Social Security Systems (SSS) executives have been slapped with a complaint for graft and corruption over alleged illegal disbursements worth P145 million from 253 anomalous contracts.
SSS Commissioner Pompee La Viña yesterday filed a criminal complaint for violation of Section 3 (e) and (g) of the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act against 21 SSS executives before the Office of the Ombudsman.
The respondents were identified as Executive Vice President Rizaldy Capulong; Senior Vice Presidents May Catherine Ciriaco and Josefina Fornilos; and Vice Presidents Eleonor Cinco, Jean Lagrada, Helen Abolencia, Johnsy Mangundayao, Guillermo Urbano, and Antonette Fernandez.
Other respondents were Department Managers III Renato Jacinto Cuisia, Geronimo Valeza, Joselito Vivit, Ma. Luisa Sebastian, Sonia Guinto,
Normita Doctor, Belinda Ella, and Haydee Raquid; Department Managers Boobie Angela Ocay and Jocelyn Evangelista; and CEO III Froilan Misa and Nancy Santos.
In his complaint, La Viña questioned various media contracts with television, radio and print companies “without undergoing the prescribed procurement process.”
Four officials — Sebastian, Guinto and another department manager who died last year, and Ciriaco — were the persons who recommended and negotiated the contracts, La Viña said.
According to the complainant, 82 media contracts were negotiated by Sebastian, 251 media contracts by Guinto, 27 by Ciriaco, while one of these contracts was approved by Capulong.
“They compromised transparency by unilaterally deciding among themselves who will be bestowed the millions worth of media contracts without the proper procurement process,” La Viña said.
“In the same vein, by just entering into contracts left and right with every media outfit at their sole discretion, there was no way to determine competitiveness of the offer/proposal with other media outfits,” the SSS commissioner said.
The approved procurement plans (APP) for 2016 and 2017, La Viña said, showed that the mode of procurement used by the respondents with different media companies was “Direct Contracting.”
“The alternative mode of Direct Contracting cannot be used as the mode of procurement in entering into the subject media contracts, since it is not proprietary in nature,” La Viña said.
In addition, La Viña said the procurement of media services did not pass through the Bids and Awards Committee (BAC) and there was no procurement monitoring report (PMR), as certified by Santos, BAC secretariat and CEO III.
“To state, for every media contract entered into by respondents through Direct Contracting, there were no industry surveys conducted; no posting in PhilGEPs, SSS website and conspicuous place. There was also no Request for Quotation (RFQ); and no identification of the BAC of the supplier,” he said.