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What happened during the January 29, 2010 UP BOR meeting?

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What happened during the January 29, 2010 UP BOR meeting?

Judy M. Taguiwalo

January 31, 2010

 January 29 was the first BOR meeting for 2010. And the start of my second year as Faculty Regent.

 The weeks prior to the meeting were hectic as I prepared my report on my 2009 stint as Faculty Regent and received appeals from faculty, staff and students from all constituent universities of  UP,  with UP Baguio and the Open U as the only exceptions

 When I arrived at Quezon Hall at around 8:30 that morning (the BOR meeting was set at 9 am) scores of students, faculty, REPS and staff from Diliman, PGH, Manila and Los Banos were already there. They circulated a statement entitled “A University in Crisis”. (see below)

 The BOR meeting started with CHED Chair Angeles presiding. President Roman, Malacanang- appointed Regents Sarmiento, Chua, and Gonzales, Alumni Regent Pascual, Staff Regent Cabrera, Student Regent Banez and myself were present.

 The agenda of the meeting was approved with the inclusion of the UP Cebu High School issue in other matters. The minutes of the December 18 BOR meeting was also approved.

 Regent Sarmiento protests the December 18 election of new PGH Director

  The first item placed on the agenda for discussion was the protest of Regent Sarmiento dated January 29, 2010. Regent Sarmiento protested the election of Jose Gonzales as PGH Director on the grounds that “The Student Regent is not only under suspension but is in fact not a student as defined by the University. Ms. Banez tried to register for the second semester but (sic) was only on November 17, 2009 that she tried to register…… “

 The “Final Prayer” prayer of Regent Sarmiento’s written protest was:

  “….the election of Dr. Jose Gonzales as Director of the Philippine General Hospital is hereby declared null and void on the following grounds: that an unqualified person claiming to be the Student Regent, although she is not even a student, Charisse Banez was allowed to vote for Dr. Gonzales giving him winning margin

 “….the Board declare that the Student Regent be deemed to have ceased, the Student Regent not being a student

  “…and items taken up by the Board at the 1252nd meeting on December 18, 2009 including the appointment of the University officials under B of the agenda, without considering, as a vote that of the Student Regent because she is no longer a student of the UPLB, she being thus is no longer a regent, she being no longer a student, all remain approved.”

 The Alumni Regent, Staff Regent and I voiced our position that the issue of the Student Regent voting last December 18, 2009 was resolved when the Board voted on the motion of President Roman. In that meeting, the UP President presented the December 15 letter of the Chancellor of UPLB (received by her office on December 17) informing her of the non-student status of the Student Regent on account of her failure to register for the second semester of Academic Year 2009-2010. The UP President also presented the December 17 memorandum of Vice President for Legal Affairs Theodore Te on the status of the Student Regent. The memorandum stated that “considering the information given by the UPLB...that the incumbent SR is not enrolled during the second semester, even for the purposes of residency”…then, “this would be a ground to declare the position vacant”. When asked, VP Te confirmed that under the UP Charter, the BOR has the power to prescribe rules for it own governance.

 Discussions ensued in an executive session and at some point the SR was asked to step out while the rest of the Regents deliberated on her status. Then President Roman moved that the SR be allowed to sit in the meeting as an observer. I and several other Regents objected to the motion as it was the first time that the Student Regent was informed of the letter of the UPLB Chancellor and the December 17, 2009 memorandum of Vice President Te. I said that the Student Regent has not been given the chance to consult with a legal adviser regarding her status and due process requires that she be given the opportunity to do so. The Staff Regent said that this was an alarming precedent as a charge could be raised against any of the Regents on the actual day of a meeting set to decide on contentious issues and that Regent would be disenfranchised without the chance to prepare for his/her answers. The Alumni Regent also objected stating that even if the allegations raised against the SR were true, the hold over rule, meaning the incumbent continues to sit until a replacement is named and qualified, would allow her to remain as a voting member of the board.

