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FOUR officials of the Metropolitan Cebu Water District are facing a criminal complaint for allegedly falsifying public documents and for conspiring to enter into an alleged irregular water supply contracts.They are MCWD general manager Edgar Donoso, board chairman Jose Daluz III, and board directors Miguelito Pato and Jodelyn May Seno.They are charged with falsification of public documents under Article 171 and Article 172 of the Revised Penal Code; violating Republic Act (RA) 9184, or the Government Procurement Reform Act; and violating Section 3(e) of RA 3019, or the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act.The anonymous complaint was filed at the Office of the Ombudsman on Monday, Feb. 19, 2024.Minerva Gerodias, MCWD spokesperson, said the four officials will reserve their comments on the matter until they receive a copy of the complaint.Article 171 of the Revised Penal Code stipulates that a public officer, employee who committed falsification will be facing prision mayor and a fine not exceeding P5,000.Acts considered as falsification under Article 171 include counterfeiting or imitating any handwriting, signature or rubric; causing it to appear that persons have participated in any act or proceeding when they did not in fact so participate; attributing to persons who have participated in an act or proceeding statements other than those in fact made by them; making untruthful statements in a narration of facts; altering true dates; making any alteration or intercalation in a genuine document which changes its meaning; issuing in an authenticated form a document purporting to be a copy of an original document when no such original exists, or including in such a copy a statement contrary to, or different from, that of the genuine original; or intercalating any instrument or note relative to the issuance thereof in a protocol, registry, or official book. Financial obligationArticle 172 states that a private individual committing falsification will be facing prision correccional in its medium and maximum periods and a fine of not more than P5,000. Punishable acts under Article 172 include any private individual who commits any of the falsifications enumerated in the next preceding article in any public or official document or letter of exchange or any other kind of commercial document; and any person who, to the damage of a third party, or with the intent to cause such damage, shall in any private document commit any of the acts of falsification enumerated in the next preceding article.The anonymous complainant claimed that the water district will bear the financial obligation amounting to P66.8 billion due to the alleged “irregular and anomalous” bulk water supply agreements, which may also lead to an increase in the cost of water in Cebu.The copy of complaint, though, did not state which water supply projects were involved.In a summary of the complaint obtained by SunStar Cebu, the complainant said the four MCWD officials insisted on procuring a multi-billion peso bulk water supply, while pointing out that the officials have yet to solve the excessive volume of water loss due to leaks.The complainant also accused them of imposing highly irregular eligibility requirements for bidders and a monopoly of a single bulk water supply company.The complainant said Daluz, Donoso, Pato and Seno entered into alleged anomalous water supply agreements which are “pricey but do not immediately solve the water crisis in Cebu,” adding such projects will not be operational until 2025.“This begs the question of why spend so much on projects that do not even address the most urgent issue MCWD and the consuming public is facing,” the complaint said.However, the complainant did not specify which projects were involved.The complainant also pointed out the officials’ failure to address the non-revenue water which the Commission on Audit (COA) has flagged since 2020.According to the complainant, the COA has been advising the respondents, through its COA audit report in 2020, 2021 and 2022, to repair old pipelines and fast-track the processing of excavation permits.More allegationsThe complainant said Daluz, Donoso, Pato and Seno did not heed COA’s instructions, and they instead chose to enter into contracts that are costly and have delayed results. “While cheaper and practical alternatives were presented to respondents, they instead opted to enter into contracts that not only would cost so much but would also produce delayed results, if at all,” the complaint said.The complainant said the respondents fixed the bidding price of the total contract to several billions of pesos for each project, blocking other possible eligible and qualified bidders and limiting the pool of competitive public bidding to a few or a singular contractor.The complainant said the practice is against the legal principle of competitive bidding.The complainant cited as an example one bidder who won MCWD’s latest bidding, the same firm that got two previous water supply projects. Each project was allegedly priced at billions of pesos. The firm or the projects involved were not named, though.The complainant said if the sitting MCWD officials’ practices do not stop, they will leave the water district “insolvent.”