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  1. #11

    Quote Originally Posted by firestarter View Post
    Unsaon nalang ang mga ghost employees ani hehehe...

    Nindot gyud pud unta nga centralized computer servers, para sa tanan departments sa government.

    That way mas paspas ang processing sa documents and dili na nimo need magdala pwerte ka daghan ID, you just need to know or have 1 ID.
    exactly right. gamay nalang ang gastos. no more redtape sa mga buaya. hopefully, ma hatagan ug budget ni. kay dako kaayog tabang ni sa tanan ug sa atong nasud. mabuhay.

  2. #12
    Quote Originally Posted by redhot itlog View Post
    exactly right. gamay nalang ang gastos. no more redtape sa mga buaya. hopefully, ma hatagan ug budget ni. kay dako kaayog tabang ni sa tanan ug sa atong nasud. mabuhay.
    Matud pa ni lacson na usa ni sa under funded na mga laws ni duterte. Important ni ang id system pero para sa atong leaders mas important pa ang 2 billion worth na airplane para sa chosen few ra maka gamit compared sa id system.

  3. #13
    C.I.A. DEMONOCIETY's Avatar
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    naa ny nakaapply ninyo ani? ug unsay process?

  4. #14
    Maayo jd naay national ID and mao na gamiton para centralization sa personal info.

    Nya wagtangon na ang mga ID uban kay samok. (SSS,Pag ibig, Postal ug unsa pa diha..)

    Iapil n lng ug connect sa nat. id sim card ug accounts sa bank. Para once naa kay kaso automatic hold tanan accounts ug communication nimu ug di ka kadali2 ug lihok.

  5. #15
    Quote Originally Posted by bongroxas View Post
    sayanga oppoz pa more lol
    national ID doubling as an ATM with no expiration date exclusively for government support in case of times like these..
    maximize the budget..

  6. #16
    Maayo unta ug mapatuman ni sa September. Naa na bay naka process ani ron?

  7. #17
    C.I.A. firestarter's Avatar
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    Murag mao ning rason nganong na taktak si NEDA chief Pernia.


    National ID delay cost Pernia his job
    Rigoberto D. Tiglao
    By
    Rigoberto D. Tiglao
    April 24, 2020


    FORMER Economic Planning Secretary Ernesto Pernia was booted out of his post last week by President Duterte because of the delay in the roll-out of the national ID system that was enacted into law Aug. 19, 2018.

    As expected of course, a Philippine Daily Inquirer editorial the other day rushed to make him some kind of hero: “Though couched in politesse, Pernia’s words unmistakably hint at simmering tensions in the Palace over fundamental lapses in leadership and policymaking, made more acute now that the Philippines is being battered by unprecedented disruptions.”

    As usual, hogwash.



    The President lost confidence in Pernia as he was too slow in rolling out a key Duterte initiative, the national ID system, which presidents since Fidel Ramos had tried to implement, but failed.

    Pernia was the Cabinet official in charge of undertaking the so-called Philippine Identification System ID (Philsys), mandated by Republic Act 11055 that Duterte signed into law on Aug. 6, 2018. The law designated as implementing agency the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), which is under the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) headed by Pernia. The law furthermore ordered the creation of the PhilSys Policy and Coordination Council — a body of 14 agencies — to make sure the ID system was implemented smoothly. Pernia was chairman of the council.

    “It was clearly Pernia’s ‘tasking,’” a Palace official said. “But sadly, he obviously didn’t have any management experience at all to undertake a huge task.”


    Duterte briefing on the coronavirus, April 14: ‘We would have distributed goods and money more easily if we had the national ID system in place. E, wala.’
    Presidential spokesman Harry Roque the other day hinted at the reason why Pernia was fired: “Ano po ang mandato ng Presidente sa bagong pinuno ng NEDA na si Secretary [Karl Kendrick] Chua? Unang una, ipatupad sa lalong mabilis na panahon ang national ID system (What was the President’s mandate to Secretary Chua? First, to fast-track the implementation of the national ID system).”

    Economist
    Pernia had spent most of his working life — the better paying part, that is — as an economist of the Asian Development Bank. Pernia was recommended to his post by former Interior and Local Government secretary Leoncio Evasco, the priest-turned-communist-turned-mayor-turned-Duterte-confidante. Evasco had been Pernia’s fellow seminarian at the Seminario Mayor de San Carlos in Cebu City in the 1960s and the two were reportedly even distant relatives, both being from Bohol.

    Pernia had not developed in the past three years Duterte’s confidence in him, a Palace official noted.

    “He should have resigned when the President appointed Vince as in charge of his legacy program Build, Build, Build last year,” a NEDA official said.

    He was referring to the appointment in September last year of Bases and Conversion Development Authority (BCDA) President and Chief Executive Officer Vivencio Dizon as presidential adviser for flagship programs and projects. It is the NEDA that coordinates — makes sure bottlenecks are cleared — for such programs undertaken by different departments in all past administrations.

    “And Dizon even had that job in a concurrent capacity as BCDA head,” the official said.

    Duterte’s attention had been drawn to the serious delay in the national ID system implementation, when some of those whom the Department of Social Welfare Development (DSWD) had determined as the first priority for the distribution of the government’s cash relief couldn’t be located. Duterte reportedly asked his officials: “Why don’t you find them through the national ID system?”

    When it was explained that the system was still in the pilot stage, he blew his top and when told that it was Pernia who was responsible for it, nodded his head and was silent for a few seconds.

