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DBM confident of funding CCT, military pensions

THE BUDGET department is confident that it can find the money for the increase in cash transfers (CCT) and pension overhaul for uniformed personnel next year, but added it needs to be selective with project proposals from government agencies due to “funding pressures” in 2019.
The cash transfers and pension commitments are “part of the 2019 budget; we are going to take that into account. We are confident we have enough revenue to cover the increase easily,” Budget Secretary Benjamin E. Diokno said during a briefing yesterday in Mandaluyong City.
Mr. Diokno noted that the government’s tax collecting agencies have been exceeding their targets in recent months.
Budget Memorandum No. 130, signed by Mr. Diokno on April 13, included a Tier 2 Budget Call — a notice to government agencies for new project proposals. The budget for Tier 2 items is P362.3 billion in 2019.
According to the memorandum, project proposals may need to compete for resources in the 2019 budget due to “funding pressures” including the P12-billion Tax Reform Cash Transfer Project, which calls for the P200 monthly transfer to beneficiaries to be raised to P300; the P33.9 billion for pensions for uniformed personnel following the lifting of pension indexation next year; and the P60.1-billion transfer of coconut levy funds to farmers upon ratification of the Coconut Farmers and Industry Development Act.
“We can do it. We actually have a funding forecast until the end of President (Rodrigo R.) Duterte’s term,” he said.
Funding requirements for uniformed personnel pensions have been growing in recent years because the pensions rise in step with the compensation paid to active-duty staff. Mr. Duterte signed in January Joint Resolution No. 1, authorizing the increase in base pay and incentives for soldiers and policemen.
The government suspended indexation this year.
Mr. Diokno said that the government “will not suspend indexation,” next year, but will proceed with a higher payout for pensioners to catch up with counterparts in active service.
“That’s our commitment to the pensioners,” he said.
The Department of Budget and Management has set a P3.78-trillion expenditure program for 2019, up 12.2% from this year’s actual budget. — Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

BoI-approved investments up; PEZA declines in first quarter

INVESTMENT pledges approved by two government agencies in the first quarter rose 53.2% year on year to P182.83 billion, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said.
Proposals approved by the Board of Investments (BoI) accounted for 83.2% or P152.12 billion, up sharply from P67.97 billion a year earlier.
The remaining P30.72 billion worth of investment proposals was approved by the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA), down 40.2% from a year earlier.
Filipino investors accounted for 92.5% of the approved investment proposals or P169.08 billion, up 73.2% from a year earlier. The foreign investors’ approved pledges worth P13.75 billion were down 36.5% from a year earlier.
The electricity, gas, steam and air-conditioning supply segment had approved proposals worth P104.35 billion, accounting for 57.1% of the total and sharply higher than the year-earlier total of P4.8 billion.
Real estate investment proposals accounted for P27.24 billion or 14.9%; followed by manufacturing at P23.85 billion or 13%; water supply, sewerage, and waste management at P13.87 billion or 7.6%, and transportation and storage at P7.01 billion or 3.8%.
Japan was the biggest source of the approved foreign investment, with P7.86 billion or 57.2% of the total, up sharply from P0.61 billion a year earlier.
The UK was the origin of P1.54 billion worth of investment proposals, followed by the Netherlands at P0.88 billion; Singapore at P0.56 billion; and the US at P0.45 billion.
The Philippines has seven Investment Promotion Agencies authorized to grant tax and non-tax incentives to investors putting up businesses or expanding existing ones in the country.
Aside from the BoI and PEZA, the other IPAs are Clark Development Corp., Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority, Authority of the Freeport Area of Bataan, BoI-Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BoI-ARMM) and Cagayan Economic Zone Authority. — Janina C. Lim

