last month when the latter asked her about
the probability of the bill to be acted favorably by the members of her committee a few
weeks before their term ends on June 30.
The amended PSA can mitigate if not solve the 2.2 million
unemployed (October 2018 data from the
Philippines Statistics Authority) and the 7.5 million
underemployed Filipinos (2018 PSA), and the 2.3 million overseas foreign workers
(2018 PSA) where many of these OFWs have been victims of abuses by their
foreign employers and where their children and spouses fall under the scourges
of narcotics addiction and spousal infidelity.
Pundits suspected the procrastination of the senators to approve the new PSA was because of the lobby monies allegedly given to them in their electoral bid by big corporations controlled by Filipino oligarchs who do not want competition with foreign rivals.
Pundits suspected the procrastination of the senators to approve the new PSA was because of the lobby monies allegedly given to them in their electoral bid by big corporations controlled by Filipino oligarchs who do not want competition with foreign rivals.
Moreover, the other bill Guico mulls to file is on
the health care issue after he saw a pathetic sight of a mother and a daughter
who undergo an expensive dialysis treatment.
“While
campaigning I encountered iyong biro mo mag ina from Alcala both of them walang
work pareho sila nagda dialysis three times a day. So nakikita natin doon
pagdating ng October max-out iyong number ng sessions nila. So, by the time
iyong October November hirap na hirap na sila”.
He explained that he will look how to get government
funding on this problem that could financially sustain the medical needs of the
poor Filipinos.
READ MY OTHER ARTICLE:
No comments:
Post a Comment