Full Disclosure Policy (FDP) Compliance of the Davao del Norte Province at the FDP Portal

Glenne Berja Lagura, Marilou Delfin Junsay, Edgardo M Santos

Abstract


The study evaluated the availability of the financial transactions and procurement reports in the government portal of all the 11 Local Government Units (LGUs) under the Province of Davao del Norte which specifically determined the extent of its implementation of e-Governance particularly in implementing the Full Disclosure Policy (FDP) as a practice of transparency. In particular, the assessment was done to verify if the following reports were uploaded in the portal: (a) Budget Reports; (b) Procurement Reports; (c) Special Purpose Fund Reports. Fourteen (14) relevant reports were queried at the portal as accessed at http://fdps.blgs.gov.ph/ from year 2012 to 2013. Results were initially obtained through an assessment done by the researchers in checking into the availability of the inquired reports at the portal. Preliminary findings were triangulated as a group of MPA students verified the initial results. Quantitative tools such as frequency counts, means and percentages were employed to know the available reports. Findings showed that there was an increase of compliance percentage for the LGUs of Asuncion, New Corella, San Isidro and Sto. Tomas while there was a noticeably slight decrease of compliance for the rest of the LGUs. Moreover, Budget Reports were the most complied while Procurement Reports were the least complied. The study concludes that while all LGUs have utilized the portal through submission of the reports, other factors affecting prompt and complete compliance and distance and income classification should be looked into. It is suggested in the study that each LGU should maximize the adoption and utilization of the government portal as a medium in promoting transparency and accountability as a practice of good governance. 


Full Text:

PDF

References


UN e-Government Survey (2010). The State of e-Government around the World (Part 2). Retrieved date: August 7, 2014 at https://docs.google.com

Ong, C.Z (2012). Jesse’s Crown Jewel: Full Disclosure Policy. Retrieved August 7, 2014 from Manila Bulletin Publishing Corporation Web site: http:// mb.com.ph/articles/370486/jesse-s-crown-jewel-full-disclosure-policy#. UM_2F3fheSo

You and Lee (2011). Budget Transparency and Participation- Korean Case Study

Philippine Development Plan (2011-2016)

Davao Region Regional Development Research Agenda (2011-2016). Part 3: Governance Priority Research Agenda, pg. 33.

National Higher Education Research Agenda – 2 (2009 – 2018)

Farhan, H. and Sanderson, M. (2007). Measuring the Quality of E_Government Folksonomy. Retrieved January 18,2013 from Department of Information Studies University of Sheffield Web site: http://www.seg.rmit.edu.au/mark/.../my.../e-Government_Folksonomy.pdf

Lallana, E. et al.(2002). e-Government in the Philippines: Benchmarking Against Global Practices. Retrieved January 17, 2013 from Digital Philippines Web site: http://www.digitalphilippines.org

Oates, B. (2003). The Potential Contribution of ICTs to the Political Process. Electronic Journal of e-Government Volume 1 Issue 1, 2003(pp 31-39). Retrieved January 8, 2012, from http://www.ejeg.com/issue/download.html?idArticle=216

Demissie, A., et. al (2010). A Comparative Study of Contents of e-Government Service Websites of Middle East and North African (MENA) Countries. C.G Reddick (ed.), Comparative e-Government, Integrated Series in Information. Retrieved March 12, 2013 from University of Tennessee Web site: http://works.bepress.com/devendra_potnis/8/

Phillips, D. 2001, Online public relations, Kogan Page Limited, London.PIA Press Release (2011, October 20). City of Tagum Lauded for Excellent Governance

Obama (2009). Open Government Initiative. Retrieved date March 13,2013 at www.whitehouse/gov/open

Hill, Hermann (n.d). Citizen Participation and New Perspectives in the Multimedia Era. Retrieved date March 13,2013 at www.dhv-speyer.de/hill/Publikationen/Citizen.pdf

Epal and Linden (2010). PTF Case Study Series No. 20. Organizing and Sustaining Civil Society-led Procurement in the Philippines from Partnership for Transparency Fund.

Cordon, J.C. (2010). Budget Transparency Limited to Few People. Retrieved December 18,2012 from Manila Times cited by the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines Web site: http://www.tucp.org.ph/news/index.php/2010/10/budget-transparency-limited-to-few-people/

Ong, C.Z (2012). Jesse’s Crown Jewel: Full Disclosure Policy. Retrieved December 18,2012 from Manila Bulletin Publishing Corporation Web site: http://mb.com.ph/articles/370486/jesse-s-crown-jewel-full-disclosure-policy#.UM_2F3fheSo

You and Lee (2011). Budget Transparency and Participation- Korean Case Study

Epal and Linden (2010). PTF Case Study Series No. 20. Organizing and Sustaining Civil Society-led Procurement in the Philippines from Partnership for Transparency Fund.

Affisco, J., & Soliman, K. (2006). e-Government: A strategic operations management frameworkfor service delivery. Business Process Management Journal, 12, 13–21.

Al-adawi, Z., Yousafzai, S., & Pallister, J. (2005). Conceptual model of citizen adoption of e-government. The Second International Conference on Innovationsin Information Technology. Retrieved March 11, 2013, from http://www.itinnovations.ae/iit005/proceedings/articles/G_6_IIT05-Al-Adawi.pdf

Irvin, R. and Stansbury, J. (2004). Citizen participation in Decision Making: Is it Worth the Effort?

Reddick, C (2004). Citizen Interaction with e-Government: From the Streets to Servers?. Government Information Quarterly 22 (2005) 38-57. Retrieved March 13, 2013 from Department of Public Administration, The University of Texas Web site: https://docs.google.com




DOI: https://doi.org/10.5296/jpag.v7i3.11638

Copyright (c) 2017 Glenne Berja Lagura, Marilou Delfin Junsay, Edgardo M Santos

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

Journal of Public Administration and Governance  ISSN 2161-7104

Email: jpag@macrothink.org

Copyright © Macrothink Institute

To make sure that you can receive messages from us, please add the 'macrothink.org' domain to your e-mail 'safe list'. If you do not receive e-mail in your 'inbox', check your 'bulk mail' or 'junk mail' folders. 

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------