New tender for Vietnam, Thai rice set for Friday

THE National Food Authority (NFA) will conduct another tender for the import of 250,000 metric tons (MT) of rice on Friday, after the failure of a bid conducted last week.
In a statement issued Wednesday, NFA Administrator Jason Laureano Y. Aquino said the Friday date was set to give suppliers from Vietnam and Thailand more time.
“We would have wanted to do this earlier, but representatives of the two supplier countries asked for time to prepare the necessary documentation and consult with their respective authorities,” he added.
The NFA will be issuing new reference prices for 15% broken and 25% broken rice to be more in line with the prevailing world market price on the day before the bid and accounting for the peso exchange rate.
The agency also said it will adjust the delivery period for 100,000 metric tons (MT) of 25% broken rice to not later than May 31, with another 100,000 MT to arrive by June 15.
The remaining 50,000 MT which should be 15% broken rice should arrive no later than June 30.
Mr. Aquino said that the agency is “optimistic that the second round will succeed.”
The Philippines has memoranda of agreement with Thailand and Vietnam for government-to-government rice procurement. The shipment is intended to replenish NFA’s rice buffer stock.
Last week, the NFA set a reference price of $483.63 per MT for 15% broken rice and $474.18 per MT for 25% broken rice.
Thailand did not bid to supply 15% broken rice and asked $530 per MT for 25% broken rice. Vietnam asked for $530 per MT for 15% broken and $521 per MT for 25% broken.
The NFA will conduct another open tender for other countries and private traders to procure another 250,000 MT of rice for use as buffer stock in the three months to September, when rice supply tends to dry up.
The tender will be divided into nine lots, and the shipments will be directed to 14 ports nationwide.
A pre-bidding conference will be held on Tuesday while the deadline for bid submissions is May 22. — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

Trade dep’t seeking to tap ex-Soviet nations’ GSP

THE Philippines is hoping to boost trade with another nontraditional market — the Eurasian Economic Union (EAU) — by accessing that bloc’s generalized system of preferences (GSP).
“To enhance market access, the Philippines proposed to engage in dialogue the Eurasian Economic Commission (EEC),” the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said in a statement on Wednesday, and asked for information on the EAU market and regulations.
The EAU’s original members are Belarus, Kazakhstan and the Russian Federation. It later admitted Armenia and Kyrgyzstan. The EEC conducts negotiations for the EAU.
The bloc grants GSP status to selected products from developing countries.
In a recent meeting with Russia, the Philippines sought Moscow’s assistance in tapping its GSP scheme.
The two countries met on April 19 in Manila to convene their Joint Commission on Trade and Economic Cooperation, a mechanism to improve bilateral economic relations.
During the meeting, both sides agreed to disclose the final results of their veterinary missions to audit Philippine seafood and seafood products and Russian meat products.
“The audit was undertaken to ensure the safety of consumers against diseases and contamination from these export products,” the DTI said.
Both countries gave updates on business arrangements initiated during the official visit to Russia of President Rodrigo R. Duterte last year.
The initial deals agreed during the visit involved engineering and design services for steel structures and pipeline construction, among others.
The Philippines has been exploring nontraditional markets like Russia as part of the government’s shift to an independent foreign policy. — Janina C. Lim

