PHILIPPINE LAWS AGAINST GRAFT & CORRUPTION
This page features the full text of Republic Act No. 6713 Code of
Conduct and Ethical Standards for Public Officials and Employees.
REPUBLIC ACT NO. 6713
AN ACT ESTABLISHING A
CODE OF CONDUCT AND ETHICAL STANDARDS FOR PUBLIC OFFICIALS AND
EMPLOYEES, TO UPHOLD THE TIME-HONORED PRINCIPLE OF PUBLIC OFFICE BEING A
PUBLIC TRUST, GRANTING INCENTIVES AND REWARDS FOR EXEMPLARY SERVICE,
ENUMERATING PROHIBITED ACTS AND TRANSACTIONS AND PROVIDING PENALTIES FOR
VIOLATIONS THEREOF AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES
SECTION 1. Title. — This Act
shall be known as the "Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for
Public Officials and Employees."
SECTION 2.
Declaration of Policies. — It is the policy of the State to
promote a high standard of ethics in public service. Public officials
and employees shall at all times be accountable to the people and shall
discharge their duties with utmost responsibility, integrity,
competence, and loyalty, act with patriotism and justice, lead modest
lives, and uphold public interest over personal interest.
SECTION 3.
Definition of Terms. — As used in this Act, the term:
(a)
"Government" includes the National Government, the local
governments, and all other instrumentalities, agencies or branches of
the Republic of the Philippines including government-owned or controlled
corporations, and their subsidiaries.
(b)
"Public Officials" includes elective and appointive officials and
employees, permanent or temporary, whether in the career or non-career
service, including military and police personnel, whether or not they
receive compensation, regardless of amount.
(c)
"Gift" refers to a thing or a right to dispose of gratuitously, or
any act or liberality, in favor of another who accepts it, and shall
include a simulated sale or an ostensibly onerous disposition thereof.
It shall not include an unsolicited gift of nominal or insignificant
value not given in anticipation of, or in exchange for, a favor from a
public official or employee.
(d)
"Receiving any gift" includes the act of accepting directly or
indirectly, a gift from a person other than a member of his family or
relative as defined in this Act, even on the occasion of a family
celebration or national festivity like Christmas, if the value of the
gift is neither nominal nor insignificant, or the gift is given in
anticipation of, or in exchange for, a favor.
(e)
"Loan" covers both simple loan and commodatum as well as
guarantees, financing arrangements or accommodations intended to ensure
its approval.
(f)
"Substantial stockholder" means any person who owns, directly or
indirectly, shares of stock sufficient to elect a director of a
corporation. This term shall also apply to the parties to a voting
trust.
(g)
"Family of public officials or employees" means their spouses and
unmarried children under eighteen (18) years of age.
(h)
"Person" includes natural and juridical persons unless the context
indicates otherwise.
(i)
"Conflict of interest" arises when a public official or employee is
a member of a board, an officer, or a substantial stockholder of a
private corporation or owner or has a substantial interest in a
business, and the interest of such corporation or business, or his
rights or duties therein, may be opposed to or affected by the faithful
performance of official duty.
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(j)
"Divestment" is the transfer of title or disposal of interest in
property by voluntarily, completely and actually depriving or
dispossessing oneself of his right or title to it in favor of a person
or persons other than his spouse and relatives as defined in this Act.
(k)
"Relatives" refers to any and all persons related to a public
official or employee within the fourth civil degree of consanguinity or
affinity, including bilas, inso and balae.
SECTION 4.
Norms of Conduct of Public Officials and Employees. — (A) Every
public official and employee shall observe the following as standards of
personal conduct in the discharge and execution of official duties:
(a)
Commitment to public interest. — Public officials and employees
shall always uphold the public interest over and above personal
interest. All government resources and powers of their respective
offices must be employed and used efficiently, effectively, honestly and
economically, particularly to avoid wastage in public funds and
revenues.