“Respondents have compromised the administrative and financial viability of MCWD and ultimately have prejudiced the consuming public. The exorbitant price of the water projects after all would ultimately ripple to the consuming public, who would be paying a higher price for a possibly unsteady supply of water,” the complaint said.The complainant has requested the anti-graft office to subpoena witnesses, including Daluz, Donoso, Pat and Seno, as well as the board of directors appointed by Cebu City Mayor Michael Rama: chairman Melquiades Feliciano, members Aristotle Batuhan, Nelson Yuvallos, Danilo Ortiz and Earl Bonachita, among others.Rama appointed Feliciano, Batuhan and Yuvallos last Oct. 31 to replace Daluz, Pato and Seno, but the Daluz’s camp refused to step down.The MCWD employees, through an official statement in 2023, acknowledged the group of Daluz, together with Ortiz and Bonachita, as the valid board.Last December, in a press release sent to the media, the Daluz-led board declared the two seats vacant after Ortiz and Bonachita declared that they would no longer attend future meetings, citing their refusal to recognize the present board led by Daluz as legitimate. 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Match and Bonus Opportunities in Philippine Online Gambling SENATE President Juan Miguel Zubiri said on Monday, February 26, 2024, that President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. wants the ratification plebiscite for the proposed amendments to the 1987 Constitution to be done during the midterm elections in 2025.Zubiri said the matter was discussed during a meeting between the senators and Marcos in Malacañang.He said Marcos wanted the plebiscite to ratify amendments in the constitution to be conducted simultaneously with the 2025 elections to lessen its funding requirements.“Dahil, napaka-klaro, kung gagawin natin yan, bago mag-eleksyon, gagastos po tayo ng P12 to P14 billion (It is very clear that if we do that before the election, we will spend P12 to P14 billion)," Zubiri said in an interview with reporters."Siya mismo, galing mismo sa kanya, sinabi niya, mas gusto niya, sabay na lang sa halalan ng 2025. So, pagka ganun, hindi po tayo kailangan magmamadali. So, we can take this up after the break, and complete the resolution, and approve the resolution before the sine die break, 'yung aming target date. Baka sabihin nila, nangako na naman ako. Target date po natin, kasi ang gusto po ng ating Pangulo eventually, is to force it to the elections of 2025," he added.(He himself, according to him, prefers it to be done just at the same time as the election of 2025. So, then, we don't need to rush. So, we can take this up after the break, and complete the resolution, and approve the resolution before the sine die break. That’s our target. They might say, I promised again. It's our target date, because what our President wants is to force it to the elections of 2025.)Zubiri said Marcos also reiterated his stand that the Senate and the House of Representatives should vote separately on the constitutional amendments and that it should only cover the economic provisions."As a matter of fact, he wants the House to adopt our version," he said."We had a sense, nung nakita po namin ang sense ng Pangulo, na gusto niya economic provisions lamang, ayaw niya ng gulo, ayaw niya magkaroon ng controversy, trabaho lang (We sensed that the President only wants economic provisions. He doesn't want trouble. He doesn't want controversy, just work), keep our heads low, and then when the time comes to vote on it, vote on it. And then present namin sa House for their adoption," he added.Zubiri earlier filed Resolution of Both Houses (RBH) 6, which seeks to amend Articles 12, 14 and 16 of the Constitution, or the provision on public services, education and advertising industry of the 1987 Constitution by adding the phrase "unless otherwise provided by law."The Senate started its deliberation on RBH 6 in the first week of February.Meanwhile, RBH 7, which is almost an exact reproduction of RBH 6, authored by Senior Deputy Speaker and Pampanga Third District Representative Aurelio "Dong" Gonzales Jr., Deputy Speaker and Quezon Second District Representative David "Jay-jay" Suarez, Majority Leader Manuel Jose Dalipe, and other House leaders was filed at the House of Representatives.The House kicked off its deliberations on RBH 7 on Monday, February 26 where House Speaker Martin Romualdez assured that they will leave the political provisions of the Constitution untouched and will adopt the Senate’s proposed amendments “in toto” to dispel doubts that their efforts are politically motivated."Malinaw po sa ating lahat ang misyon natin ngayon. Baguhin ang ilang economic provisions na pumipigil sa pagpasok ng mga negosyo mula sa ibang bansa. Mga negosyong lilikha ng trabaho at magpapasigla ng ating ekonomiya. Ito lamang ang pakay natin. Ekonomiya, hindi pulitika," he said.(Our mission is clear to all of us now. Change some economic provisions that prevent the entry of businesses from other countries. Businesses that will create jobs and stimulate our economy -- this is our only goal. Economics, not politics.) (TPM/SunStar Philippines)

