PRESENTATION TO THE SENATE PUBLIC HEARING ON THE
PROPOSED CHARTER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF THE PHILIPPINES BY THE SENATE
COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION, ARTS AND CULTURE, Sept. 16, 2004.
By Prof. Judy M. Taguiwalo
President, All-U.P. Academic Employees Union
Ladies and Gentlemen of the Senate Committee on
Education, Arts and Culture and fellow guests of the Committee:
On behalf of the All-UP Academic Employees Union,
we would like to thank Senator Flavier and members of the Senate Committee
on Education, Arts and Culture for inviting us to make this presentation
regarding the proposed charter of the University of the Philippines.
The All-UP Academic Employees Union is the union
of academic personnel (faculty and research, extension and professional staff
or REPS) of the UP System with Certificate of Registration No. 1167 from the
Department of Labor and Employment and the Civil Service Commission. We are
in the process of working for recognition as the sole and exclusive
negotiating agent of rank and file faculty and REPS with the UP
administration.
While UP faculty and REPS were originally part of
the All-UP Workers Union when it was established in 1987, a July 1992
Supreme Court decision(G.R. No. 96819) necessitated the formation of two
separate bargaining units for UP employees: one for the rank and file
non-academic personnel and the other the rank and file academic employees.
Hence, in December 2001, the General Assembly of the All-UP Workers Union
voted for the separation of academic and non-academic members and the All-UP
Academic Employees Union was established. However, the two unions work
closely together on common issues and concerns as UP and public sector
employees.
Our stand on the need for a new UP Charter
We are one with the sponsors of the various Senate
Bills and with the UP Administration on the need for a new UP Charter. The
present UP Charter enacted in 1908 needs to be replaced by a new Charter
which will embody the changes that the University has undergone after almost
100 years and make the University more responsive to the times.
However, we differ with regards to two substantive
aspects of SBN 226, SBN 566, SBN 1066 of Senators Osmena, Villar Jr., and
Angara respectively: the retention of the Board of Regents as the governance
body of the university and the section on land grants and other real
properties to wit:
"The Board of Regents may plan, design, approve
and/or cause the implementation
of contracts, mechanisms and financial
instruments, such as joint ventures, long-term
leases, fully-owned subsidiaries,
securitization and outright sale, to give the Univer-
sity the flexibility to generate revenues and
other resources from land grants and other
properties."
A Governance Body Which is Democratically-Selected,
Representative and Transparent
The issue of democratization is very much at the
heart of our support for a governance body composed of elected
representatives from the faculty, REPS, administrative staff, students and
alumni from the seven constituent universities of the UP System together
with the Chairs of the CHED, of the Senate Committee onn Education, of the
House Committee on Higher Education and the President of the UP Alumni
Association. We believe that the Board of Regents, a creation during the
American colonial period, has retained its colonial character as a small
body not accountable to the principal university constituencies. After
almost 100 years, isn't it about time to democratize the governance system
of our premier state university?
The creation of a System University Council
(Section 12 of SB 1106, Section 13 of SB 221) is not the answer to our call
for the democratization of the governance structure of the University. In
fact, when we had consultations on our proposal for a UP Charter, a section
on a University Senate with powers similar to that of a System University
Council was dropped after discussions reveals that many of the powers of a
University Senate are already exercised by the University Councils of the
different constituent universities. Instead, the consultation agreed that
the formulation of academic policies with system-wide implications such as
the University's Admission Policies or a General Education Program can be
done by convening, as the need arises, a special body composed of
representatives from the different University Councils rather than creating
another layer of bureaucracy in the University structure.
No to Commercialization
Members of the Committee who were part of the 12th
Congress, may be aware of the opposition raised by organizations of
students, faculty, REPS and administrative staff regarding then SB 2587 or
the Pangilinan Bill. That history of opposition included the violent
dispersal of our September 9, 2003 rally and the arrest and detention of 10
UP students and three young faculty members. The major locus of that
opposition then concerned the same provision on Land Grants quoted above.
While SB 1106 sponsored by Sen. Drilon basically
retains the Board of Regents as the governing body of the University, we
note that the bill does not contain the explicit subsection on the Board of
Regents' power to commercialize UP mentioned above which the three other
bills have. Instead, the bill contains Sec. 10(q) which gives the BOR the
power "to organize and finance a corporation under the Corporation Code to
assist the University in the discharge of its functions." Is this another
way of saying the same thing or does Senator Drilon share our view that the
University of the Philippines as the premier state university in the country
should not be involved directly in commercial ventures which are not the
purview of a state university?
We hold to the belief that the University of the
Philippines is the country's premier state university and that for it to be
able to fulfill its role in providing quality but affordable education to
our youth, it must focus on its role as an academic institution. However,
the trend has been towards the freezing or reduction of government budget
allocation for social services including education and a demand from the
government for the state universities and colleges to raise their own funds.
But state universities and colleges, based on May
2003 data from the Commission on Higher Education, comprise only 7.51% of
the total number of tertiary level educational institutions. Even if we
include the local universities/colleges(LUCs) and other state managed
tertiary level schools, the percentage share of these is only 10%.
Moreover, of the three million students at the tertiary level for AY
2004-2005, only 26% can be accommodated by state universities and
colleges(Bulletin, June 6, 2004)
In sum, tertiary education in the Philippines is
in the main already privatized. The pressure on UP and other state
universities and colleges to raise their own funds and to go into commercial
ventures is another indication of the abandonment of the state and is
essentially in consonance with the recommendations of the 1999 World Bank
and Asian Development Bank report, Philippine Education for the 21st
Century: The 1998 Philippine Education Sector Study(PESS). The ideal system
of education, according to PESS, is a "privately provided system,
selectively supported with public funding." It recommends that the
"central government should limit its activities to those that cannot be
covered well by the private sector" and criticizes the budget increase for
secondary and tertiary education during the 80s. According to the study,
such increase "has had the predictable effect of undermining the private
sector's share of the education market. Indeed, the sheer size of the
private sector is an indication that the private market was satisfying quite
well the demand for education at these levels, at least in urban areas."
Hence, our opposition to the section on giving the
power to the Board of Regents to enter into securitization, joint ventures
and outright sale is an opposition to the continuing trend of the state
abandonment of its obligation to provide affordable and quality services to
the people,including education.
Special Attention to the Research, Extension and
Professional Staff or REPS
There are over 1000 research, extension and
professional staff in the University. They are librarians, research
personnel, extension personnel with many having master degrees and PhDs.
Previously called the academic non-teaching staff or ANTS, the REPS as
non-teaching academic personnel have academic eligibilities which are in
many cases at par with the faculty. The section on Appointment Requisites
(Section 20 of SB 221, Section 18 of SB 1066 and Section 21 of SB 1106) of
three of the four bills gives recognition to the REPS by exempting them,
together with the faculty from any Civil Service examination or regulation
as requisite to their appointment.
However, this same recognition of REPS as a
distinct sector of the University is not accorded even in the limited
addition to the composition of the Board of Regents in all the proposed
bills. The REPS have no separate Regent as the proposed Staff Regent
represents both the administrative (non-academic personnel) and the academic
non-teaching personnel.
Finally, we would like to put on record that the
two substantive content of SB 221, SB 566, SB 1066 and SB 1106: the
retention of the Board of Regents and the provision on giving the BOR the
power to enter into commercial ventures which we oppose are intertwined. It
would be easier for a small body such as the Board of Regents to accelerate
the commercialization and privatization of the University of the
Philippines.