(b)
Professionalism. — Public officials and employees shall perform and
discharge their duties with the highest degree of excellence,
professionalism, intelligence and skill. They shall enter public service
with utmost devotion and dedication to duty. They shall endeavor to
discourage wrong perceptions of their roles as dispensers or peddlers of
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(c)
Justness and sincerity. — Public officials and employees shall
remain true to the people at all times. They must act with justness and
sincerity and shall not discriminate against anyone, especially the poor
and the underprivileged. They shall at all times respect the rights of
others, and shall refrain from doing acts contrary to law, good morals,
good customs, public policy, public order, public safety and public
interest. They shall not dispense or extend undue favors on account of
their office to their relatives whether by consanguinity or affinity
except with respect to appointments of such relatives to positions
considered strictly confidential or as members of their personal staff
whose terms are coterminous with theirs.
(d)
Political neutrality. — Public officials and employees shall provide
service to everyone without unfair discrimination and regardless of
party affiliation or preference.
(e)
Responsiveness to the public. — Public officials and employees shall
extend prompt, courteous, and adequate service to the public. Unless
otherwise provided by law or when required by the public interest,
public officials and employees shall provide information of their
policies and procedures in clear and understandable language, ensure
openness of information, public consultations and hearings whenever
appropriate, encourage suggestions, simplify and systematize policy,
rules and procedures, avoid red tape and develop an understanding and
appreciation of the socio-economic conditions prevailing in the country,
especially in the depressed rural and urban areas.
(f)
Nationalism and patriotism. — Public officials and employees shall
at all times be loyal to the Republic and to the Filipino people,
promote the use of locally produced goods, resources and technology and
encourage appreciation and pride of country and people. They shall
endeavor to maintain and defend Philippine sovereignty against foreign
intrusion.
(g)
Commitment to democracy. — Public officials and employees shall
commit themselves to the democratic way of life and values, maintain the
principle of public accountability, and manifest by deeds the supremacy
of civilian authority over the military. They shall at all times uphold
the Constitution and put loyalty to country above loyalty to persons or
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(h)
Simple living. — Public officials and employees and their families
shall lead modest lives appropriate to their positions and income. They
shall not indulge in extravagant or ostentatious display of wealth in
any form.
(B) The
Civil Service Commission shall adopt positive measures to promote (1)
observance of these standards including the dissemination of information
programs and workshops authorizing merit increases beyond regular
progression steps, to a limited number of employees recognized by their
office colleagues to be outstanding in their observance of ethical
standards; and (2) continuing research and experimentation on measures
which provide positive motivation to public officials and employees in
raising the general level of observance of these standards.
SECTION 5.
Duties of Public Officials and Employees. — In the performance of
their duties, all public officials and employees are under obligation
to:
(a) Act
promptly on letters and requests. — All public officials and
employees shall, within fifteen (15) working days from receipt thereof,
respond to letters, telegrams or other means of communications sent by
the public. The reply must contain the action taken on the request.
(b)
Submit annual performance reports. — All heads or other responsible
officers of offices and agencies of the government and of
government-owned or controlled corporations shall, within forty-five
(45) working days from the end of the year, render a performance report
of the agency or office or corporation concerned. Such report shall be
open and available to the public within regular office hours.
(c)
Process documents and papers expeditiously. — All official papers
and documents must be processed and completed within a reasonable time
from the preparation thereof and must contain, as far as practicable,
not more than three (3) signatories therein. In the absence of duly
authorized signatories, the official next-in-rank or officer in charge
shall sign for and in their behalf.
(d) Act
immediately on the public's personal transactions. — All public
officials and employees must attend to anyone who wants to avail himself
of the services of their offices and must, at all times, act promptly
and expeditiously.
(e) Make
documents accessible to the public. — All public documents must be
made accessible to, and readily available for inspection by, the public
within reasonable working hours.
SECTION 6.
System of Incentives and Rewards. — A system of annual incentives
and rewards is hereby established in order to motivate and inspire
public servants to uphold the highest standards of ethics. For this
purpose, a Committee on Awards to Outstanding Public Officials and
Employees is hereby created composed of the following: the Ombudsman and
Chairman of the Civil Service Commission as Co-Chairmen, and the
Chairman of the Commission on Audit, and two government employees to be
appointed by the President, as members.
