Municipal Participatory launching in Gubat |
GUBAT,
SORSOGON, August 20 (PIA) – The Philippine Center for Civic Education and
Democracy (PCCED) and the Municipal government of Gubat, Sorsogon launched the
first ever Municipal Participatory Budgeting Project in simple ceremonies held
last August 8, 2013 at the Andaya Gymnasium in Gubat town.
Participatory
Budgeting is one of the two components of PCCED’s program in Gubat town dubbed as
“Promoting Democratic Values in the Barangays of Gubat”. It aims to make the
Municipal Budgeting Process more inclusive and participatory by allowing
ordinary citizens to deliberate and propose spending ideas to the Local
Government Unit (LGU) so that the Municipal Budget reflects the real need of
the community.
PCCED
Executive Director Reynald Trillana emphasized the need to provide the citizens
with civic education to be able to meaningfully participate in political
processes like in Government Budgeting.
“While
there are other models of participatory budgeting, what we are doing here in
Sorsogon is a program that is as close as possible to direct democracy. Here
the people themselves decide how to spend their money,” he said. He added that
the program also hopes to educate people on the intricacies of public budgeting
and make them meaningful participants in governance.
Addressing
the Barangay Captains and leaders from various sectors, Gubat Municipal Mayor
Roderick “Nonong” Co said that they aspire to become a model and center of
Participatory Democracy in the Philippines. “We aim to inspire the people to
work together for the community, especially those who, in one way or another,
faced obstacles to participation and disillusioned by politics,” he said.
Sorsogon CityMayor Sally Lee delivers her message |
“Investing
in the capacities of people is a key to making our democratic institutions more
effective and responsive to the needs of the community,” she further added.
Participatory
budgeting is a program developed in Porto Alegre, Spain that has been adopted
by many local governments all over the world including New York, Chicago, New
Zealand, Senegal, and South Korea.
The
program is supported by the Spanish Agency for International Development
Cooperation (AECID) through Asociacion Zabalketa, a Spain based NGO. Over the
past years, AECID has been supporting projects that would strengthen democracy
and its institutions in the Philippines.
Globe distributes communication equipment |
“Sagot
Ka Ni Kap!” is part of Globe BridgeCom's nationwide initiative to help
communities prevent crime in their areas by providing communication and
relevant law enforcement equipment including mobile phones and SIMs, hand-held
radios, uniform shirts, tear gas, boots, flashlights, raincoats, and handcuffs
to the local community police auxiliary units or barangay tanods.
PCCED
and Globe Bridging Communities have partnered for Barangay Rule of Law Program
and Project Citizen.
The
Barangay Rule of Law Program of PCCED is anchored on the belief that the
barangay, the basic political component in the country, should function as a
“school for citizenship” incorporating democratic values, skills, habits and
dispositions as they perform their task as peacekeepers of the community.
Project Citizen teaches
young people how democracy actually works by training high school students in
seeking public policy interventions to solve community problems. It is an international program for increasing the democratic participation,
political efficacy, and civic engagement levels of students at the middle and
high school levels. (BARecebido, PIA-5/Sorsogon/JELansang, PCCED)
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