 The SR was called in and Chairman Angeles informed her that the Board would take a vote on whether she would assume an observer status or continue as a voting member of the Board. Right before President Roman’s motion was put to a vote; it was clarified that a YES vote would mean that the SR sits on the Board as an observer until the issue about her enrolment is settled and a NO vote, that she continues as a voting member until the same issue is resolved. The SR was allowed to vote on the motion she continues to be a regular voting member of the Board unless the Board decides to make her an observer as proposed in the motion. In a secret voting, with all of the nine (9) Regents present casting their votes, four voted YES and five voted NO. The motion was not carried so the Student Regent continued to sit as a voting member of the Board at the December 18 meeting.

 Regent Sarmiento participated in the voting on the SR’s status and did not question the propriety or jurisdiction of the BOR deciding on the fate of the SR’s participation in the December 18 meeting. Neither did he object when the SR was asked to return to the meeting and participated in the voting on the motion of President Roman.  Regent Sarmiento subsequently also participated in the voting for the new PGH Director where Dr. Jose Gonzales was elected by a vote of six (6) while then incumbent PGH Director Dr. Alfiler (who had already served a total of two consecutive terms) garnered five (5) votes.[1]  It was only after the remaining items in the agenda were voted upon and when the meeting was about to be adjourned that Regent Sarmiento expressed verbally his intent to protest the election of the new PGH Director.

 January 29 protest of Regent Sarmiento: Latest attempt to prevent Dr. Jose Gonzales from assuming the position of PGH Director  

 We, the Sectoral Regents and the Alumni Regent, were not against discussing the current status of the Student Regent prior to deliberating on the matters on the agenda for the January 29, 20101 meeting. But we found it highly irregular that the question on the status of the Student Regent during the December 18 meeting, which had already been decided was being revisited for the purpose of nullifying the election of Dr. Gonzales as PGH Director.

 The irregularity of the protest on the status of the Student Regent by Regent Sarmiento tying it with the election of the PGH Director, who was not the choice of President Roman, Regent Sarmiento, Regent Gonzales and Regent Chua, is better understood by what occurred after the December 18 meeting. The term of outgoing PGH Director Alfiler was to end on December 31, 2009. There was no issuance of the appointment of university officials right after the BOR meeting on December 18, when previous BOR decisions on appointments were announced on the same day as the BOR meetings (e.g. October 21 OSU Memorandum on Appointment of University Officials and November 23 OSU Memorandum on Appointment of University Officials). When I inquired about this failure to issue a similar memorandum on the December 18 decisions of the BOR on the appointment of University Officials, the Secretary of the University said that because it was the last working day of the year, the issuance would be made on January 4, 2010. This clarification was not consistent with the fact that the December 18 decision of the BOR on the appointment of UP Artists was posted on the UP official website on December 18 itself.

 The memorandum on the appointments of new university officials made during the December 18 meeting came out only on January 4. Early on that day, Dr. Gonzales was informed by the UP Manila Chancellor that he (Dr. Gonzales)would take his oath of office at 2:00 pm of January 4. But prior to the scheduled oath-taking,  the UP Manila Chancellor sent a message to Dr. Gonzales that his oath was reset for January 5 as President Roman wanted to meet with them in Diliman that afternoon.  There was neither an oath taking on January 5 because on that day President Roman issued Memorandum No. PERR-2010-001, appointing Chancellor Ramon L. Arcadio as Officer-in-Charge of PGH. The Sectoral Regents immediately issued a statement dated January 6 protesting the deliberate refusal of President Roman to install Dr. Jose C. Gonzales as PGH Director, duly elected by the Board of Regents.  There was an emergency meeting held at the Manila Hotel in the afternoon of January 6 attended by Chairman Angeles, President Roman, Chancellor Arcadio and Dr. Gonzales. At noon time of January 7 at the height of the protests of PGH personnel, medical students and staff against the refusal to install Dr. Gonzales as Director, the formal notification of appointment of Dr. Gonzales dated December 18, 2009 was sent to the UP Manila Chancellor. At two in the afternoon of that day, Dr. Gonzales took his oath before the Chancellor with other university officials and staff of PGH in attendance.

 One cannot but surmise, given these series of events, that some very powerful people are  intent on preventing the installation of Dr. Gonzales as PGH Director. The protest of Regent Sarmiento was clearly aimed at nullifying the election of the PGH Director but it has been overtaken by events. The fact is Dr. Gonzales has taken his oath of office for a fixed term of three years and has actually discharged his duties for more than three weeks. He cannot be removed or suspended except for cause as provided by law. Moreover, an appointment once made and completed, is not subject to reconsideration or revocation.

