Wish Illegal Number Game Jueteng
Around
By Mortz C. Ortigoza
Vice mayors in Pangasinan these days are anxious as
the filing of the certificate of candidacy (CoC) will be on Thursday because
they are financially handicapped to the rush of solicitors who will exploit
their candidacy, a vice mayor of a Central Pangasinan town lamented.
“The filing will be on October 11-12 to 15-17 this
month and election will be on May 13, 2019. Can you imagine the waves of
indigents, public employees like teachers, folks in the barangays who need
monies for their medical problems, Christmas programs, fiestas and basketball
uniforms,” he
told this paper.
The number two chief executive of a first class
burgeoning town cited that he and his fellow vice mayors would have no money
problem if illegal game jueteng still exist.
“When President Rodrigo Duterte became president in
June 2016 jueteng was stopped on the following year and it was replaced by the
small town lottery (STL), then our ingreso from the maintainer of jueteng
stopped, too,” he
deplored.
Many vice mayors in these Pangasinan towns were
recipients of the P25 thousand a week average during the heyday of the illegal
number games that were drawn under the acacia tree to dupe the poor gullible
bettors.
A former supervisor of jueteng in a town in the
mammoth province narrated:
“Noong sa jueteng pa ako kami-kami na lang ang
nagsasabi kung ano ang mananalo na numero”.
He said some jueteng supervisors draw 37 balls with
number in a container rattan three times a day under the acacia tree.
The vice mayor even referred to his predecessor who
regularly dole-outs monies to some media men to lambast on their radio programs
and newspapers the then sitting mayor because of his ambition to become the
chief elected executive.
After a year of this brinkmanship, the mayor asked the
maintainer, who is under his watch, to stop the five thousand pesos a week
payola to the critical vice mayor so those media men undermining him would stop
too because of the absence of the incentives.
A mayor in the Fourth Congressional District of the
forty four towns and four cities’ province told this newspaper that the three
percent of the STL is inadequate compared to those given by the operators of
illegal number games Jueteng and Meridien Vista Gaming Corporation (MVGC) Jai
Alai when Gloria Arroyo and Benigno Aquion III, respectively, were presidents
of the country.
“Noong Jueteng P600 thousand ako monthly or P20,000 a
day ako. Sa akin lang iyon, iba din sa vice mayor na 1.5 percent at chief of
police na 1.5 percent. Noong Meridiane na P500 thousand ako o P17,000.
Iba rin iyong kay vice mayor and chief of police”.
This huge amount given to the mayor of this almost
100,000 populated first class town was usually given to indigents, supporters,
and several media men from the more than 200 practitioners and those bogus who
bring their families and friends when they go to his house or office.
He said when STL replaced Jai-Alai, the vice mayor was
at a loss because he have numbers of mistresses and children out of wedlock he
sends to school.
“I gave him the other week ten thousand pesos because
he came to me sad and I pitied him,” the mayor said.
In July, 2017, a vice mayor told this paper that his
mayor cheated him on the bookish given by a maintainer to his mayor.
But with the suspected shenanigan being done by the
mayors, he said he and his fellow vice mayors are in a bind presently because
they could not give anything to indigents who go to their houses and offices
for alms.
He explained that during that time his 1.5% supposedly
translates to more than P200, 000 monthly where the mayor deducted P90, 000 for
the nine municipal councilors who received P10, 000 each monthly while he was
given P50, 000.
“The mayor was already cheating me by more than
P60, 000 monthly but I kept mum on it,” he deplored.
Meanwhile, many newspaper publishers even complained
that the vice mayors become greedier on the publication of ordinances on their
newspapers by asking half of the seven thousand pesos per page or one hundred
to two hundred thousand pesos of the thick pages’ ordinances like tax.
“It was just fine if we did not compete on the strict
process of the bidding at the BAC (Bids & Awards Committee). Sa bidding
pababaan kami ng presyo. Then the secretary of the Sanggunian (legislative
council) would come to us and tell us that the vice mayor wanted to get half of
the awarded amount as his S.O.P”, ang kapal talaga ng mukha”.
The female publisher said she could understand that
the vice mayor could only pocket the appropriation intended to the publication
but he should not be greedy because they won it in a legitimate bidding
process.
“We know that the vice mayor’s clout to pocket
government funds is incomparable to the mayors who can have a cut of up to
twenty percent to a government project, but he must not imposed half of the
awarded amount to us since we paid too for the ink, paper, taxes, and our
workers in running our printing press”.
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