It shall be
the task of this Committee to conduct a periodic, continuing review of
the performance of public officials and employees, in all the branches
and agencies of Government and establish a system of annual incentives
and rewards to the end that due recognition is given to public officials
and employees of outstanding merit on the basis of the standards set
forth in this Act.
The
conferment of awards shall take into account, among other things, the
following: the years of service and the quality and consistency of
performance, the obscurity of the position, the level of salary, the
unique and exemplary quality of a certain achievement, and the risks or
temptations inherent in the work. Incentives and rewards to government
officials and employees of the year to be announced in public ceremonies
honoring them may take the form of bonuses, citations, directorships in
government-owned or controlled corporations, local and foreign
scholarship grants, paid vacations and the like. They shall likewise be
automatically promoted to the next higher position with the commensurate
salary suitable to their qualifications. In case there is no next higher
position or it is not vacant, said position shall be included in the
budget of the office in the next General Appropriations Act. The
Committee on Awards shall adopt its own rules to govern the conduct of
its activities.
SECTION 7.
Prohibited Acts and Transactions. — In addition to acts and
omissions of public officials and employees now prescribed in the
Constitution and existing laws, the following shall constitute
prohibited acts and transactions of any public official and employee and
are hereby declared to be unlawful:
(a)
Financial and material interest. — Public officials and employees
shall not, directly or indirectly, have any financial or material
interest in any transaction requiring the approval of their office.
(b)
Outside employment and other activities related thereto. — Public
officials and employees during their incumbency shall not:
(1) Own, control, manage or accept
employment as officer, employee, consultant, counsel, broker, agent,
trustee or nominee in any private enterprise regulated, supervised or
licensed by their office unless expressly allowed by law;
(2) Engage in the private practice of
their profession unless authorized by the Constitution or law,
provided, that such practice will not conflict or tend to conflict
with their official functions; or
(3) Recommend any person to any
position in a private enterprise which has a regular or pending
official transaction with their office.
These prohibitions shall continue to
apply for a period of one (1) year after resignation, retirement, or
separation from public office, except in the case of subparagraph (b)
(2) above, but the professional concerned cannot practice his
profession in connection with any matter before the office he used to
be with, in which case the one-year prohibition shall likewise apply.
(c)
Disclosure and/or misuse of confidential information. —
Public
officials and employees shall not use or divulge, confidential or
classified information officially known to them by reason of their
office and not made available to the public, either:
(1) To further their private
interests, or give undue advantage to anyone; or
(2) To prejudice the public interest.
(d) Solicitation or acceptance of
gifts. — Public officials and employees shall not solicit or
accept, directly or indirectly, any gift, gratuity, favor,
entertainment, loan or anything of monetary value from any person in
the course of their official duties or in connection with any
operation being regulated by, or any transaction which may be affected
by the functions of their office.
As to gifts
or grants from foreign governments, the Congress consents to:
(i) The acceptance and retention by a
public official or employee of a gift of nominal value tendered and
received as a souvenir or mark of courtesy;
(ii) The acceptance by a public
official or employee of a gift in the nature of a scholarship or
fellowship grant or medical treatment; or
(iii) The acceptance by a public
official or employee of travel grants or expenses for travel taking
place entirely outside the Philippine (such as allowances,
transportation, food, and lodging) of more than nominal value if such
acceptance is appropriate or consistent with the interests of the
Philippines, and permitted by the head of office, branch or agency to
which he belongs.
The Ombudsman shall prescribe such
regulations as may be necessary to carry out the purpose of this
subsection, including pertinent reporting and disclosure requirements.
Nothing in
this Act shall be construed to restrict or prohibit any educational,
scientific or cultural exchange programs subject to national security
requirements.
SECTION 8.
Statements and Disclosure. — Public officials and employees have
an obligation to accomplish and submit declarations under oath of, and
the public has the right to know, their assets, liabilities, net worth
and financial and business interests including those of their spouses
and of unmarried children under eighteen (18) years of age living in
their households.