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SENATE President Juan Miguel Zubiri said on Monday, February 26, 2024, that President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. wants the ratification plebiscite for the proposed amendments to the 1987 Constitution to be done during the midterm elections in 2025.Zubiri said the matter was discussed during a meeting between the senators and Marcos in Malacañang.He said Marcos wanted the plebiscite to ratify amendments in the constitution to be conducted simultaneously with the 2025 elections to lessen its funding requirements.“Dahil, napaka-klaro, kung gagawin natin yan, bago mag-eleksyon, gagastos po tayo ng P12 to P14 billion (It is very clear that if we do that before the election, we will spend P12 to P14 billion)," Zubiri said in an interview with reporters."Siya mismo, galing mismo sa kanya, sinabi niya, mas gusto niya, sabay na lang sa halalan ng 2025. So, pagka ganun, hindi po tayo kailangan magmamadali. So, we can take this up after the break, and complete the resolution, and approve the resolution before the sine die break, 'yung aming target date. Baka sabihin nila, nangako na naman ako. Target date po natin, kasi ang gusto po ng ating Pangulo eventually, is to force it to the elections of 2025," he added.(He himself, according to him, prefers it to be done just at the same time as the election of 2025. So, then, we don't need to rush. So, we can take this up after the break, and complete the resolution, and approve the resolution before the sine die break. That’s our target. They might say, I promised again. It's our target date, because what our President wants is to force it to the elections of 2025.)Zubiri said Marcos also reiterated his stand that the Senate and the House of Representatives should vote separately on the constitutional amendments and that it should only cover the economic provisions."As a matter of fact, he wants the House to adopt our version," he said."We had a sense, nung nakita po namin ang sense ng Pangulo, na gusto niya economic provisions lamang, ayaw niya ng gulo, ayaw niya magkaroon ng controversy, trabaho lang (We sensed that the President only wants economic provisions. He doesn't want trouble. He doesn't want controversy, just work), keep our heads low, and then when the time comes to vote on it, vote on it. And then present namin sa House for their adoption," he added.Zubiri earlier filed Resolution of Both Houses (RBH) 6, which seeks to amend Articles 12, 14 and 16 of the Constitution, or the provision on public services, education and advertising industry of the 1987 Constitution by adding the phrase "unless otherwise provided by law."The Senate started its deliberation on RBH 6 in the first week of February.Meanwhile, RBH 7, which is almost an exact reproduction of RBH 6, authored by Senior Deputy Speaker and Pampanga Third District Representative Aurelio "Dong" Gonzales Jr., Deputy Speaker and Quezon Second District Representative David "Jay-jay" Suarez, Majority Leader Manuel Jose Dalipe, and other House leaders was filed at the House of Representatives.The House kicked off its deliberations on RBH 7 on Monday, February 26 where House Speaker Martin Romualdez assured that they will leave the political provisions of the Constitution untouched and will adopt the Senate’s proposed amendments “in toto” to dispel doubts that their efforts are politically motivated."Malinaw po sa ating lahat ang misyon natin ngayon. Baguhin ang ilang economic provisions na pumipigil sa pagpasok ng mga negosyo mula sa ibang bansa. Mga negosyong lilikha ng trabaho at magpapasigla ng ating ekonomiya. Ito lamang ang pakay natin. Ekonomiya, hindi pulitika," he said.(Our mission is clear to all of us now. Change some economic provisions that prevent the entry of businesses from other countries. Businesses that will create jobs and stimulate our economy -- this is our only goal. Economics, not politics.) (TPM/SunStar Philippines) Match and Bonus Opportunities in Philippine Online Gambling FOUR officials of the Metropolitan Cebu Water District are facing a criminal complaint for allegedly falsifying public documents and for conspiring to enter into an alleged irregular water supply contracts.They are MCWD general manager Edgar Donoso, board chairman Jose Daluz III, and board directors Miguelito Pato and Jodelyn May Seno.They are charged with falsification of public documents under Article 171 and Article 172 of the Revised Penal Code; violating Republic Act (RA) 9184, or the Government Procurement Reform Act; and violating Section 3(e) of RA 3019, or the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act.The anonymous complaint was filed at the Office of the Ombudsman on Monday, Feb. 19, 2024.Minerva Gerodias, MCWD spokesperson, said the four officials will reserve their comments on the matter until they receive a copy of the complaint.Article 171 of the Revised Penal Code stipulates that a public officer, employee who committed falsification will be facing prision mayor and a fine not exceeding P5,000.Acts considered as falsification under Article 171 include counterfeiting or imitating any handwriting, signature or rubric; causing it to appear that persons have participated