Headline
Senators start filing priority bills as 19th Congress opens
MANILA – The first round of filing of bills in the Senate started on Monday hours before the 19th Congress opened at noon.
Senator Loren Legarda, based on the principle of seniority or length of service, was the first to file bills following the guidelines issued by Senate Secretary Myra Marie Villarica.
Each senator is allowed to initially file 10 bills or resolutions, which Legarda availed of. (See related story.)
Senators Pia Cayetano, Lito Lapid, and Ramon Revilla Jr., in office for at least 15 years, were next.
Lapid filed the Monthly Social Pension for Indigent Persons with Disability Act; Free Professional Examinations Act; Tourist Protection and Assistance Act; Climate Resilient Agriculture Act; and Medical Bill Transparency Act.
“Makakaasa po kayo na patuloy ang serbisyong nasimulan natin sa nakaraang Kongreso, at higit pa po tayong magsisipag upang makapaghain at makapagpasa pa ng mga batas para sa masa (You can expect that the service I have started in the previous Congress will continue and we will work harder to file bills and pass more laws for the people),” Lapid’s statement read.
Senators Alan Peter Cayetano, Francis Escudero, and Jinggoy Estrada, who have served for at least 12 years, also submitted their bills.
Among Estrada’s priority bills are Strengthening of the National Wages and Productivity Commission; An Act Providing for a Working Time Flexibilization in the Private Sector and for Other Purposes; and An Act Providing Indigent Job Applicants a 20 precent Discount in Payment of Fees and Charges for Certain Certificates and Clearances Issued by Government Agencies.
Senator Sonny Angara, who has served for nine years along with Nancy Binay, Grace Poe, and Cynthia Villar, filed the Exports and Investments Development Act; E-Health System and Services Act; Health Care Facility Augmentation Act; Satellite Specialty Hospital Act; Teaching Supplies Act; Underprivileged Students’ Discount Act; Magna Carta for Workers in the Informal Economy; Poverty Reduction Through Social Entrepreneurship Act; Right to Adequate Food Framework Act; and a Resolution urging the Senate Committee on Finance to conduct an inquiry legislation on the budgetary requirements of the government’s industrialization and employment-generation initiatives.
Senators can file another 10 measures, still following the seniority principle, in the second round.
The third round of filing will be on a “first come, first served” basis for an unlimited number of bills or resolutions.
The guidelines were formulated in consultation with the Office of the Senate President and the Legislation Department.
Cecille Moreno
July 5, 2022 at 12:59 PM
Good thing the elected officials started working early.I just hope that of ever one of their proposed bills will be turned into a law, it will benefit the general public and will not be just center of controversies and corruption.And that they have pour their wisdom and heart onto it in the sevice of our people.
Mark Christian Dizon
July 5, 2022 at 5:39 PM
That’s the leader! I hope those proposed bills would really help the people especially the needs of them. Sana hanggang sa dulo hindi sa una lang magaling.