It seems that the main point is to see who among our top officials are living beyond their means and are presumably wallowing in the fruits of corruption.
The report adds that the President was reacting to the last survey of the London-based Transparency International that rated the Philippines 11th most corrupt among 102 nations assessed.
This jaded observer thinks nothing will come out of this latest act of desperation to turn things around.
It is actually easy to make a graft case against most corrupt officials. The simple rule is that any wealth that is manifestly out of proportion to an officials legitimate income is presumed to be ill-gotten. It is subject to forfeiture and makes the official criminally liable.
But then the lawyers will step in and lecture to us about due process, as if there was also due process when grafters in government merrily made their dirty pile.
If due process gets in the way, the President can just focus first on her Cabinet and fire anybody who fails the test. If its high drama that GMA wants to jolt this country to take notice, she can start the purge with her official family.
Pardon our saying so, but the lumbering Presidential Anti-Graft Commission may need help. Why doesnt the President turn over the chore to a citizens group composed of respected citizens? The PAGC, in fairness, should be all right, but it is part of the bureaucracy that is under investigation.
The President should inject insulin into her administration by getting rid of the deadwood, misfits and the corrupt in the higher echelons of government and announcing a new working team in the new year.
So when former Sen. Juan Ponce Enrile, it seems to us, confused HHV and LHV in relation to BTU, we thought it normal. But the confusion should be immediately clarified as it could mislead the Senate committee listening to him and the general public concerned with the cost of electricity.
The terms BTU, HHV and LHV stand, respectively, for: "British thermal unit"; for "higher heating value"; and "lower heating value." As applied to power plants, BTU is the amount of heat needed to produce a kilowatt-hour (kwh) of electricity. Depending on its efficiency, a power plant may have either a higher or lower heating value.
We may define efficiency as the plants generating the maximum power (electricity) at minimum expense of means and with minimum wear and tear.
We got the impression from him that a power facility like Sta. Rita is more efficient if its BTU registers HHV (higher). And, conversely, it would be less efficiency it the BTU registers LHV (lower).
The fact is that the opposite is true. If a power plant needs or uses less heat to generate the same amount of electricity, it is more efficient. If it requires or uses more heat to produce the same amount of electricity, it is less efficient. It may be that Enriles message was just garbled in the transmission.
Sta. Rita, by the way, is distinguished as the countrys most efficient plant today. It earned the distinction on the strength of its most recent heat rate test, conducted last July, wherein it registered 6,577 BTU per kwh lower than its guaranteed 6,859 BTU performance.
Per manual, the ideal heat rate to produce one kwh of electricity is 3,413 BTU. Thats much lower than Sta. Ritas rating, but that does not take anything away from its distinction as the countrys most efficient power plant so far.
Enrile refused to attend subsequent hearings, saying in so many words that he has said his piece and its now up to the Senate committee chaired by Sen. Joker Arroyo to dig further on the issues.
The recent debacle at the Busan Games is being cited for Philippine sports own need for a "regime change," a turnover of leadership and an overhaul of the PBA game plan. How this "regime change" would play out depends largely on who will take over the helm as PBA chairman.
The PBA board of governors convened last week to receive the nomination of candidates for the post to be vacated by Emilio "Jun" Bernardino.
Bernardino, who will retire at the end of the year as the longest-serving commissioner of the league, is back from the 14thAsian Games in Korea. He has not given hints of his leaving the cage scene for good.
With Gamboa, Narvasa, and Eala on the short list, the consolation is that at least the top PBA post will stay in the PBA family.
Gamboa, who retired as Shells vice president for corporate communications last year, served as chairman of the PBA board two years ago and is touted to be a hands-on man. Being a good communicator, he can be an asset in bringing the message of the PBA to its many publics.
His name cropped up some months back as a contender, being an old hand in running the league together with Bernardinos office.
On the other hand, Narvasa was with the Shell Turbo Chargers and had also coached Purefoods. The former Ateneo player, now a banker and president of the Basketball Coaches Association of the Philippines, can bring in management expertise.
Meanwhile, the 39-year-old Eala, an Ateneo law graduate, is a long-time anchorman with Viva Sports. The youngest of the three contenders, Eala could inject just the right dose of youthful vigor into the league.
Members of the PBA Board of Governors are expected to rush the screening and selection of the new commissioner before the end of the month since planning for the 2003 season should start early.
The vetting comes on the heels of the opening of the All-Filipino Cup, the leagues final tournament for the year, which has opened at the Araneta Coliseum.