in any act or proceeding when they did not in fact so participate; attributing to persons who have participated in an act or proceeding statements other than those in fact made by them; making untruthful statements in a narration of facts; altering true dates; making any alteration or intercalation in a genuine document which changes its meaning; issuing in an authenticated form a document purporting to be a copy of an original document when no such original exists, or including in such a copy a statement contrary to, or different from, that of the genuine original; or intercalating any instrument or note relative to the issuance thereof in a protocol, registry, or official book. Financial obligationArticle 172 states that a private individual committing falsification will be facing prision correccional in its medium and maximum periods and a fine of not more than P5,000. Punishable acts under Article 172 include any private individual who commits any of the falsifications enumerated in the next preceding article in any public or official document or letter of exchange or any other kind of commercial document; and any person who, to the damage of a third party, or with the intent to cause such damage, shall in any private document commit any of the acts of falsification enumerated in the next preceding article.The anonymous complainant claimed that the water district will bear the financial obligation amounting to P66.8 billion due to the alleged “irregular and anomalous” bulk water supply agreements, which may also lead to an increase in the cost of water in Cebu.The copy of complaint, though, did not state which water supply projects were involved.In a summary of the complaint obtained by SunStar Cebu, the complainant said the four MCWD officials insisted on procuring a multi-billion peso bulk water supply, while pointing out that the officials have yet to solve the excessive volume of water loss due to leaks.The complainant also accused them of imposing highly irregular eligibility requirements for bidders and a monopoly of a single bulk water supply company.The complainant said Daluz, Donoso, Pato and Seno entered into alleged anomalous water supply agreements which are “pricey but do not immediately solve the water crisis in Cebu,” adding such projects will not be operational until 2025.“This begs the question of why spend so much on projects that do not even address the most urgent issue MCWD and the consuming public is facing,” the complaint said.However, the complainant did not specify which projects were involved.The complainant also pointed out the officials’ failure to address the non-revenue water which the Commission on Audit (COA) has flagged since 2020.According to the complainant, the COA has been advising the respondents, through its COA audit report in 2020, 2021 and 2022, to repair old pipelines and fast-track the processing of excavation permits.More allegationsThe complainant said Daluz, Donoso, Pato and Seno did not heed COA’s instructions, and they instead chose to enter into contracts that are costly and have delayed results. “While cheaper and practical alternatives were presented to respondents, they instead opted to enter into contracts that not only would cost so much but would also produce delayed results, if at all,” the complaint said.The complainant said the respondents fixed the bidding price of the total contract to several billions of pesos for each project, blocking other possible eligible and qualified bidders and limiting the pool of competitive public bidding to a few or a singular contractor.The complainant said the practice is against the legal principle of competitive bidding.The complainant cited as an example one bidder who won MCWD’s latest bidding, the same firm that got two previous water supply projects. Each project was allegedly priced at billions of pesos. The firm or the projects involved were not named, though.The complainant said if the sitting MCWD officials’ practices do not stop, they will leave the water district “insolvent.”“Respondents have compromised the administrative and financial viability of MCWD and ultimately have prejudiced the consuming public. The exorbitant price of the water projects after all would ultimately ripple to the consuming public, who would be paying a higher price for a possibly unsteady supply of water,” the complaint said.The complainant has requested the anti-graft office to subpoena witnesses, including Daluz, Donoso, Pat and Seno, as well as the board of directors appointed by Cebu City Mayor Michael Rama: chairman Melquiades Feliciano, members Aristotle Batuhan, Nelson Yuvallos, Danilo Ortiz and Earl Bonachita, among others.Rama appointed Feliciano, Batuhan and Yuvallos last Oct. 31 to replace Daluz, Pato and Seno, but the Daluz’s camp refused to step down.The MCWD employees, through an official statement in 2023, acknowledged the group of Daluz, together with Ortiz and Bonachita, as the valid board.Last December, in a press release sent to the media, the Daluz-led board declared the two seats vacant after Ortiz and Bonachita declared that they would no longer attend future meetings, citing their refusal to recognize the present board led by Daluz as legitimate.

