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The Legislative
Process: The Local Government Code |
Our present
legal system places great faith and reliance on a system of decentralized
and localized governance. Since 1987, many laws have been passed
concerning the environment that recognize the role of local government
units (LGU’s) in the proper implementation and enforcement
of the law. Through the power of local legislation granted by
the Local Government Code, LGUs can regulate and control many
of the activities that directly impact on the coastal area.
CHAPTER
III
Local Legislation
SECTION 48. Local Legislative Power. — Local legislative power
shall be exercised by the sangguniang panlalawigan for the province;
the sangguniang panlungsod for the city; the sangguniang bayan for
the municipality; and the sangguniang barangay for the barangay.
SECTION 49. Presiding Officer. — (a) The vice-governor shall
be the presiding officer of the sangguniang panlalawigan; the city
vice-mayor, of the sangguniang panlungsod; the municipal vice-mayor,
of the sangguniang bayan; and the punong barangay, of the sangguniang
barangay. The presiding officer shall vote only to break a tie.
(b) In the event of the inability of the regular presiding officer
to preside at a sanggunian session, the members present and constituting
a quorum shall elect from among themselves a temporary presiding
officer. He shall certify within ten (10) days from the passage
of ordinances enacted and resolutions adopted by the sanggunian
in the session over which he temporarily presided.
SECTION 50. Internal Rules of Procedure. — (a) On the first
regular session following the election of its members and within
ninety (90) days thereafter, the sanggunian concerned shall adopt
or update its existing rules of procedure.
(b) The rules of procedure shall provided for the following:
(1)
The organization of the sanggunian and the election of its officers
as well as the creation of standing committees which shall include,
but shall not be limited to, the committees on appropriations,
women and family, human rights, youth and sports development,
environmental protection, and cooperatives; the general jurisdiction
of each committee; and the election of the chairman and members
of each committee;
(2) The order and calendar of business for each session;
(3) The legislative process;
(4) The parliamentary procedures which include the conduct of
members during sessions;
(5) The discipline of members for disorderly behavior and absences
without justifiable cause for four (4) consecutive sessions, for
which they may be censured, reprimanded, or excluded from the
session, suspended for not more than sixty (60) days, or expelled:
Provided, That the penalty of suspension or expulsion shall require
the concurrence of at least two-thirds (2/3) vote of all the sanggunian
members: Provided, further, That a member convicted by final judgment
to imprisonment of at least one (1) year for any crime involving
moral turpitude shall be automatically expelled from the sanggunian;
and
(6) Such other rules as the sanggunian may adopt.
SECTION
52. Sessions. — (a) On the first day of the session immediately
following the election of its members, the sanggunian shall, by resolution,
fix the day, time, and place of its regular sessions. The minimum
numbers of regular sessions shall be once a week for the sangguniang
panlalawigan, sangguniang panlungsod, and sangguniang bayan, and twice
a month for the sangguniang barangay.
(b) When public interest so demands, special sessions may be called
by the local chief executive or by a majority of the members of the
sanggunian.
(c) All sanggunian sessions shall be open to the public unless a closed-door
session is ordered by an affirmative vote of a majority of the members
present, there being a quorum, in the public interest or for reasons
of security, decency, or morality. No two (2) sessions, regular or
special, may be held in a single day.
(d) In the case of special sessions of the sanggunian, a written notice
to the members shall be served personally at the member's usual place
of residence at least twenty-four (24) hours before the special session
is held.
Unless otherwise concurred in by two-thirds (2/3) vote of the sanggunian
members present, there being a quorum, no other matters may be considered
at a special session except those stated in the notice.
(e) Each sanggunian shall keep a journal and record of its proceedings
which may be published upon resolution of the sanggunian concerned.
SECTION 53. Quorum. — (a) A majority of all the members of the
sanggunian who have been elected and qualified shall constitute a
quorum to transact official business. Should a question of quorum
be raised during a session, the presiding officer shall immediately
proceed to call the roll of the members and thereafter announce the
results.
(b) Where there is no quorum, the presiding officer may declare a
recess until such time as a quorum is constituted, or a majority of
the members present may adjourn from day to day and may compel the
immediate attendance of any member absent without justifiable cause
by designating a member of the sanggunian to be assisted by a member
or members of the police force assigned in the territorial jurisdiction
of the local government unit concerned, to arrest the absent member
and present him at the session.
(c) If there is still no quorum despite the enforcement of the immediately
preceding subsection, no business shall be transacted. The presiding
officer, upon proper motion duly approved by the members present,
shall then declare the session adjourned for lack of quorum.
SECTION 54. Approval of Ordinances. — (a) Every ordinance enacted
by the sangguniang panlalawigan, sangguniang panlungsod, or sangguniang
bayan shall be presented to the provincial governor or city or municipal
mayor, as the case may be. If the local chief executive concerned
approves the same, he shall affix his signature on each and every
page thereof; otherwise, he shall veto it and return the same with
his objections to the sanggunian, which may proceed to reconsider
the same. The sanggunian concerned may override the veto of the local
chief executive by two-thirds (2/3) vote of all its members, thereby
making the ordinance or resolution effective for all legal intents
and purposes.
(b) The veto shall be communicated by the local chief executive concerned
to the sanggunian within fifteen (15) days in the case of a province,
and ten (10) days in the case of a city or a municipality; otherwise,
the ordinance shall be deemed approved as if he had signed it.
