Joker Arroyo kin tied to VP Binay in graft probe
‘No evidence’
Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV asked the subcommittee to invite Arroyo to the next subcommittee hearing. He also asked the Commission on Audit to conduct a special audit of the transactions of the joint venture.
In his statement, Binay’s spokesman Quicho said Bondal has no evidence to prove his allegations against Arroyo.
“Bondal, former Vice Mayor Ernesto Mercado, and their cohorts have been given a license by Senator Trillanes and his companions to malign the names of private individuals without so much as offering a shred of evidence to prove their allegations,” Quicho said.
The Binay camp released a timeline/fact sheet on the establishment of UMak’s College of Nursing that covered resolutions and ordinances of Makati City.
According to the fact sheet from the Binay camp, the Makati government on May 21, 2003, issued a resolution authorizing Binay to enter into a joint venture with STI for the setting up of an Institute of Nursing at UMak in 2003 and 2004. The joint venture company would offer a bachelor’s degree in nursing, a master’s degree in nursing, informatics and healthcare degrees.
Article continues after this advertisementThe PHEI was incorporated and registered with the SEC on March 19, 2004. The UMak and STI were to own 40 percent of the company, it said.
Article continues after this advertisement“The balance of 20 percent supposed to be owned by STI was instead taken up by Dr. Jack Arroyo, at that time the president of American Eye Clinic, so that the UMak nursing graduates will have a chance to do their RLE and OJT stints in a modern, cutting-edge healthcare institution,” the fact sheet stated.
Based on the PHEI corporate structure, the STI/Doctors Group was to have a 60-percent share and equity of P7.5 million for the building of the nursing school, while Makati’s UMak share of 40 percent from rentals of existing facilities was to be converted into equity, until the 40-percent share was paid up.
Quicho said the funds due to the city of Makati were all accounted for and that the joint-venture project has generated P262 million worth of financial benefits to the city.
“Makati has benefited immensely from the joint venture. It has earned P42 million in dividends and around P70 million in rental, utilities and general education faculty fees,” he said.
No Makati funds used
Disputing the statements made by Trillanes on Monday, UMak president Tomas Lopez on Tuesday said Makati government funds were never used to subsidize the PHEI joint venture’s nursing school.
Lopez added that Makati residents are given full tuition and scholarships. He said the total value of scholarships granted to Makati residents from 2004 have already amounted to P140 million.
“Contrary to the claim of Senator Trillanes, the city does not pay any subsidy to the joint venture for the scholarships of the Makati students. On the contrary, the joint venture, to date, has paid the city P42 million in dividends and over P70 million in rental, utility fees, and the provision of general education faculty services to the nursing students,” Lopez said.
He added the nursing school charges fees of about P27,000 to non-Makati residents only.
On Monday, Trillanes claimed that Binay owned shares in the UMak College of Nursing and that he earned from it. The senator said Binay’s name was in the SEC documents. He said Binay was involved in a conflict-of-interest situation, graft and tax evasion because of this.
He claimed that Binay earned from the scholarships that were funded and paid for by city funds which he said goes straight to the Vice President’s pockets as he is a part owner of the school.
Not a stockholder
Lopez said Binay was not a stockholder in the joint venture which manages the nursing school.
“Vice President Binay ceased to be an officer and director of PHEI after his term as mayor ended in 2010. He received no financial benefits whatsoever while he was chair and director of PHEI,” the UMak president added.
As founding chair and incorporator, Binay represented the 40-percent shareholdings owned by the city while the remaining 60 percent were held by STI, Lopez explained.
“The city government of Makati did not infuse cash for its equity in the joint venture. Instead, rental payments were not charged to the joint venture until the city’s 40-percent equity, amounting to P5 million, had been covered,” he added.
Lopez said the university was proud of the joint venture as one of their initiatives in promoting public-private sector partnerships and which has generated at least P262 million in financial benefits to the city of Makati and its beneficiaries.
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