Technology and tax

We live in a time of automation, paperless transactions, online shopping and online booking services, and there are no signs the development of such technologies will ever slow down. The key to the popularity of information technology in everyday life is convenience. People seize every opportunity to make life more comfortable and to accomplish their duties expeditiously and effortlessly. Another benefit is reduced cost. Items sold online can be cheaper because of lower selling and administrative overhead.
With the digital economy and e-commerce exponentially growing, our government needs to focus on how to regulate this industry, including how to collect the correct taxes from such businesses and to ensure that they meet tax compliance obligations.
Over the years, the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) has been gradually issuing tax rulings, revenue regulations, and memorandum circulars to clarify the tax treatment of persons engaged in online transactions and e-commerce, as follows:
THE SALE OF PRODUCTS IN DIGITAL OR ELECTRONIC FORMAT
In at least one ruling in 2008, the sale of e-books, e-journals and the like, which appear at regular intervals, available for subscription and sale at fixed prices, and are not principally devoted to the publication of paid advertisements, were considered exempt from value-added tax (VAT). These materials were treated akin to the sale of books, newspapers, magazines, reviews or bulletins exempt from VAT under Section 109(R) of the Tax Code.
The ruling mentioned that the relevant provision of the Tax Code must be read in conjunction with Sections 5(f) and 7 of Republic Act No. (RA) 8792, otherwise known as the Electronic Commerce Act of 2000. Section 5(f) defines the term “electronic document,” while Section 7 states that electronic documents shall have the same legal effect, validity or enforceability as any other documents.
RA 8792 clearly allows for documents/messages/information that are electronically written, capable of being sent, received, recorded, stored, downloaded, transmitted, retrieved and finally reduced into printed form, to be considered as equivalent to print media. Based on this, e-books, e-journals and online library resources were considered equivalent to printed media; the importation and sale of which are exempt from VAT under Section 109(R) of the Tax Code.
However, in subsequent rulings, the BIR used a strict interpretation of Section 109(R). It employed the governing principle in taxation that tax exemptions must be strictly construed against the taxpayer and liberally in favor of the taxing authority.
According to these rulings, the term “book” only applies to printed materials in hard copy. Thus, an electronic copy of any publication does not come within the purview of the terms “books, newspapers, periodicals, magazines, reviews or bulletins” for VAT exemption purposes.
In fact, the BIR issued Revenue Memorandum Circular (RMC) No. 75-2012, providing that books and similar resources pertain to printed materials in hard copy. They do not include digital or electronic copies, online library sources, CDs and software.
ONLINE BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS
In RMC 55-2013, the BIR clarified that taxpayers engaged in online business transactions (such as online shopping/retailing, intermediary service, advertisement and auction) are on the same footing as physical stores. Hence, they are required to: register the business; secure Authority to Print invoices/receipts; register and maintain books of accounts for use in business; issue registered invoice/receipt for each transaction; withhold and remit tax to the BIR as required by law; file the applicable tax returns/information returns/other compliance reports and pay taxes on time; and keep and make accounting records available anytime for inspection and verification by the BIR.
PERSONS ENGAGED IN THE BUSINESS OF LAND TRANSPORTATION
Because of the popularity of ride-hailing/sharing apps, the BIR issued RMC 70-2015 to cover the tax incidence of so-called transport network companies (TNCs).
The tax treatment provided in the RMC is quite general. The TNC and its partners may be considered common carriers if they are granted a Certificate of Public Convenience. Hence, they are subject to the 3% common carriers tax. Otherwise, they will be classified as land transportation service contractors subject to 12% VAT, or if they so elect, to the 3% percentage tax if the gross annual sales or receipts do not exceed P1,919,500 (now, P3 million).
In the same RMC, whoever receives the payment should issue official receipts (i.e., upon payment of the passenger and upon the distribution of revenue between the TNC and the vehicle owner).
Since then, no other tax guidance has been released by the BIR covering e-commerce or online businesses; neither has there been any jurisprudence on the matter. Considering that there are several other types of e-commerce, such as app-based purchases, online gaming and cloud services, it would be good if more recent rules/guidelines are issued governing the taxation of this industry. These businesses develop and use sophisticated technological innovations. It is possible that these may result in certain complexities in taxation which should be evaluated by the BIR. Otherwise, it may stand to lose billions in uncollected taxes.
On a related note, the reliance of businesses on paper documents for keeping their tax and accounting records is not due to the lack of innovation from businesses in the Philippines (as evidenced by the flurry of innovative ideas we see being pitched at local incubators), but is driven largely by conventional policies from the BIR that still require hard copy documentation. For instance, although the idea of e-invoicing was introduced in 2003, no subsequent guidelines were issued to clarify its implementation. Given the irreversible reality of e-commerce, it is high time for the BIR to complete what it started.
Fortunately, technology-driven documentation guidelines were included in the recently enacted Package 1 of the tax reform program (TRAIN law) which requires the issuance of electronic receipts/invoices by large taxpayers and those engaged in export. Implementation is projected to happen within five years from the effectivity of the law and upon the establishment of a system capable of storing and processing the required data.
Without sounding pessimistic, however, I have reservations on the projected timeline of five years. Considering the wide scope of e-commerce, budgetary/technical constraints can stand in the way of building the required electronic infrastructure to encompass the target objectives; which means, the project may not materialize even in 2023. Nonetheless, the initiative is a positive sign for modernization.
While it is essential for the BIR to impose controls and ensure that records are reliable, complete and accurate, it is equally important for the government to cope with technological changes that stand to benefit both the taxpayers in terms of ease of compliance, and the BIR in terms of curbing tax leakages due to improper taxation of technology-driven businesses and more efficient and effective tax audits.
In this day and age, the imperative is clear. Technological evolution is the way to go.
The views or opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of Isla Lipana & Co. The content is for general information purposes only, and should not be used as a substitute for specific advice.
 