(c) Ordinances enacted by the sangguniang barangay shall, upon approval
by the majority of all its members, be signed by the punong barangay.
SECTION 55. Veto Power of the Local Chief Executive. — (a) The
local chief executive may veto any ordinance of the sanggunian panlalawigan,
sangguniang panlungsod, or sanggunian bayan on the ground that it
is ultra vires or prejudicial to the public welfare, stating his reasons
therefor in writing.
(b) The local chief executive, except the punong barangay, shall have
the power to veto any particular item or items of an appropriations
ordinance, an ordinance or resolution adopting a local development
plan and public investment program, or an ordinance directing the
payment of money or creating liability. In such a case, the veto shall
not affect the item or items which are not objected to. The vetoed
item or items shall not take effect unless the sanggunian overrides
the veto in the manner herein provided; otherwise, the item or items
in the appropriations ordinance of the previous year corresponding
to those vetoed, if any, shall be deemed reenacted.
(c) The local chief executive may veto an ordinance or resolution
only once. The sanggunian may override the veto of the local chief
executive concerned by two-thirds (2/3) vote of all its members, thereby
making the ordinance effective even without the approval of the local
chief executive concerned.
SECTION 56. Review of Component City and Municipal Ordinances or Resolutions
by the Sangguniang Panlalawigan. — (a) Within three (3) days
after approval, the secretary to the sanggunian panlungsod or sangguniang
bayan shall forward to the sangguniang panlalawigan for review, copies
of approved ordinances and the resolutions approving the local development
plans and public investment programs formulated by the local development
councils.
(b) Within thirty (30) days after the receipt of copies of such ordinances
and resolutions, the sangguniang panlalawigan shall examine the documents
or transmit them to the provincial attorney, or if there be none,
to the provincial prosecutor for prompt examination. The provincial
attorney or provincial prosecutor shall, within a period of ten (10)
days from receipt of the documents, inform the sangguniang panlalawigan
in writing of his comments or recommendations, which may be considered
by the sangguniang panlalawigan in making its decision.
(c) If the sangguniang panlalawigan finds that such an ordinance or
resolution is beyond the power conferred upon the sangguniang panlungsod
or sangguniang bayan concerned, it shall declare such ordinance or
resolution invalid in whole or in part. The sangguniang panlalawigan
shall enter its action in the minutes and shall advise the corresponding
city or municipal authorities of the action it has taken.
(d) If no action has been taken by the sangguniang panlalawigan within
thirty (30) days after submission of such an ordinance or resolution,
the same shall be presumed consistent with law and therefore valid.
SECTION 57. Review of Barangay Ordinances by the Sangguniang Panlungsod
or Sangguniang Bayan. — (a) Within ten (10) days after its enactment,
the sangguniang barangay shall furnish copies of all barangay ordinances
to the sangguniang panlungsod or sangguniang bayan concerned for review
as to whether the ordinance is consistent with law and city or municipal
ordinances.
(b) If the sangguniang panlungsod or sangguniang bayan, as the case
may be, fails to take action on barangay ordinances within thirty
(30) days from receipt thereof, the same shall be deemed approved.
(c) If the sangguniang panlungsod or sangguniang bayan, as the case
may be, finds the barangay ordinances inconsistent with law or city
or municipal ordinances, the sanggunian concerned shall, within thirty
(30) days from receipt thereof, return the same with its comments
and recommendations to the sangguniang barangay concerned for adjustment,
amendment, or modification; in which case, the effectivity of the
barangay ordinance is suspended until such time as the revision called
for is effected.
SECTION 58. Enforcement of Disapproved Ordinances or Resolutions.
— Any attempt to enforce any ordinance or any resolution approving
the local development plan and public investment program, after the
disapproval thereof, shall be sufficient ground for the suspension
or dismissal of the official or employee concerned.
SECTION 59. Effectivity of Ordinances or Resolutions. — (a)
Unless otherwise stated in the ordinance or the resolution approving
the local development plan and public investment program, the same
shall take effect after ten (10) days from the date a copy thereof
is posted in a bulletin board at the entrance of the provincial capitol
or city, municipal, or barangay hall, as the case may be, and in at
least two (2) other conspicuous places in the local government unit
concerned.
(b) The secretary to the sanggunian concerned shall cause the posting
of an ordinance or resolution in the bulletin board at the entrance
of the provincial capitol and the city, municipal, or barangay hall
in at least two (2) conspicuous places in the local government unit
concerned not later than five (5) days after approval thereof.
The text of the ordinance or resolution shall be disseminated and
posted in Filipino or English and in the language understood by the
majority of the people in the local government unit concerned, and
the secretary to the sanggunian shall record such fact in a book kept
for the purpose, stating the dates of approval and posting.
(c) The gist of all ordinances with penal sanctions shall be published
in a newspaper of general circulation within the province where the
local legislative body concerned belongs. In the absence of any newspaper
of general circulation within the province, posting of such ordinances
shall be made in all municipalities and cities of the province where
the sanggunian of origin is situated.
(d) In the case of highly urbanized and independent component cities,
the main features of the ordinance or resolution duly enacted or adopted
shall, in addition to being posted, be published once in a local newspaper
of general circulation within the city: Provided, That in the absence
thereof the ordinance or resolution shall be published in any newspaper
of general circulation.
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