Published July 5, 2020,
10:00 PM by Myrna M. Velasco
Disgruntled Iloilo City
power consumers are elevating their concern to President Rodrigo Duterte given
the worsening brownouts that already reached 326 hours in the past four months
since the assumption of MORE Electric and Power Corporation as a service
provider in the area.
In a press briefing
over the weekend, Iloilo City consumers said their power supply woes are
further aggravated by recent bill shocks.
In addition, they are
also appealing to the Supreme Court, believing that a favorable decision from
the country’s highest judicial body could finally resolve the legal scuffle
between MORE and former provider Panay Electric Company (PECO) — as the
protracted legal battle served as the root cause of the incessant power
interruptions that have been impacting adversely on their quality of life and
taking toll on economic opportunities for the area.
Ruperto Supeña,
chairman of the Koalisyon Bantay Kuryente, said “Iloilo is dying and needs the
help of President Duterte. We hope that you will enter the picture and you give
our problem a finality here. We hope that this will be acted upon by the
President.”
He added, “We do
not want our kababayans to continue suffering. We don’t want our agony to
continue and our economy to deteriorate…that’s our ultimate move,” emphasizing
that their strategy is to gather thousands of signatures before sending formal
petition to the Office of the President.
Congress is also being
urged to take a second look at the franchise granted to MORE Power, with Supeña
stressing “there’s still chance for Congress to change its course on the grant
of the franchise,” given the myriad of complaints from consumers now on the
firm’s “mediocre” service provision.
He further blamed
MORE Power for disruptions in local businesses. “Their long and frequent
brownouts are killing our businesses and livelihoods, and they are disrupting
our essential medical services. We need the President to intervene, so he can
keep a watchful eye on those who would exploit us.”
In particular, he
noted that coronavirus testing at the Iloilo Doctors Hospital had been affected
fuelling fears that infections in the city may exacerbate that could put their
lockdown status back to the stricter enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) level.
Jon Mikel Lorenzo
Afzelius, corporate communications and external affairs officer of PECO, laid
down in a public hearing in Iloilo City, that city suffered 326 hours in total
darkness in the past four months, double the outage duration during the PECO
within the same timeline last year.
Primarily, he reckoned
that the approximate 13-hour power outage that happened on June 20 in
Mandurriao on the eve of Father’s Day celebration, should have been addressed
in a duration of just one-hour if the servicing utility can genuinely lean on
technical competence and expertise in power distribution of the company’s organization.
On the exorbitant
billings, KBK Coordinator Jose Allen Aquino said they are currently collating
all complaints from affected consumers – including those on electric bills that
doubled as well as the questionable billing gaps – and will submit these as
pieces of evidence to the Energy Regulatory Commission and Congress, so they
can be prompted to carry out serious investigations on the matter.
He cited the case of
Iloilo City National High School which February billing cycle prior to the
Covid-19 lockdown was at P200,000, but at the height of the ECQ when there had
been no classes, the school’s electric bill shoot up to P350,000. The consumer
group said there was no explanation provided by MORE Power yet on this
particular billing case.
On the bill shocks
being the sharp focus of investigations by the House and Senate Committees on
Energy and with the prime attention also given by the ERC and the Department of
Energy (DOE), Supeña queried that while “Meralco is being investigated by the
government, why is our situation not being looked into?”
Iloilo City Mayor Jerry
Trenas, in a recent Council hearing, has taken MORE Power to task, telling the
company that “the people of Iloilo deserve more, and MORE Power promised more —
and we are still waiting for MORE to give us the more.”
Councilors of Iloilo
also took turn in reprimanding MORE Power on the series of brownouts happening
in the area, with Councilor Alan Zaldivar stating “our clear message to MORE is
that, you are not ready to give quality service to Iloilo City.”
In the view of
Councilor Ely Estante, it could have been better for MORE Power if it just have
invested on its own facilities rather than opt for expropriation of the assets
owned by PECO.
Councilor Ed
Peñaredondo similarly sought firm commitment from MORE Power on immediate
improvements that it can implement the technical incompetence demonstrated by
its current service, as he emphasized that this is already taking toll on the
flow of investments in the city.
Among all infrastructure assets and key facilities in that metropolis, he noted that water and power are top concerns, but this cannot be concretized squarely if the on-and-off service provision of MORE Power will persist. “Sometimes you meet the supply requirements, sometimes you do not supply. So, if that is the case, we cannot convince our investors to come over,” he said.
Among all infrastructure assets and key facilities in that metropolis, he noted that water and power are top concerns, but this cannot be concretized squarely if the on-and-off service provision of MORE Power will persist. “Sometimes you meet the supply requirements, sometimes you do not supply. So, if that is the case, we cannot convince our investors to come over,” he said.
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