Samantha Joy H. Oreta is a senior manager at the Tax Services Department of Isla Lipana & Co., the Philippine member firm of the PwC network.
+63 (2) 845-2728
samantha.joy.h.oreta@ph.pwc.com.

Duterte son cleared from smuggling raps

THE OFFICE of the Ombudsman in a statement Wednesday said it has cleared former Davao City Vice-Mayor Paolo Z. Duterte as well as lawyer Manases R. Carpio, from charges in connection with illegal drugs worth P6.4-billion drug smuggled in May last year.
The presidential son and his brother-in-law, Mr. Carpio, were dragged into that controversy after they were named in a Senate inquiry in which they were eventually obliged to take part in September last year. Mr. Carpio is the husband of Davao Mayor Sara Z. Duterte.
On the other hand, the Special Panel of Fact-Finding Investigators recommended the filing of criminal charges against former Bureau of Customs (BoC) Commissioner Nicanor Faeldon, Import Assessment Service (IAS) Director Milo Maestrecampo, Risk Management Office (RMO) Chief Larribert Hilario and Accounts Management Office (AMO) Chief Mary Grace Tecson-Malabed, for violation of Section 3(e) of the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act (Republic Act No. 3019).
The panel also recommended the filing of administrative charges of Grave Misconduct against Mr. Faeldon and BoC officials Joel Pinawin and Oliver Valiente, as well as Gross Neglect of Duty and Grave Misconduct against Ms. Tecson-Malabed and Mr. Maestrecampo.
Mr. Faeldon was further slapped with additional charges of Usurpation of Official Functions (Article 177 of the Revised Penal Code), violation of Section 32 of the Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002 (Republic Act No. 9165), and violation of Section 3(a) of the anti-graft law.
BoC Director Neil Anthony Estrella was also charged with violation of Section 3(a), the Ombudsman said in its statement.
The statement noted that Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales took no part in the fact-finding investigation. Ms. Morales is an aunt of Mr. Carpio.
Preliminary investigation is underway on the criminal and administrative charges.

Trust in Robredo falls in SWS survey

NET TRUST in Vice-President Maria Leonor G. Robredo fell 13 points and one grade to a “good” +39, according to the latest poll by the Social Weather Stations. The First Quarter 2018 Social Weather Survey, conducted from March 23-27, found 58% of adult Filipinos with much trust, 23% undecided, and 18% with little trust in Ms. Robredo, yielding the +39 net trust which compares with her “very good” +52 (66% much trust, 14% little trust) in December last year.
The SWS terminology for Net Trust Ratings is as follows: +70 and above, “excellent”; +50 to +69, “very good”; +30 to +49, “good”; +10 to +29, “moderate”; +9 to -9, “neutral”; -10 to -29, “poor”; -30 to -49, “bad”; -50 to -69, “very bad”; -70 and below, “execrable.”
Ms. Robredo’s net trust rating remained “moderate” in Metro Manila (+23) and “very good” in the Visayas (+56), although both ratings dropped by 4 and 8 points, respectively.
However, net trust in Ms. Robredo fell by one grade from “very good” to “good” in Balance Luzon (down 15 points to +41) and Mindanao (down 18 points to +32).
Ms. Robredo’s net trust fell 4 points and one grade to “good” +48 among elementary graduates.

Among non-elementary graduates, it fell 20 points and one grade to “good” +46.
Her net trust among high school graduates also fell one grade as well as 16 points to “good” +35.
Among college graduates, Ms. Robredo’s net trust fell two grades and 14 points to “moderate” +29.
The noncommissioned survey was conducted using face-to-face interviews of 1,200 adults nationwide, with 300 each in Metro Manila, Balance Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao, and sampling error margins of ±3% for national percentages, and ±6% each for the said areas.
Ms. Robredo’s camp was sought for comment as of this writing.