(A)
Statements of Assets and Liabilities and Financial Disclosure. — All
public officials and employees, except those who serve in an honorary
capacity, laborers and casual or temporary workers, shall file under
oath their Statement of Assets, Liabilities and Net Worth and a
Disclosure of Business Interests and Financial Connections and those of
their spouses and unmarried children under eighteen (18) years of age
living in their households.
The two
documents shall contain information on the following:
(a) real property, its improvements,
acquisition costs, assessed value and current fair market value;
(b) personal property and acquisition
cost;
(c) all other assets such as
investments, cash on hand or in banks, stocks, bonds, and the like;
(d) liabilities, and;
(e) all business interests and
financial connections.
The documents must be filed:
(a) within thirty (30) days after
assumption of office;
(b) on or before April 30, of every
year thereafter; and
(c) within thirty (30) days after
separation from the service.
All public officials and employees
required under this section to file the aforestated documents shall
also execute, within thirty (30) days from the date of their
assumption of office, the necessary authority in favor of the
Ombudsman to obtain from all appropriate government agencies,
including the Bureau of Internal Revenue, such documents as may show
their assets, liabilities, net worth, and also their business
interests and financial connections in previous years, including, if
possible, the year when they first assumed any office in the
Government.
Husband and
wife who are both public officials or employees may file the required
statements jointly or separately.
The
Statements of Assets, Liabilities and Net Worth and the Disclosure of
Business Interests and Financial Connections shall be filed by:
(1) Constitutional and national
elective officials, with the national office of the Ombudsman;
(2) Senators and Congressmen, with
the Secretaries of the Senate and the House of Representatives,
respectively; Justices, with the Clerk of Court of the Supreme Court;
Judges, with the Court Administrator; and all national executive
officials with the Office of the President.
(3) Regional and local officials and
employees, with the Deputy Ombudsman in their respective regions;
(4) Officers of the armed forces from
the rank of colonel or naval captain, with the Office of the
President, and those below said ranks, with the Deputy Ombudsman in
their respective regions; and
(5) All other public officials and
employees, defined in Republic Act No. 3019, as amended, with the
Civil Service Commission.
(B) Identification and disclosure of
relatives. — It shall be the duty of every public official or
employee to identify and disclose, to the best of his knowledge and
information, his relatives in the Government in the form, manner and
frequency prescribed by the Civil Service Commission.
(C)
Accessibility of documents. — (1) Any and all statements filed under
this Act, shall be made available for inspection at reasonable hours.
(2) Such
statements shall be made available for copying or reproduction after ten
(10) working days from the time they are filed as required by law.
(3) Any
person requesting a copy of a statement shall be required to pay a
reasonable fee to cover the cost of reproduction and mailing of such
statement, as well as the cost of certification.
(4) Any
statement filed under this Act shall be available to the public for a
period of ten (10) years after receipt of the statement. After such
period, the statement may be destroyed unless needed in an ongoing
investigation.
(D)
Prohibited acts. — It shall be unlawful for any person to obtain or
use any statement filed under this Act for:
(a) any purpose contrary to morals or
public policy; or aisa dc
(b) any commercial purpose other than
by news and communications media for dissemination to the general
public.
SECTION 9. Divestment. — A public
official or employee shall avoid conflicts of interest at all times.
When a conflict of interest arises, he shall resign from his position
in any private business enterprise within thirty (30) days from his
assumption of office and/or divest himself of his shareholdings or
interest within sixty (60) days from such assumption.
The same
rule shall apply where the public official or employee is a partner in a
partnership.
The
requirement of divestment shall not apply to those who serve the
Government in an honorary capacity nor to laborers and casual or
temporary workers.
SECTION 10.
Review and Compliance Procedure. — (a) The designated Committees
of both Houses of the Congress shall establish procedures for the review
of statements to determine whether said statements which have been
submitted on time, are complete, and are in proper form. In the event a
determination is made that a statement is not so filed, the appropriate
Committee shall so inform the reporting individual and direct him to
take the necessary corrective action.
