Marcos creates Independent Commission for Infrastructure to investigate flood control projects
President Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos Jr. on Thursday, Sept. 11, announced the creation of an organization that will investigate the anomalous flood control projects of the Department of Public Works and Highways.
Marcos signed Executive Order No. 94, which states that the commission will be composed of a chairperson and two members "who shall all be persons of proven competence, integrity, probity, and independence."
"The Chairperson and Members may be entitled to per diems and allowances, in accordance with existing laws, rules, and regulations," it notes.
The Independent Commission for Infrastructure (ICI) is mandated to "hear, investigate, receive, gather, and evaluate evidence, intelligence reports and information, against all government officials and employees, and any other individual, involved in anomalies, irregularities, and misuse of funds in the planning, financing, and implementation of government flood control and other infrastructure projects nationwide."
The commission must prioritize projects within the last 10 years.
After its findings, the ICI is tasked to recommend the filing of appropriate charges and recommend to the appropriate government bodies the enforcement of remedies, corrective actions, or legislative measures.
The ICI will get assistance from the Department of Justice, the National Bureau of Investigation, the National Prosecution Service, the DPWH, the Department of Interior and Local Government, the Philippine National Police, and offices in the national government's executive branch "to accomplish its mandates."
It also has the power to conduct hearings, take testimony, and receive, gather, review, and evaluate evidence, issue subpoenas for the attendance of witnesses and the production of documents, recommend to the DOJ the admission of a person as a state witness, and obtain information and documents from the Senate and the House of Representatives.
During the first part of his "BBM Podcast" uploaded on YouTube on Sunday, Sept. 7, Marcos said he will give the commission "all the powers that are necessary" for it to come to a conclusion or findings about the issue.
"Para alam naman natin kung ano 'yung nangyari," he added.
Marcos noted that the group can investigate anything or anyone.
"Otherwise... sasabihin may sacred cow na naman o may pinoproteksiyonan," he said.
Flood control mess
The issue in the government's flood control projects began in July as the rains triggered massive flooding in the metro. At the time, Sen. Ping Lacson told dzBB that since 2011, about P1 trillion allocated for flood control projects may have been lost to corruption.
Marcos, in his fourth State of the Nation Address, called out government officials involved in the would-be corruption in flood control projects.
Marcos ordered the DPWH to "immediately submit" to him the list of flood control projects from every region that were started and completed in the last three years. He said a project monitoring committee will evaluate this list to determine the failures, as well as the unfinished and ghost projects.
Marcos launched the Sumbong sa Pangulo website, where the public can track and report anomalous flood control projects and other possible corrupt practices.
According to the website, there are 9,855 flood control projects totalling P545.64 billion since July 2022. Of that number, 6,021 projects worth over P350 billion don't specify the exact type of flood control being built, while several others in different locations also have the same contract cost.
Marcos also said there are 15 contractors that exclusively bagged 20% of all flood control projects worth P100 billion in the last three years.
Among them was the couple Curlee and Sarah Discaya, who were thrown into the spotlight when Pasig Mayor Vico Sotto, whom Sarah unsuccessfully ran against in the midterm elections, posted about their controversial interviews with Korina Sanchez and Julius Babao.
In the interviews, the Discayas talked about their "inspiring" rags-to-riches life story, showcasing their dozens of luxury cars and other assets. Babao asked them what served as their "gateway" to have a better life, and Sarah answered, "Noong nag-DPWH kami."
After Sotto's posting, the couple's story unraveled and opened a can of worms. It led to flood control projects being the talk of the town, a Bureau of Customs chase, revocation of the Discaya companies' licenses, and congressional hearings.
The Discayas have since maintained their innocence, claiming that they're just victims of a broken system. In the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee Hearing on Monday, Sept. 8, they accused DPWH officials and congressmen of making them participate in anomalous biddings with kickbacks ranging from 10% to 25%. Otherwise, they'd supposedly face termination of contracts, right-of-way problems, and removal from the government's contractors list.
Curlee name-dropped the officials, who promptly denied his claims. There were even some who said they'd file libel and perjury cases against the couple.
In a House committee hearing on Sept. 9, former DPWH engineer Brice Hernandez, who was detained at the Philippine National Police Custodial Center after the Senate cited him in contempt, shifted the blame to senators Jinggoy Estrada and Joel Villanueva, former DPWH Bulacan 1st District Engineer Henry Alcantara, and DPWH Visayas Usec. Robert Bernardo.
Hernandez claimed that the officials were involved in kickback schemes for projects worth millions of pesos, with Alcantara as the "chief implementor." Estrada, Villanueva, and Alcantara denied the accusations.
DPWH Sec. Vince Dizon has filed a case against 20 public work officials, including Alcantara and Hernandez, as well as four contractors.
The national attention and outrage toward the Discayas since the metro's flooding also rubbed off on other contractors. Adding insult to the injury was how internet users noticed several children of politicians and contractors, branding them as "nepo babies," who flex their designer clothing and fly to different countries in seemingly unapologetic fashion—even vlogging about their comforts.
The matter has become so alarming that many celebrities and personalities have decided to speak up.