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FOUR officials of the Metropolitan Cebu Water District are facing a criminal complaint for allegedly falsifying public documents and for conspiring to enter into an alleged irregular water supply contracts.They are MCWD general manager Edgar Donoso, board chairman Jose Daluz III, and board directors Miguelito Pato and Jodelyn May Seno.They are charged with falsification of public documents under Article 171 and Article 172 of the Revised Penal Code; violating Republic Act (RA) 9184, or the Government Procurement Reform Act; and violating Section 3(e) of RA 3019, or the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act.The anonymous complaint was filed at the Office of the Ombudsman on Monday, Feb. 19, 2024.Minerva Gerodias, MCWD spokesperson, said the four officials will reserve their comments on the matter until they receive a copy of the complaint.Article 171 of the Revised Penal Code stipulates that a public officer, employee who committed falsification will be facing prision mayor and a fine not exceeding P5,000.Acts considered as falsification under Article 171 include counterfeiting or imitating any handwriting, signature or rubric; causing it to appear that persons have participated in any act or proceeding when they did not in fact so participate; attributing to persons who have participated in an act or proceeding statements other than those in fact made by them; making untruthful statements in a narration of facts; altering true dates; making any alteration or intercalation in a genuine document which changes its meaning; issuing in an authenticated form a document purporting to be a copy of an original document when no such original exists, or including in such a copy a statement contrary to, or different from, that of the genuine original; or intercalating any instrument or note relative to the issuance thereof in a protocol, registry, or official book. Financial obligationArticle 172 states that a private individual committing falsification will be facing prision correccional in its medium and maximum periods and a fine of not more than P5,000. Punishable acts under Article 172 include any private individual who commits any of the falsifications enumerated in the next preceding article in any public or official document or letter of exchange or any other kind of commercial document; and any person who, to the damage of a third party, or with the intent to cause such damage, shall in any private document commit any of the acts of falsification enumerated in the next preceding article.The anonymous complainant claimed that the water district will bear the financial obligation amounting to P66.8 billion due to the alleged “irregular and anomalous” bulk water supply agreements, which may also lead to an increase in the cost of water in Cebu.The copy of complaint, though, did not state which water supply projects were involved.In a summary of the complaint obtained by SunStar Cebu, the complainant said the four MCWD officials insisted on procuring a multi-billion peso bulk water supply, while pointing out that the officials have yet to solve the excessive volume of water loss due to leaks.The complainant also accused them of imposing highly irregular eligibility requirements for bidders and a monopoly of a single bulk water supply company.The complainant said Daluz, Donoso, Pato and Seno entered into alleged anomalous water supply agreements which are “pricey but do not immediately solve the water crisis in Cebu,” adding such projects will not be operational until 2025.“This begs the question of why spend so much on projects that do not even address the most urgent issue MCWD and the consuming public is facing,” the complaint said.However, the complainant did not specify which projects were involved.The complainant also pointed out the officials’ failure to address the non-revenue water which the Commission on Audit (COA) has flagged since 2020.According to the complainant, the COA has been advising the respondents, through its COA audit report in 2020, 2021 and 2022, to repair old pipelines and fast-track the processing of excavation permits.More allegationsThe complainant said Daluz, Donoso, Pato and Seno did not heed COA’s instructions, and they instead chose to enter into contracts that are costly and have delayed results. “While cheaper and practical alternatives were presented to respondents, they instead opted to enter into contracts that not only would cost so much but would also produce delayed results, if at all,” the complaint said.The complainant said the respondents fixed the bidding price of the total contract to several billions of pesos for each project, blocking other possible eligible and qualified bidders and limiting the pool of competitive public bidding to a few or a singular contractor.The complainant said the practice is against the legal principle of competitive bidding.The complainant cited as an example one bidder who won MCWD’s latest bidding, the same firm that got two previous water supply projects. Each project was allegedly priced at billions of pesos. The firm or the projects involved were not named, though.The complainant said if the sitting MCWD officials’ practices do not stop, they will leave the water district “insolvent.”“Respondents have compromised the administrative and financial viability of MCWD and ultimately have prejudiced the consuming public. The exorbitant price of the water projects after all would ultimately ripple to the consuming public, who would be paying a higher price for a possibly unsteady supply of water,” the complaint said.The complainant has requested the anti-graft office to subpoena witnesses, including Daluz, Donoso, Pat and Seno, as well as the board of directors appointed by Cebu City Mayor Michael Rama: chairman Melquiades Feliciano, members Aristotle Batuhan, Nelson Yuvallos, Danilo Ortiz and Earl Bonachita, among others.Rama appointed Feliciano, Batuhan and Yuvallos last Oct. 31 to replace Daluz, Pato and Seno, but the Daluz’s camp refused to step down.The MCWD employees, through an official statement in 2023, acknowledged the group of Daluz, together with Ortiz and Bonachita, as the valid board.Last December, in a press release sent to the media, the Daluz-led board declared the two seats vacant after Ortiz and Bonachita declared that they would no longer attend future meetings, citing their refusal to recognize the present board led by Daluz as legitimate., check the following table to see what categories most online casinos in the Philippines fit in.

