Senate to look into glitch in midterm polls
By Charmaine A. Tadalan , Reporter
THE Senate committee on electoral reforms and people鈥檚 participation will hold an oversight hearing on June 4 to look into technical issues that hounded Monday鈥檚 midterm elections.
Committee chairman and reelectionist Senator Aquilino L. Pimentel III, who currently places 10th in the ongoing election count, confirmed the scheduled hearing in a phone message, adding that his panel鈥檚 counterparts at the House of Representatives will also conduct their inquiry.
Senator Panfilo M. Lacson affirmed this in a phone message to reporters. 鈥淲e have to conduct the inquiry as soon as we resume our session,鈥 he said.
Mr. Lacson also said he will take up, among other things, the glitch in the transparency server which led to a seven-hour delay in the transmission of election results on Monday night.
鈥淐omelec has to address certain issues that I myself will raise 鈥 among which are: (1) why did they shift from a simultaneous transmission of data at the precinct level as practiced before(,) to a transparency server which…as we found out caused the stoppage of the dissemination of data for some 7 hours,鈥 Mr. Lacson said.
He added: 鈥(2) who controls the transparency server; (3) what is the purpose of the transparency server in the first place except to act as a traffic controller; and (4) why did they procure low quality SD (secure-digital memory) cards…etc.鈥
Initial results transmitted from the transparency server to media organizations and PPCRV (Parish Pastoral Council for Responsible Voting) were posted at around 6:00 p.m. on Monday but did not change until 1:00 a.m.
Senate Majority Leader Juan Miguel F. Zubiri said his colleagues will hold a caucus on Monday on this and other matters. 鈥淢eron kaming (We have a) Majority caucus on Monday at 12 to discuss important issues,鈥 he told reporters in a phone message. 鈥淚t would probably be discussed there.鈥
鈥楽UPPLIER SHOULD NOT BE PAID鈥
For her part, Commissioner Ma. Rowena Amelia V. Guanzon of the Commission on Elections told reporters on Wednesday: 鈥淭his is my personal view, na itong supplier ng SD cards hindi namin babayaran ng buo at ipapasuri ko 鈥榶an 鈥榶ung proseso sa pag bidding at saka pag deliver nila ng cards kasi 鈥榶an po talaga 鈥榶ung naging culprit.鈥 (This is my personal view, that this supplier (S1 Technologies Incorporated) of SD cards should not be paid by us in full and I will have this looked into, the bidding process and the delivery of the cards, because that is really the culprit).
As of Tuesday, 1,665 SD cards out of more than 55,000 used were reported defective, compared with the 120 memory cards reported defective in the 2016 general elections.
Comelec Chairman Sheriff A. Abas told reporters on Tuesday the poll body is reviewing its supply contracts to determine possible contract violations.
The PPCRV, for its part, said it wants to check the results in the central server received by the Comelec.
PPCRV Chairperson Myla C. Villanueva told reporters on Wednesday, 鈥淕usto po namin makita ang central server data kasi 鈥榶ung central server data i-ma-match namin sa transparency server data (We want to…match the central server data with the transparency server data). We wanted to make sure that it鈥檚 the same.鈥
鈥淲e want the count, all the results to match,鈥 she added.
Ms. Villanueva said PPCRV has asked the Comelec for the 鈥渓ogs鈥 after the transmission of votes in the transparency server to determine the cause of the glitch. 鈥淚 will insist on the logs…It is right to wait. Ayaw natin guluhin 鈥榶ung transparency server kasi tinatanggap pa 鈥榶ung data (We do not want to disrupt the transparency server because data are still coming in). Pero (But) I don鈥檛 see any reason why we will not get it. I鈥檓 sure gusto rin nilang malaman kung ano 鈥榶ung nangyari (I鈥檓 sure they also want to know what happened), but definitely we want to know. It鈥檚 a way of auditing.鈥
Regarding the Comelec鈥檚 agreement with the National Printing Office (NPO), over the printing of voter information sheets in which NPO reportedly tapped the Holy Family Printing Corporation, Ms. Guanzon said, 鈥淭hat鈥檚 against COA (Commission on Audit) rules, 鈥榶补苍驳 subcontracting. Kaya nga sila ang pinili namin para wala na kaming bidding.鈥 (Subcontracting is against COA rules. That鈥檚 why they [NPO] were selected, so there鈥檒l be no more bidding).
She said the Comelec spent P4 per voter information sheet or an estimated total of P200 million for the over 61 million printed. 鈥 with Gillian M. Cortez and Vann Marlo M. Villegas