 When a Regent moved for a vote supporting Regent Sarmiento’s protest against the Student Regent’s participation in the December 18, 2009 meeting and nullifying the appointment of Dr. Gonzales, the Staff Regent, Alumni Regent, Student Regent and I protested.  But there was no more room for discussion as one of the Regents insisted on putting an end to more talk and to proceed to the voting. I asked for a break and conferred with the other Sectoral Regents and the Alumni Regent. We discussed the consequences of participation in the unlawful removal of an elected University official, without cause and without due process, as proposed by Regent Sarmiento, and the subsequent election of another PGH director in spite of the fact that the post is not vacant. I decided that I could not countenance being part of a process which was clearly aimed at reversing the decision on the choice of the PGH Director made last December and which could be considered illegal. It left me physically ill. I opted to leave the meeting.

 The Staff Regent, Student Regent and Alumni Regent after a while also left leaving the meeting without a quorum.

We are open to deliberating on the status of the Student Regent but it should not be used to overturn a decision not palatable to the powers that be

Let me reiterate: we, the Sectoral Regents and the Alumni Regent, were open to a discussion of the current status of the Student Regent prior to deliberating on the matters on the agenda for the January 29 meeting. But what we found highly irregular was that the question on the status of the Student Regent involved the nullification of decisions of December 18, in particular the selection of the PGH Director, undermining the integrity of decision-making processes in our institution.

Our university faces a range of burning issues which we as Regents, through our collective wisdom, must deliberate and decide on. But we must do so with the highest respect for due process and respect for decisions, especially on appointments,  arrived at by the Board  even  in the rare case that the decision goes against the wishes of the highest executive official within or outside UP.

 

[1]  Senator Mar Roxas and Rep. Cynthia Villar voted through signed letters sent to Chairman Angeles and President Roman, respectively.

 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 02 February 2010 09:51
 

THE UNIVERSITY IN CRISIS

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AN OPEN LETTER TO THE BOARD OF REGENTS

CONCERNED UP FACULTY, STUDENTS, REPS AND STAFF

JANUARY 29, 2010

THE UNIVERSITY IN CRISIS 

 A crisis is well underway when people who make up an institution are responsibly aware of shared values that facilitate the attainment of their common goals and recognize that the same values are threatened. The issues being raised by various sectors in the different constituent units of the University of the Philippines System are sufficiently alarming for they cast considerable doubt on the UP Administration' s commitment to good governance and democratization.

 

The Large Lecture Class Scheme (LLCS) which converts the regular class size of every General Education subject from 30-40 to 150-200 in UP Los Banos will be effective by the first semester of AY 2010-2010 according to a memorandum released by Chancellor Luis Velasco on January 4, 2009. This decision was arrived at without substantive and participative consultation with students and faculty.  The LLCS has ushered in the largest, most relentless  opposition in UPLBs recent history.

 

In January 14, 2009, Dean Enrique Avila of UP Visayas Cebu College (UPVCC) announced the suspension of the UP Visayas Cebu High School (UPVCHS) admission test in consonance with his proposal to phase out the secondary institution. The reason for this drastic move is UPVCC's bid for becoming an autonomous constituent unit of UP, hence the need to rechannel resources.

 

Both cases reveal the setbacks of commercialization espoused by the Roman Administration and the violation of the principles of democratic governance which the University is supposed to uphold. When proposals are turned to decisions made behind closed doors, and when the same decisions bear the effect of the abolition of educational institutions in the case of UPVCC and the contractualization of  labor or even job loss for the untenured faculty; and the steady decline of general education on account of large class size in the case of UPLB,  any university aiming for survival must rethink its dogmatic commitment to rationalization schemes.  

 

A series of huge and furious protests earlier this month were undertaken by hospital staff, students and concerned faculty from the Philippine General Hospital, UP-Manila and UP-Diliman to condemn the refusal of President Emerlinda Roman to install Jose C. Gonzales PGH Director. The vigorous protests based on sound arguments and just ground resulted in the swearing in of Dr. Jose C. Gonzales as the PGH Director, duly elected by the Board of Regents on December 18, 2009.

