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Friday, May 17, 2024

Pangilinan bats for coco levy fund bill

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Since none of the bills seeking to utilize the around P100-billion coco levy funds filed in the past Congresses were passed, Senator Francis Pangilinan called on his colleagues to act on his bill pending on second reading at the Senate.

Pangilinan said funds collected valued at P9.7 billion and now estimated to have grown to around P100 billion can be used to develop the coconut industry and benefit the farmers.

The coco levy funds were proceeds of a forced tax imposed by the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos on the coconut industry between 1973 and 1982.

Pangilinan, also Liberal Party president, said a similar version of his bill is being deliberated in plenary at the House.

He said a Coco Levy Trust Fund law would be the best gift President Rodrigo Duterte and Congress could give to the Filipino coconut farmers as the country observes the National Coconut Week.

The senator, who served as Presidential Assistant for Food Security and Agricultural modernization in the last administration, expressed hopes that the bill could be approved within the year after leaders of the Senate and the House of Representatives identified it as among the priority measures for passage.

“Many farmers have died without being able to benefit from the fund that came from their hard labor. They have waited for over 40 years. We can’t tell them to wait some more),” he said.

The senator said the coco levy fund would also be a big boost for the industry constantly hounded by problems like pests and calamities.

He said coconut farmers groups nationwide, the religious sector, and civil society organizations have all supported the passage of the measure.

“More than the long, arduous fights in court, the main battleground is in Malacañang and Congress, where politics could come into play,” Pangilinan said.

Former President Noynoy Aquino issued Executive Orders 179 and 180 which authorized the utilization of the coconut levy funds to benefit coconut farmers, but these were stopped by a temporary restraining order by the Supreme Court.

The legal impasse can be resolved if Congress is finally able to pass a law establishing a trust fund for the coconut farmers, Pangilinan said.

“Let’s end our coconut farmers’ woes and give to them and their families what they deserve and work hard for. Let this administration do it,” he said.

The National Coconut Week is observed from August 24 to 30 every year by virtue of Proclamation 142 signed on 19 August 1987, by then President Corazon Aquino.

Pangilinan’s Coconut Farmers and Industry Development Bill will, among others: specify that the estimated P100-billion in cash and assets of the coco levy fund will go only for the development of the coconut industry; establish a perpetual trust fund that will only use the interest income earned; create a fund trustee, the Trust Fund Committee, of which six of its eleven members, or a majority, are either from coconut farmers groups or their representatives. (Chaired by the Secretary of Finance, and co-chaired by the Secretary of Agriculture, the committee will decide on how to invest the fund.); specify the formulation of a Coconut Development Plan and ensure the active participation of coconut farmers at every stage of the implementation of the law.

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