(b) In
order to carry out their responsibilities under this Act, the designated
Committees of both Houses of Congress shall have the power within their
respective jurisdictions, to render any opinion interpreting this Act,
in writing, to persons covered by this Act, subject in each instance to
the approval by affirmative vote of the majority of the particular House
concerned.
The
individual to whom an opinion is rendered, and any other individual
involved in a similar factual situation, and who, after issuance of the
opinion acts in good faith in accordance with it shall not be subject to
any sanction provided in this Act.
(c) The
heads of other offices shall perform the duties stated in subsections
(a) and (b) hereof insofar as their respective offices are concerned,
subject to the approval of the Secretary of Justice, in the case of the
Executive Department and the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, in the
case of the Judicial Department.
SECTION 11.
Penalties. — (a) Any public official or employee, regardless of
whether or not he holds office or employment in a casual, temporary,
holdover, permanent or regular capacity, committing any violation of
this Act shall be punished with a fine not exceeding the equivalent of
six (6) months' salary or suspension not exceeding one (1) year, or
removal depending on the gravity of the offense after due notice and
hearing by the appropriate body or agency. If the violation is
punishable by a heavier penalty under another law, he shall be
prosecuted under the latter statute. Violations of Sections 7, 8 or 9 of
this Act shall be punishable with imprisonment not exceeding five (5)
years, or a fine not exceeding five thousand pesos (P5,000), or both,
and, in the discretion of the court of competent jurisdiction,
disqualification to hold public office.
(b) Any
violation hereof proven in a proper administrative proceeding shall be
sufficient cause for removal or dismissal of a public official or
employee, even if no criminal prosecution is instituted against him.
(c) Private
individuals who participate in conspiracy as co-principals, accomplices
or accessories, with public officials or employees, in violation of this
Act, shall be subject to the same penal liabilities as the public
officials or employees and shall be tried jointly with them.
(d) The
official or employee concerned may bring an action against any person
who obtains or uses a report for any purpose prohibited by Section 8 (D)
of this Act. The Court in which such action is brought may assess
against such person a penalty in any amount not to exceed twenty-five
thousand pesos (P25,000). If another sanction hereunder or under any
other law is heavier, the latter shall apply.
SECTION 12.
Promulgation of Rules and Regulations, Administration and Enforcement
of this Act. — The Civil Service Commission shall have the primary
responsibility for the administration and enforcement of this Act. It
shall transmit all cases for prosecution arising from violations of this
Act to the proper authorities for appropriate action: Provided,
however, That it may institute such administrative actions and
disciplinary measures as may be warranted in accordance with law.
Nothing in this provision shall be construed as a deprivation of the
right of each House of Congress to discipline its Members for disorderly
behavior.
The Civil
Service Commission is hereby authorized to promulgate rules and
regulations necessary to carry out the provisions of this Act, including
guidelines for individuals who render free voluntary service to the
Government. The Ombudsman shall likewise take steps to protect citizens
who denounce acts or omissions of public officials and employees which
are in violation of this Act.
SECTION 13.
Provisions for More Stringent Standards. — Nothing in this Act
shall be construed to derogate from any law, or any regulation
prescribed by any body or agency, which provides for more stringent
standards for its official and employees.
SECTION 14.
Appropriations. — The sum necessary for the effective
implementation of this Act shall be taken from the appropriations of the
Civil Service Commission. Thereafter, such sum as may be needed for its
continued implementation shall be included in the annual General
Appropriations Act.
SECTION 15.
Separability Clause. — If any provision of this Act or the
application of such provision to any person or circumstance is declared
invalid, the remainder of the Act or the application of such provision
to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected by such
declaration.
SECTION 16.
Repealing Clause. — All laws, decrees and orders or parts thereof
inconsistent herewith, are deemed repealed or modified accordingly,
unless the same provide for a heavier penalty.
SECTION 17. Effectivity. — This
Act shall take effect after thirty (30) days following the completion
of its publication in the Official Gazette or in two (2) national
newspapers of general circulation.
Approved: February 20, 1989.