 


UP students across the nation are outraged by what they claim as a systematic violation of their right to representation in the University's highest policy-making body. The various charges against  Student Regent Charisse Banez, now under appeal, have also been used to  threaten her of a denial of  participation in the BOR. This situation is reflective of the Administration' s proclivity to silence the voice of the studentry in crafting decisions that greatly shape  the quality of education.   

 

The long and drawn-out tenure application of  Sociology Professor Sarah Raymundo, that had gone through the process of appeal and denied twice by the offices of the Chancellor and the President have elicited the most unyielding  objections from local and international scholars, students and university unions. Professor Raymundo's has proven that  when the university institutionalizes and proclaims its academic standards, the public stakes its claim on it. Her tenure application has exposed not only the arbitrariness of the tenure process but also the Administration' s disposition on not granting permanency on activist professors. Despite the series of denials from different administrative levels, Professor Raymundo's case has not been discussed in a manner that is substantive and observant of the procedures approved by University bodies. 

 

The cases stated above are by no means disparate. They are testimonies to the crises of good governance and democratization that plague the UP system. They raise fundamental questions, beyond political stakes, on our ability as members of an academic institution to oppose grave abuses of discretions and to assert that the ideals of  a democratic institution should be actualized. It is in the spirit that we call upon the Board of Regents to heed our call to question the corporatist claims of the  Roman Administration. There is no better time other than this moment of crisis to take another look at another vision of our pact to good governance and democratization.

 

 

 

The ACT Teachers Partylist raised fresh concerns about the Commission on Election’s readiness to implement poll automation for the May 2010 elections after a failed field test in two schools in Taguig this morning.

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ACT Teachers Partylist raises poll automation concerns anew after COMELEC’s transmission woes

 

The ACT Teachers Partylist raised fresh concerns about the Commission on Election’s readiness to implement poll automation for the May 2010 elections after a failed field test in two schools in Taguig this morning.

 

At a public demonstration held this morning, COMELEC officials struggled for several hours to transmit mock election results to COMELEC’s central server in Intramuros from Precinct Count Optical Scan machines located in two different public schools in Taguig City, to no avail. According to reports, transmission failed because the 3 major telecommunications companies—Smart, Globe, and Sun—had weak mobile signals in the area. The COMELEC’s Automated Election System (AES) will rely mainly on private mobile networks for the transmission of election results.

 

“We anticipated that the wireless transmission of election results will present the biggest challenges, given the uneven state of the country’s telecommunications infrastructure,” said ACT Teachers partylist president Antonio Tinio. “But it’s particularly dismaying to learn that the Automated Election System may fail even in the very heart of Metro Manila, where it’s safe to assume that the infrastructure is most developed. This doesn’t bode well for the coming elections.”

 

Tinio called on the COMELEC to immediately present to the public the results of the nationwide site survey conducted by Smartmatic-TIM to determine the availability and strength of mobile telecommunications signals for use in the wireless transmission of election results. “COMELEC must inform the public as soon as possible about the extent of the challenges with regard to transmission. Real-time transmission of results was touted as one of the advantages of the AES, something that could negate traditional methods of election fraud. But it looks like wireless transmission will prove too difficult in many areas.”

 

Tinio reiterated the call to provide early and adequate training expressed for teachers. “Teachers will be in the front lines during elections and are expected to have mastered the operation of the PCOS machines, including any technical difficulties that might arise. This can only happen through adequate hands-on training with the machines at the actual locations where they will be used. How else can we know if transmission will work in a particular precinct?” #

 

Educators find A-Teacher party-list wanting

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Originally posted in Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 04:42:00 01/26/2010

As the school year enters its final quarter, school administrators dread the problems that a new academic year usually brings.

Schools would not need to increase their fees if only Congress had addressed some of these problems.

One problem besetting private schools is the exorbitant taxes being charged by local government units, although private schools are supposed to be tax-exempt. Another is the exodus of students with unpaid accounts (one-third of school fees have yet to be collected from the transferees) to public schools. Some of these transferees have already graduated from college. A third problem is the mushrooming of small private pre-schools that operate without permit.

