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Sugar groups call for hike in SIDA funding to P5B 

PSMA Exec. Director Jesus L. Barrera, PANAYFED president Danilo A. Abelita, NFSP president Enrique D. Rojas and CONFED president Aurelio J. Valderrama Jr. (l-r)  sign the joint position paper calling for amendments to the Sugarcane Industry Development Act.* 

Sugar producers and millers are calling for  an increase in the annual Sugar Industry Development Act (SIDA) funding from P2 billion  to P5 billion. 

The House  Committee on Agriculture and Food is holding a public hearing on the proposed amendments  to Republic Act 10659 (SIDA of 2015) at  Nature’s Village Resort in Talisay City, Negros Occidental,   on  Thursday morning, August 8. 

The sugar producers and millers, in a press statement Wednesday, August 7, said their joint proposal contains measures to improve farm productivity and mill efficiency in response to the call of President  Ferdinand Marcos Jr. to boost productivity in the sugar industry. 

The measures call for amendments to the SIDA of 2015, particularly the increase in the annual SIDA funding from P2 billion to P5 billion, the creation of a dedicated Sugar Regulatory Administration-SIDA Program Management Structure focused on the implementation of SIDA-mandated programs, and the institutionalization of the Stakeholders’ Consultative Assembly (SCA) and Sugar Industry Development Council (SIDC). 

Aurelio J. Valderrama Jr. of the Confederation of Sugar Producers’ Associations (CONFED), Enrique D. Rojas of the National Federation of Sugarcane Planters (NFSP), Danilo A. Abelita of the Panay Federation of Sugarcane Farmers (PANAYFED) and  Jesus L. Barrera of the Philippine Sugar Millers Association (PSMA) signed the joint position paper, which they will submit to the congressmen, senators and agriculture officials. 

The CONFED, NFSP, PANAYFED and PSMA represent the substantial majority of sugar producers and millers in the country, their press statement said. 

The SIDA mandates an annual allocation of P2 billion for the sugar industry’s productivity improvement programs, as follows:  50 percent for infrastructure support, 15 percent for grants to block farms, 15 percent for socialized credit for farm support and farm mechanization programs, 15 percent  for research and development, capability building and technology transfer activities, and 5 percent for scholarship grants. 

Under the group’s proposal, the annual SIDA fund should be increased to P5 billion, broken down as follows:  40 percent  (P2 billion) for farm productivity improvement, 20 percent  (P1 billion) for mill efficiency improvement, 20 percent  (P1 billion) for infrastructure support (farm-to-market roads and  bridges), and 20 percent  (P1 billion) for cane-transport systems upgrading. 

The producers also pushed for the creation of a full-time SRA-SIDA Program Management Structure to enable efficient, timely and effective implementation of programs with clear lines of responsibility. 

Program Management Teams headed by Project Management Officers under an SRA-SIDA Program Coordinator should  be hired to manage the different program components, they said. 

The SRA administrator should  perform overall supervision of SIDA programs, and submit required performance or accomplishment reports to concerned agencies, they added. 

The group is also proposing the institutionalization of the Stakeholders’ Consultative Assembly (SCA) and Sugar Industry Development Council (SIDC).  

The SCA should  be composed of SRA-accredited representatives from participating and/or concerned sectors, and shall be consulted on the revision of SIDA Implementing Rules and Regulations and the promulgation of policies and regulations directly affecting the industry, they said. 

They also said the SIDC should  be composed of industry experts and reputable stakeholder institutions, and consultants when allowed and necessary, under the direction of SRA, to review and assist in the formulation of plans, programs, policies and industry development strategies.* 

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