Malay execs face graft case over Boracay’s floating walkway

ILOILO. The complainant, Boracay-based journalist Noel Cabobos, editor of Boracay Informer, shows his filed complaint affidavit against 11 Malay officials, on Monday, January 13, 2020. (Photo by Leo Solinap)
ILOILO. The complainant, Boracay-based journalist Noel Cabobos, editor of Boracay Informer, shows his filed complaint affidavit against 11 Malay officials, on Monday, January 13, 2020. (Photo by Leo Solinap)

ILOILO CITY -- It appears that the controversy behind the pontoon or floating walkway on Boracay Island is far from over.

This developed as a case of graft and corruption, abuse of authority, and gross negligence was filed Monday, January 13, before the Office of the Ombudsman-Visayas.

The complaint prayed for the immediate preventive suspension of Malay acting Mayor Frolibar Bautista and acting Vice Mayor Niño Carlos Cawaling. Tagged along are the entire members of the Municipal Council composed of Board members Daligdig Sumdad, Lloyd Maming, Danilo Delos Santos, Maylynn Graf, Nickie Cahilig, Dante Pagsuguiron, Junthir Flores, Ralf Tolosa, and Christine Hope Pagsuguiron.

It may be recalled that on December 21, 2019 the local government of Malay started to impose the payment of P30 for every person who would be using the pontoon docked at the front beach of Stations 1 & 3. The imposition of which was based on Bautista’s Executive Order No. 51 series of 2019 mandating all water sports and sea sports operators to utilize the pontoon in their activities.

“Beyond doubt, the fact that the collection of said user’s fee was implemented without the requisite of an ordinance is highly anomalous. The law is very clear in Section 132 of the Local Government Code that the power to impose a tax, fee, or charge or to generate revenue shall be exercised only by the Sanggunian of the local government unit concerned through an appropriate Ordinance,” the complaint stated.

The complainant, Boracay-based journalist Noel Cabobos who is the editor of Boracay Informer, said that aside from the absence of an ordinance, the legislative body which did not oppose the EO already constitutes gross negligence and violation of Section 3 of the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act for which all of them must be held liable.

“We are governed by laws not of men. They cannot just impose fees as simple as that. The bad faith and manifest intent of the respondents to cause the public wrong for their personal gain is very evident from the systematic and orchestrated issuance of an Executive Order to collect such fees,” Cabobos said.

“Yes, I agree that the mayor has the authority to issue executive orders within his executive and administrative powers since EOs are official directives or commands from the local chief executive to agencies in the executive branch. Meaning, these orders generally concern the implementation or enforcement of rules, policies and procedures which have the force of law, but let me emphasize here that Mayor Bautista’s exercise of his executive and administrative powers cannot impinge on the legislative powers of the municipal council, therefore, as the local chief executive, he may not usurp the legislative function by enacting policies not adopted by the legislative branch,” Cabobos added.

Cabobos also assailed the mayor’s order on watersports and seasports operators to enter into a contract with a private travel company, which manages the pontoons, as well as the latter’s order for them to collect the fees in behalf of the government even with the absence of a receipt.

“Again, this is a clear violation of the law since Section 130 paragraph (c) of the Local Government Code succinctly provides that the collection of local taxes, fees, charges and other impositions shall in no case be let to any private person,” Cabobos said.

Earlier, the Boracay Water Sports Association (BWSA), which is among the four associations that were ordered by Bautista to collect the fee in behalf of the local government of Malay, assailed the executive order through a Board resolution and had asked him to stop the implementation of the user’s fee but to no avail.

Over the weekend, the Boracay Inter-Agency Rehabilitation Management Group (BIARMG) general manager Natividad Bernardino had directed Bautista to stop the implementation citing complaints and oppositions from various stakeholders, sports enthusiasts, and visiting tourists on the island.

BIARMG is the implementing arm of the Boracay Inter-Agency Task Force (BIATF) headed by DENR Secretary Roy Cimatu.

BIATF, through President Rodrigo Duterte’s Executive Order No. 53, was tasked to formulate and implement the action plan for Boracay’s rehabilitation to reverse the degradation of this island paradise. (SunStar Philippines)

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