Poll shows 64% of Filipinos opposed to Charter Change

MAJORITY OR 64% of Filipinos are not in favor of charter change, a poll released Wednesday by Pulse Asia showed.
The March 2018 Pulse Asia nationwide survey found that only 23% favored that move, a key initiative in President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s program of government, while 13% were found ambivalent on the matter.
In comparison with a 2016 survey also by Pulse Asia, overall public support for constitutional amendments declined by 14 points to 23% in March 2018. Those against constituted 64%, a 20-point rise from 2016’s 44%.
In Mindanao, Mr. Duterte’s home region, 58% of respondents were against constitutional amendments whereas 24% supported it. The 58% against compares with 2016’s 36%.
Polled as well about their knowledge of the 1987 Constitution, 25% of respondents indicated 25% of respondents nationwide indicated a sufficient to a great deal of knowledge, as opposed to 75% who had little to no knowledge of the country’s basic law.
Twenty-nine percent (29%) said they had a sufficient to a great deal of knowledge on the proposed federal system of government, while 71% said they had little to no knowledge of that system as being pushed by the Duterte administration.
On the other hand, 66% of Filipinos opposed the proposal to adopt a federal government; while 27% of the population supported it. The survey noted 36% of respondents who opposed the move maintained they are not in favor of the shift regardless of the timing of such change, while 30% said they are not in favor of changing it now, but may be open to it in the future.
The survey also showed only 49% of Filipinos are aware of proposals to change the Constitution.
The noncommissioned survey was conducted from March 23 to 28, using face-to-face interviews.
The Consultative Committee on Charter Change welcomed the survey results. “The survey was taken at a time when the Consultative Committee is still formulating the proposed revisions. Once we are done and the proposed revisions are presented to the public, we are confident that the public perception will change,” the body said in a statement.
For his part, Presidential spokesman Harry L. Roque, Jr. said: “The Duterte administration is thus working tirelessly in promoting to the public the workings of a federal set-up, a campaign promise of the President to bring government closer to the people.”
Sought for comment, Senate President Aquilino L. Pimentel III said in part, “I acknowledge that people still need to know more about federalism as the word has remained a new and still unfamiliar concept to them.”
House Speaker Pantaleon D. Alvarez in a statement said: “The survey finding that 3 out of every 4 Filipinos, or 75 percent, have little/almost none/no knowledge at all about the 1987 Philippine Constitution tells us very clearly that we must come together and intensify the information, education and communication campaigns throughout the country to tell our people that we must revise the three-decade-old Constitution to make it responsive to changing times.”
And opposition senator Francis N. Pangilinan, who heads the Senate committee on constitutional amendments and revision of codes, said in a statement: “This lack of support for Cha-cha and federalism even in Mindanao, which is supposed to benefit from this push and is reflected in the survey results, simply means that rushing Charter change and forcing it upon the citizens is not the way to go.” — Charmaine A. Tadalan and Camille A. Aguinaldo

