The main defect appears to be the bills manner of granting voting rights to Filipino immigrants who are already permanent residents of other countries.
Two key elements of suffrage under our Constitution are citizenship and residence. Allowed to vote under Section 1 of Article V are Philippine citizens 18 years or older who have resided in the Philippines for one year and in the barangay where they propose to vote six months immediately prior to the election.
Question: Do Filipinos who enjoy permanent resident status in other countries, such as "green card" holders in the US, satisfy the residence requirement in the Constitution?
But then, our lawmakers pressured to pass the voting law promised for the past 15 years to some seven-to-eight million Filipinos abroad have rushed a pill to cure that defect.
They have inserted a provision saying that if a Filipino immigrant permanently residing abroad promises in a sworn statement that he will go back to reside in the Philippines within three years, he will be allowed to vote.
In other words, the proposed law says that while these immigrants are still Filipino citizens, they are not Philippine residents legally qualified to vote but that if they promise to come home for good within three years, they are suddenly qualified!
The irony is that the pill might prove to be worse than the infirmity it seeks to cure, as it might result in the upcoming law being declared unconstitutional.
Even for us non-lawyers, there is something obviously wrong in the circumlocution resorted to in the bill to grant voting rights to Filipinos who obviously do not satisfy the residence requirement of suffrage.
If Filipino immigrants permanently residing abroad are indeed qualified to vote here, why the need for a sworn promise for them to return to the Philippines?
But Tesda director general Dante V. Liban, just six months on the job, is fighting back. Zeroing in on a notorious sector preying on singers, musicians, and dancers seeking overseas employment, Liban moved to transfer its screening function to the private industry.
The move cuts the bloodline of an insider syndicate with industry cohorts that has been raking in millions monthly from the issuance of the Artist Record Book to outbound performers for P20,000 to P30,000 without passing audition.
It will also rid Tesda of a chore best handled by competent private sector pratitioners. Screening performing artists is just a small part of Tesdas coverage that includes information communications technology, health care, food processing, agriculture, livelihood, garments, transport and automotive services.
Liban continued to roil the waters when he took in additional testing officers from the University of the Philippines College of Music, the University of Sto. Tomas, Philippine Womens University, and the National Center for Culture and the Arts.
He is also filing charges against two union leaders for spreading reports that he spent Tesda funds for his Christmas cards and pocket and wall calendars last year.
"Except for the wall calendars, which were needed in all Tesda rooms," he said, "I spent my own funds for producing the rest of the items." He said the Commission on Audit can bear him out on this.
He laments the syndicates blocking reforms and frustrating program to improve skills and competencies of workers without college degrees. He points out that "technical skills development is the strongest weapon of the poor to escape from the cycle of hunger, ignorance, and social injustice."
For 2002, Tesda targeted the training of one million workers. Its total output as of November last year was already 1,156,116 persons trained, or 116 percent of the target.
"But this grand vision must be clothed in the armor of morality and
transparency," he said. "Under my leadership, there will be no compromise on moral integrity in the Tesda family."
Resident Gene Reyes just came from there and reported that the Petron depot is starting to contaminate the adjacent residential lands and seashore with fuel leaks and spills and chemical wastes.
"It happened much quicker than we expected," Reyes said, "less than a year since the plant began commercial operations last year."
He reported that 15 residents living across the station, whose drinking wells were contaminated with gas and diesel fuel discharges from the fuel depot, have complained in writing to the Punong Barangay of Lonos and asked for an emergency supply of fresh drinking water.