    Amelioration
    Duterte, in a press conference last April 14 on the government’s response to the coronavirus, said the national ID system would have facilitated the social amelioration program for low-income families during this crisis.

    “The head of a poor family would have just gone to the barangay (village) head or DSWD official and showed his ID, and he would have been given the goods or the money,” he explained.

    “But we have no ID system until now,” he said in Filipino. “So, we have had delays in distributing government help.” (Duterte, however, blamed the Left for opposing the national ID system at that same press conference.)

    The next day, Pernia was told by Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea to submit his resignation.

    Even Senate President Vicente Sotto 3rd and Sen. Panfilo Lacson had recently raised their serious concern over the P25-billion national ID system’s delay and had filed Senate Resolution 342 last week asking for a full-blown investigation for its hold-up.

    “Pinaghirapan naming ipasa ‘yan at marami ayaw, ang dami pang bumatikos sa amin, e bakit hanggang ngayon wala pa rin,” Sotto said in a television interview.

    The Senate resolution read in part:

    “From 2018 to 2020 General Appropriations Act, a budget of P2 billion has been allotted for the national ID system every year — totaling to only P6,096,329,000 budget allocation for three years.”

    But almost two years from its enactment into law and the approval of its implementing rules and regulation, there seems to be no significant headway in its implementation. It was only on Sept. 2, 2019, a year after the supposed implementation, that the first pilot testing for the national identification program was conducted by the PSA.

    Based on the article published by the PSA on Sept. 2, 2019 titled “Philippine ID System on Track for Registering Population by Mid-2020,” it was only on that date that the national ID program commenced its testing covering a small number of individuals from the National Capital Region.

    Reflection
    Pernia claims, however, that he wasn’t fired but had resigned. He issued a statement two days after he was given his walking papers: “After reflection during Holy Week and consultations with my family and close colleagues, I have decided to resign from my post as secretary of Socioeconomic Planning. This is due partly to personal reasons and partly to differences in development philosophy with a few of my fellow Cabinet members.”

    In an interview with a CNN Philippines reporter, Pernia said he quit because of differences with other government officials involved in designing policy approaches to shoring up the economy amid the raging coronavirus crisis. He said poor orchestration within the government prompted him to resign.

    “When the orchestra is not well orchestrated, then you have a little problem. Since I seem to be a dissonant voice among others, I thought I should just quit,” he added.

    Pernia even elevated his firing — resignation, according to him — as a matter of economic philosophy: “My training in economics is that in a market economy like ours, the private sector is the engine for economic growth, while the government provides the kind of policy environment that encourages the private sector to thrive.”

    Just for embracing the kind of economic philosophy that was dogma in the 1960s, but now widely debunked — buried 6 feet under by the 2007 to 2008 global financial crisis and cursed as useless at this time of the pandemic — Pernia’s appointment as NEDA was one of President Duterte’s worst decisions.
    NEDA eyes 5 million registrants in national ID system this year
    By CNN Philippines Staff

    Published Apr 21, 2020 7:45:10 PM


    9912

    Metro Manila (CNN Philippines, April 21) - The government is working to fast track the implementation of the country's national identification system amid the battle against COVID-19.

    Newly-appointed Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick Chua on Tuesday said they expect to register five million Filipinos under the national ID system this year.

    "One thing we are thinking about is if we can target so that each household gets to be registered," Chua said in a media briefing on Tuesday.

    "So we will still reach five million registrations but we are not merely covering five million people, we are covering five million households and that is one way to ensure that we address some of the issues in the social amelioration program," he added.

    President Rodrigo Duterte earlier said that the execution of the national ID system could have helped speed up the government's aid distribution in light of the continuing lockdown brought by the COVID-19 pandemic.

    READ: Duterte: National ID system could have hastened COVID-19 aid rollout

    Chua said the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA), which he now heads, and the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) have come up with a plan to fast track its implementation, despite limited mobility due to the Luzon-wide enhanced community quarantine.

    "We agreed to use the next two months for the remaining procurement and preparation so that by June or July when ECQ is relaxed or modified, we will be able to begin again registration of households so that is the plan," Chua said.

    "We have received support from DBM (Department of Budget and Management) to fund part of the work that is needed to move this project forward faster," he added.

    Chua said the ID system and recovery plan are two important components in ensuring sound macroeconomic policies.

    "The national ID is one thing that we have to also accelerate because it is really a way we can achieve more financial inclusion and target the subsidies that will benefit the intended beneficiaries," Chua said.

    "These are already very big programs in a very uncertain time so I would focus on that first and once we have crafted or understand the new normal, then we can look at other priorities and programs," he added.

    President Rodrigo Duterte signed the Philippine Identification System Act into law in August 2018, which aims to create a single official ID card for all citizens that integrates and interconnects various government-issued IDs.

    However, some government officials noted that 'no significant headway' on the ID system has been made despite the approval of its implementing rules and regulations 60 days after it was enacted.

    Two senators have called for an investigation on the delay in implementing the law.

    READ: Senators seek probe on delay of national ID system

    Despite this, Chua remains confident that they can reach their goal of registering majority of Filipinos by 2022.

    “We think that the 2022 target is still feasible but we are thinking of ways so that we front load many of the registration to this year as much as possible," Chua said.

    Former NEDA chief Ernesto Pernia estimated that 107 million Filipinos, including those working overseas and foreigners who are residents in the Philippines, will be covered by the national ID system by the end of the Duterte administration.
    Last edited by firestarter; 05-16-2020 at 10:22 PM.

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