Thursday, May 21, 2026
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Du30 men dunned on pledges

Senate Minority Leader Ralph Recto on Sunday asked Malacañang to familiarize itself with the “anti-red tape and quick response” targets that its appointees have promised the public during the 2017 national budget deliberations.

The senator said  sanctions must be meted out to agencies that would fail in their pledges of fast document processing and rapid reaction to distress calls.

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“Is it not the President  who is angry at long lines? The Palace should know the fast services promised by his appointees’” said Recto.

He noted that the pledges, attached to budget requests of agencies, range from “a seven-minute response time of firemen to alarms, to a 15-minute maximum crime scene arrival of police officers, to delivery of car plates and stickers in seven days, to a ‘gone in 40 seconds’ in immigration arrival gates,” Recto said.

Other targets include the pledge of the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration that “100 percent of all OFW requests for assistance be acted upon within 24 hours and the Department of Transportation’s vow that light rail trains will have an average speed of 50 kilometers per hour.”

Recto said that the Philippine Statistics Authority, keeper and issuer of civil registration records, said 96 percent of requested documents will be released within the prescribed time.   

While it gave no specific target, the Department of Foreign Affairs said it would render service that will be rated “good or better” by 90 percent of passport applicants.   

The senator said the Bureau of Customs has also issued timetables in the processing of cargoes. 

He said the National Bureau of Investigation pledged to process clearances within 10 minutes, while the Land Registration Authority has promised a 20-day deadline in the issuance of land titles.

Even infrastructure projects, Recto said,    are now bound by performance guarantees, with the Department of Public Works and Highways boldly assuring that 100 percent of road projects will be completed on time.

Recto, however, called for a change in many perfomance benchmarks as some are misleading and do not guarantee fast service. 

“Processing time” target for some documents is clocked the moment the document is handed over to the government employee and “does not count the time spent in queues.”  

As part of recent budgeting reforms, “countable outputs” are linked to appropriations, with specific funds given to an agency in exchange for a specific set of deliverables.

But Recto’s call is limited to anti-red tape pledges only which, he said, the Palace must closely monitor as President Duterte was elected on the promise of quick government action “and given his legendary disdain for government    offices that make people wait.” 

Recto said Malacañang should also take a second look at the performance guarantees and assess if the deadlines are religiously met.

He said many agencies also did not submit “promissory notes” so there is no basis to gauge performance and reward good work. Many promises contained in the previous budgets, he noted, “especially on traffic,” have disappeared in the 2017 national budget.

For easy monitoring, Recto urged Malacanang “to collate in one menu” all the important targets, particularly the maximum processing time for commonly requested documents.      

Recto said it will not be a mere enumeration of promises, but essentially a listing of the provisions of law “because the national budget is a republic act.”

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