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FOUR officials of the Metropolitan Cebu Water District are facing a criminal complaint for allegedly falsifying public documents and for conspiring to enter into an alleged irregular water supply contracts.They are MCWD general manager Edgar Donoso, board chairman Jose Daluz III, and board directors Miguelito Pato and Jodelyn May Seno.They are charged with falsification of public documents under Article 171 and Article 172 of the Revised Penal Code; violating Republic Act (RA) 9184, or the Government Procurement Reform Act; and violating Section 3(e) of RA 3019, or the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act.The anonymous complaint was filed at the Office of the Ombudsman on Monday, Feb. 19, 2024.Minerva Gerodias, MCWD spokesperson, said the four officials will reserve their comments on the matter until they receive a copy of the complaint.Article 171 of the Revised Penal Code stipulates that a public officer, employee who committed falsification will be facing prision mayor and a fine not exceeding P5,000.Acts considered as falsification under Article 171 include counterfeiting or imitating any handwriting, signature or rubric; causing it to appear that persons have participated in any act or proceeding when they did not in fact so participate; attributing to persons who have participated in an act or proceeding statements other than those in fact made by them; making untruthful statements in a narration of facts; altering true dates; making any alteration or intercalation in a genuine document which changes its meaning; issuing in an authenticated form a document purporting to be a copy of an original document when no such original exists, or including in such a copy a statement contrary to, or different from, that of the genuine original; or intercalating any instrument or note relative to the issuance thereof in a protocol, registry, or official book. Financial obligationArticle 172 states that a private individual committing falsification will be facing prision correccional in its medium and maximum periods and a fine of not more than P5,000. Punishable acts under Article 172 include any private individual who commits any of the falsifications enumerated in the next preceding article in any public or official document or letter of exchange or any other kind of commercial document; and any person who, to the damage of a third party, or with the intent to cause such damage, shall in any private document commit any of the acts of falsification enumerated in the next preceding article.The anonymous complainant claimed that the water district will bear the financial obligation amounting to P66.8 billion due to the alleged “irregular and anomalous” bulk water supply agreements, which may also lead to an increase in the cost of water in Cebu.The copy of complaint, though, did not state which water supply projects were involved.In a summary of the complaint obtained by SunStar Cebu, the complainant said the four MCWD officials insisted on procuring a multi-billion peso bulk water supply, while pointing out that the officials have yet to solve the excessive volume of water loss due to leaks.The complainant also accused them of imposing highly irregular eligibility requirements for bidders and a monopoly of a single bulk water supply company.The complainant said Daluz, Donoso, Pato and Seno entered into alleged anomalous water supply agreements which are “pricey but do not immediately solve the water crisis in Cebu,” adding such projects will not be operational until 2025.“This begs the question of why spend so much on projects that do not even address the most urgent issue MCWD and the consuming public is facing,” the complaint said.However, the complainant did not specify which projects were involved.The complainant also pointed out the officials’ failure to address the non-revenue water which the Commission on Audit (COA) has flagged since 2020.According to the complainant, the COA has been advising the respondents, through its COA audit report in 2020, 2021 and 2022, to repair old pipelines and fast-track the processing of excavation permits.More allegationsThe complainant said Daluz, Donoso, Pato and Seno did not heed COA’s instructions, and they instead chose to enter into contracts that are costly and have delayed results. “While cheaper and practical alternatives were presented to respondents, they instead opted to enter into contracts that not only would cost so much but would also produce delayed results, if at all,” the complaint said.The complainant said the respondents fixed the bidding price of the total contract to several billions of pesos for each project, blocking other possible eligible and qualified bidders and limiting the pool of competitive public bidding to a few or a singular contractor.The complainant said the practice is against the legal principle of competitive bidding.The complainant cited as an example one bidder who won MCWD’s latest bidding, the same firm that got two previous water supply projects. Each project was allegedly priced at billions of pesos. The firm or the projects involved were not named, though.The complainant said if the sitting MCWD officials’ practices do not stop, they will leave the water district “insolvent.”