Palace defends: Duterte did not promise to end all forms of contractualization

PRESIDENT RODRIGO R. Duterte’s executive order (EO) signed on Labor Day, May 1, does not grant the labor unions’ wish to have total prohibition on all forms of contractualization by establishing direct hiring as the general norm of employment.
Presidential Spokesperson Harry L. Roque, Jr. defended that the President never promised to end all forms of contractualization.
“His promise was to end ‘endo’ (end-of-contract scheme). He did not promise to end all forms of contractualization, even if you review all of his speeches during the 2016 elections,” Mr. Roque, speaking in Filipino, said in his interview with Radyo Pilipinas on Wednesday morning.
Endo has been a longstanding practice that denies workers permanent employment and benefits by deliberately terminating or not renewing their contract before becoming eligible for such status.
Rep. Carlos Isagani T. Zarate of the militant party-list Bayan Muna, in a statement, said that the President’s EO is “useless as its general provisions are already stipulated in the Labor Code.”
Section 2 of EO No. 51, which the Palace released on Wednesday, May 2, states that “contracting or subcontracting, when undertaken to circumvent the worker’s right to security of tenure, self-organization and collective bargaining, and peaceful concerted activities pursuant to the 1987 Philippine Constitution, is hereby strictly prohibited.”
Under the draft EO submitted to the Palace by labor groups, a copy of which was sent by the Associated Labor Unions-Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (ALU-TUCP) to the media, Section 2 on the “Prohibition Against Contracting or Subcontracting” includes the line: “Consistent with the policy of this government, direct hiring of the employee by the principal employers shall be the general norm in employment relations.”
It adds: “Security of tenure is hereby strengthened by the general norm of direct hiring.”
Both the draft and signed versions define Security of Tenure as “the right of employees not to be dismissed or removed without just or authorized cause and observance of procedural due process consistent with the constitution, labor code of the Philippines as amended, and prevailing jurisprudence.”
Mr. Zarate said what is needed now is to issue a policy to stop all “forms of job contracting,” as promised by Mr. Duterte during the 2016 presidential campaign.
SENATE
Meanwhile, Senate President Aquilino L. Pimentel III vowed to have the proposed ENDO law as the Senate’s priority measure when Congress resumes sessions in mid-May.
“The law on endo will have priority once Congress resumes its session on May 15, 2018. Ending endo will empower our workers and improve their quality of life,” he said in a statement issued late Tuesday.
“For my part, I will make sure that a law on the matter will be passed as soon as possible to make the gains of workers permanent,” he added.
Senate Bill No. 1116 or the proposed End of Endo or Contractualization Act of 2016 seeks to amend the Labor Code of the Philippines and prohibit labor-only and manpower contracting. It simplifies the classification of employees to regular and probationary and lists unfair labor practices in a contracting or subcontracting arrangement.
Its counterpart version at the House of Representatives was approved on third and final reading last January 29. — Arjay L. Balinbin and Camille A. Aguinaldo

DoJ starts probe on SC IT consultant; Senate urged to assert impeachment power over Sereno

THE DEPARTMENT of Justice (DoJ) on Wednesday, May 2, began its investigation on the Supreme Court’s (SC) allegedly anomalous hiring of information and technology (IT) consultant Helen Perez-Macasaet.
The case stems from the complaint filed by lawyer Lorenzo G. Gadon, who claims that only two out of Ms. Perez-Macasaet’s eight contracts with the SC passed through the Bids and Awards Committee (BAC), while the rest were handled and renewed by Chief Justice Maria Lourdes P.A. Sereno.
The impeachment case against Ms. Sereno before Congress was also filed by Mr. Gadon.
Ms. Perez-Macasaet, who was represented by her legal counsel, was given by Assistant State Prosecutor Gilmarie Fe S. Pacamarra until May 9 to submit her counter-affidavit.
The co-respondents in the case, lawyers Ma. Lourdes B. Oliveros and Michael Ocampo of the SC BAC, submitted their counter-affidavits through their legal counsels.
The state prosecutor gave the complainant until May 17 to submit his reply on the counter-affidavits. A rejoinder is set on May 29.
SERENO SUPPORT
In a related development, advocacy group Coalition for Justice (CFJ) on Wednesday urged the Senate to assert its exclusive power to impeach government officials and pass a resolution asking the Supreme Court to suspend its quo warranto case against Ms. Sereno.
“We ask the Senate to call for a special session before May 11 and/or to pass a resolution asking the Supreme Court to suspend its Quo Warranto proceedings and await the resolution of the impeachment,” the group said in a letter addressed to senators, citing reports that the SC plans to decide on the case on May 11.
CFJ said the May 11 special session of the SC was meant “to pre-empt and render moot the transmittal of the articles of impeachment to Congress.”
The letter to senators also contained a petition signed by over 300 individuals denouncing the quo warranto case, including former vice president Teofisto T. Guingona, Jr., Senators Francis N. Pangilinan and Antonio F. Trillanes IV, Makabayan lawmakers, human rights advocates, artists, and leaders of civil society groups. — Dane Angelo M. Enerio and Camille A. Aguinaldo

Bangusan crowd

A big crowd gather at the J. De Venecia highway on April 30 for the annual street party that caps Dagupan City’s Bangus Festival. Mayor Belen T. Fernandez said participants are continuously “growing bigger and bigger every year!”

Van check

Vans are lined up for checking along a highway in Sta. Rosa, Laguna, as authorities crack down on unlicensed vehicles operating as public utility. The Department of Transportation reported that as of 8:45 a.m., May 2, 17 colorum vehicles were apprehended by the Inter-Agency Council for Traffic (i-ACT).