Private schools have a sectoral representative in A-Teacher. But sadly, Rep. Mariano Piamonte seems helpless, although he can get elected to another term if educators vote for the same party.

Most private schools in Metro Manila were hit by “Ondoy” and those affected waited for their representatives to help. But they did not even show up. A-Teacher also received pork barrel funds to the tune of about P30 million to P35 million. Was this used to buy noodles, too? We are not after a slice of this pork, but we have the right to ask where the funds went.

Marikina schools have not fully recovered. My school, St. Nicholas in Fairlane, Marikina, was 20 feet underwater. We lost almost a million and waited for our representatives, but nothing was heard from them.

We approached the second seater, Ulan Sarmiento; surprisingly, he accommodated the Federation of Associations of Private Schools and Administrators (Fapsa). He is even willing to help the affected schools with their legal needs relative to lost transcripts which will be claimed by students, though he said he has no pork barrel since he assumed the party-list’s second seat only in June last year. He said he is no longer interested in being picked this coming election.

The Department of Education can hardly do anything about our financial woes and we expect some legislation to be passed for private schools, since we are not subsidized by the government. In fact, we have remained accustomed to this set-up—losing our end of the bargain—that we immediately consider 10 percent of our gross income thrown away as bad debt. Some member-schools do not receive their teachers’ pay during summer owing to thick promissory notes. But where is Mang Nano? I do not beg but this is the most appropriate time to know if our representative delivers on what he is supposed to.

I am afraid we might have to raise fees next school year again.

We educators tell our parents to vote wisely. I am afraid this should be observed by us first.

—ELEAZARDO SANCHEZ KASILAG,
president, Federation of Associations of Private Schools and Administrators (Fapsa)
St. Nicholas School, Fairlane Rd.,
Fairlane Subd., Concepcion, Marikina City

 

Teachers group to intensify voters ed, basic poll automation training among teachers

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Teachers group to intensify voters ed, basic poll automation training among teachers

PRESS RELEASE

JANUARY 25, 2010

 

Teachers group to intensify voters ed, basic poll automation training among teachers

 DAVAO CITY – Exactly 104 days  before election time, the ACT Teachers partylist is set to intensify its own initiated voters’ education and basic poll automation training among teachers. 

 In a press conference held today, Prof. Myfel Paluga, regional coordinator of ACT Teachers Partylist, said that “the apparent ineptness of the Commission on Elections in providing the teachers with voters’ education and basic knowledge regarding poll automation is already causing panic among the teachers and the voting public in general.”

 The ACT Teachers Party, which was recently accredited by the Comelec to participate in the coming 2010 elections, has long been calling the Comelec to provide basic orientation on the new system.

 “We need to ensure that the true voice of the teachers will not be disenfranchised because of the Comelec's negligence of its supposed tasks,” Paluga said.

 For her part Mrs. Gloria Arcenas, Kahugpungan ng mga Magtutudlo ug Kawani sa Edukasyon (KAMKEM-Alliance of Concerned Teachers) secretary-general and a public school teacher said “we play a crucial role in this year's election given the major changes in the technology we will be using.  Such would require efficiency in our part and we fear that the lack of knowledge we have regarding poll automation would make us inept for the task.”

 “More so, we fear that any lapse on our part would be used in the manipulation of the election results. As Board of Election Inspectors, the teachers are also responsible for the guarding of the sacred ballots,” Arcenas said.

 Paluga also reported that they have received reports of massive disenfranchisement among teachers in some regions.

 “We will also be looking into the reported disenfranchisement of teachers who will be serving as Board of Election Inspectors during the elections.  Most of them are required to vote on the precinct where they are registered. However, the problem arises when the precinct where they are registered is not the precinct where they are assigned as a BEI,” Paluga said.

Watchdogs for the 2010 elections have recently rated the Comelec’s readiness on poll automation as “endangered”.  #

  

For reference: 

PROF. MYFEL PALUGA

293-0084 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 26 January 2010 23:24
 


Page 9 of 12

Newsflash

Mr. Antonio Tinio giving his solidarity statement

to the 12th SMP - NATOW National Convention January 29, 2010