“Respondents have compromised the administrative and financial viability of MCWD and ultimately have prejudiced the consuming public. The exorbitant price of the water projects after all would ultimately ripple to the consuming public, who would be paying a higher price for a possibly unsteady supply of water,” the complaint said.The complainant has requested the anti-graft office to subpoena witnesses, including Daluz, Donoso, Pat and Seno, as well as the board of directors appointed by Cebu City Mayor Michael Rama: chairman Melquiades Feliciano, members Aristotle Batuhan, Nelson Yuvallos, Danilo Ortiz and Earl Bonachita, among others.Rama appointed Feliciano, Batuhan and Yuvallos last Oct. 31 to replace Daluz, Pato and Seno, but the Daluz’s camp refused to step down.The MCWD employees, through an official statement in 2023, acknowledged the group of Daluz, together with Ortiz and Bonachita, as the valid board.Last December, in a press release sent to the media, the Daluz-led board declared the two seats vacant after Ortiz and Bonachita declared that they would no longer attend future meetings, citing their refusal to recognize the present board led by Daluz as legitimate. 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licensed online casinos SENATE President Juan Miguel Zubiri said on Monday, February 26, 2024, that President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. wants the ratification plebiscite for the proposed amendments to the 1987 Constitution to be done during the midterm elections in 2025.Zubiri said the matter was discussed during a meeting between the senators and Marcos in Malacañang.He said Marcos wanted the plebiscite to ratify amendments in the constitution to be conducted simultaneously with the 2025 elections to lessen its funding requirements.“Dahil, napaka-klaro, kung gagawin natin yan, bago mag-eleksyon, gagastos po tayo ng P12 to P14 billion (It is very clear that if we do that before the election, we will spend P12 to P14 billion)," Zubiri said in an interview with reporters."Siya mismo, galing mismo sa kanya, sinabi niya, mas gusto niya, sabay na lang sa halalan ng 2025. So, pagka ganun, hindi po tayo kailangan magmamadali. So, we can take this up after the break, and complete the resolution, and approve the resolution before the sine die break, 'yung aming target date. Baka sabihin nila, nangako na naman ako. Target date po natin, kasi ang gusto po ng ating Pangulo eventually, is to force it to the elections of 2025," he added.(He himself, according to him, prefers it to be done just at the same time as the election of 2025. So, then, we don't need to rush. So, we can take this up after the break, and complete the resolution, and approve the resolution before the sine die break. That’s our target. They might say, I promised again. It's our target date, because what our President wants is to force it to the elections of 2025.)Zubiri said Marcos also reiterated his stand that the Senate and the House of Representatives should vote separately on the constitutional amendments and that it should only cover the economic provisions."As a matter of fact, he wants the House to adopt our version," he said."We had a sense, nung nakita po namin ang sense ng Pangulo, na gusto niya economic provisions lamang, ayaw niya ng gulo, ayaw niya magkaroon ng controversy, trabaho lang (We sensed that the President only wants economic provisions. He doesn't want trouble. He doesn't want controversy, just work), keep our heads low, and then when the time comes to vote on it, vote on it. And then present namin sa House for their adoption," he added.Zubiri earlier filed Resolution of Both Houses (RBH) 6, which seeks to amend Articles 12, 14 and 16 of the Constitution, or the provision on public services, education and advertising industry of the 1987 Constitution by adding the phrase "unless otherwise provided by law."The Senate started its deliberation on RBH 6 in the first week of February.Meanwhile, RBH 7, which is almost an exact reproduction of RBH 6, authored by Senior Deputy Speaker and Pampanga Third District Representative Aurelio "Dong" Gonzales Jr., Deputy Speaker and Quezon Second District Representative David "Jay-jay" Suarez, Majority Leader Manuel Jose Dalipe, and other House leaders was filed at the House of Representatives.The House kicked off its deliberations on RBH 7 on Monday, February 26 where House Speaker Martin Romualdez assured that they will leave the political provisions of the Constitution untouched and will adopt the Senate’s proposed amendments “in toto” to dispel doubts that their efforts are politically motivated."Malinaw po sa ating lahat ang misyon natin ngayon. Baguhin ang ilang economic provisions na pumipigil sa pagpasok ng mga negosyo mula sa ibang bansa. Mga negosyong lilikha ng trabaho at magpapasigla ng ating ekonomiya. Ito lamang ang pakay natin. Ekonomiya, hindi pulitika," he said.(Our mission is clear to all of us now. Change some economic provisions that prevent the entry of businesses from other countries. Businesses that will create jobs and stimulate our economy -- this is our only goal. Economics, not politics.) (TPM/SunStar Philippines)

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Much like the rest of the world, the flash and blur of the slots has made them Match and Bonus Opportunities in Philippine Online Gambling for players who deposit with credit and debit cards from the Philippines. Recognized by international gambling laws, online slots can be found in the best casino in the Philippines. A main reason is that they are incredibly simple to play – all you need to do is adjust the settings for how much you wish to bet per spin, then watch the reels fly. At OKBet Online Casino APP 2024 online casino you will find every form of popular online casino game from slots to roulette, blackjack, baccarat and live video poker. The favorites, based on Filipino trends, are highlighted here:

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Gambling in the Philippines 2023 – the Latest Trends

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Some of the most important trends revolve around the changes to the legalisation of online gambling for offshore operators, with President Rodrigo Duterte cracking down on illegal operations in recent years. Otherwise, we’ve identified that the growth in the land-based gambling industry has resulted in job creation for locals, with more than half of all employees in the entertainment sector being employed for gambling and betting activities.

Filipino Player Frequently Asked Questions

There can be a lot of contradictory information and biased reports out there on the internet that can conduse the PH online casino user. We find that our readers often have a lot of questions that need resolving, so we dedicated this section to provide more clarity on the topic of online casino in the Philippines.

1 Which is the best online casino in the Philippines?

The recommended picks include a carefully selected and researched list of fantastic venues. All best Filipino casinos host a slew of great games from various providers and each one stands out with How can I get free money in the Philippines? . Besides, the PH online casinos are safe, regulated, and trustworthy, above all else.

2 Are PH online casinos legal?

Yes, Filipinos should know PH online casinos are legal if hosted by offshore operators. We recommend you stick to Match and Bonus Opportunities in Philippine Online Gambling , as these are legally operating in the country and therefore hold a little risk of being shut down. Avoid shady businesses without official stamps of approval and regular auditing checks.

3 Which are the safest online casinos in the Philippines?

If you stick to licensed and regulated operators, you will be in the hands of safe Filipino casino sites. Those have the latest security and encryption technologies in place to protect their users. Gambling can be addictive, so stay safe from its dangers by setting and sticking to a budget. How do you win in fishing? .

4 Which is the best online casino in the Philippines for slots?

Filipinos should be delighted to learn that the slots sites in the Philippines are jam-packed with incredibly enticing games like Gonzo's Quest, , Big Bad Wolf, Jack Hammer 2, and more. The said slot machines are provided by OKBet Online Casino APP 2024 with the necessary certification and experience.

5 Which PH online casinos have the best payouts?

The OKBet Online Casino APP 2024 that are housed by the operator. As each title boasts individual RTP value, the best payout PH casino sites will be those with the highest average across its coming catalog. Information regarding all RTP rates is published on every reputable operator's website.

6 What online casinos in the Philippines offer fast withdrawals?

The speed of the withdrawals depends on the PH online casino payment methods. Across the board, OKBet Online Casino APP 2024, with the transaction being finalized in less than a day. Bank transfers take the longest, stretching up to seven business days, due to additional processing and verification checks.

7 Which casino online in the Philippines has the best bonus offer?

Promotions are an integral part of every operator's arsenal to attract and maintain interest. The best Filipino casino site bonuses come in various forms and terms, and which is the most suitable depends on PH players' personal strategies and expectations. Usually, the recommended ones Bagong bukas, laro na! Huwag palampasin ang malaking premyo!.

8 Which online casino in the Philippines offers the most games?

Every top pick out of all online casinos has impressed with its extensive gaming catalogue. It contains representatives of most gambling products that players have grown accustomed to seeing. The numbers Match and Bonus Opportunities in Philippine Online Gambling , all housed under one single gambling roof. Regardless of your choice, each venue will exceed expectations quantity-wise.

9 Do all online casinos in the Philippines take PayPal?

PayPal is one of the leading e-wallets How can I get free money in the Philippines? online. It is always associated with legitimate platforms and can be used to charge up your mobile PH casino account while on the go, as well. Not all casinos accept it, but the recommended ones do and Filipinos can freely use it.

10 Do all PH online casinos offer secure deposits and withdrawals?

Similarly to the land-based casinos in the Philippines, the licensed digital gambling platforms also ensure that all monetary transactions coming in and out of players' accounts are extremely secured. This is ensured by the OKBet Online Casino APP 2024 that back up and protect each deposit and withdrawal.

Conclusion – Find Trusted Online Casino Sites for Filipino Players

There are a lot of safe and reputable online casinos for players from the Philippines to enjoy, though sorting through them can be time-consuming. To make the task simple, our experts put together a list of the certified online casinos in the Philippines that have been tested and proven to offer satisfactory experiences. Here, you can take advantage of Match and Bonus Opportunities in Philippine Online Gambling and plentiful payment options in a completely legal setting.

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We hope that, by now, you feel safe in the knowledge that there are trustable Filipino online casinos to choose from. Whether you choose to play at the sites featured here or go in search of operators on your own, remember that every Bagong bukas, laro na! Huwag palampasin ang malaking premyo!.

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If, after all the information included on this page, you feel you need a quick refresher on the available casino sites – look no further! The table below will show you How can I get free money in the Philippines? , along with their welcome bonuses for this year and a direct link to the offer. Philippines’s OKBet Online Casino APP 2024 Sites