(UPDATE) THE House of Representatives started its investigation into anomalous flood control projects on Tuesday.
At the start, the House’s three-panel infra committee conducting the probe approved a motion for the committee’s members to disclose whether they have financial or business interests that may be affected by any investigation of government flood control projects.
“I believe we need to assure the public that this investigation will not be a whitewash and that no members of the three committees conducting this investigation have a conflict of interest,” said Akbayan Rep. Chel Diokno, who made the motion.
The motion called for the members of the three panels to make a full disclosure of “financial, business, or pecuniary interest that may be directly or indirectly affected by any investigation into the government’s past or present flood control” projects.
Diokno’s motion was seconded and carried., This news data comes from:http://www.705-888.com
The tri-panel infrastructure committee is composed of the Committees on Public Accounts, Public Works and Highways, and Good Government and Public Accountability.
Last month, the House autho rized the three committees to conduct a joint inquiry, in aid of legislation, on the implementation of government flood control projects.
“We aim to present new proposals, so that there would be a perpetual blacklist of bad contractors. We also aim to include the private sector in inspections of projects in all aspects of project implementation,” Bicol Saro Rep. Terry Ridon, chairman of the public accounts committee, said in Filipino and English during the probe.
House probe tackles flood control corruption: Lawmakers disclose conflicts of interest
“All the findings of this committee will be immediately submitted to the Independent Commission,” he said, referring to the body that President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said he would create.
Ridon said on Aug. 28, 2025, that the infra committee was “not constrained to focus only on flood control and what the president had inspected.”
On the sidelines of the House hearing, former Public Works secretary Manuel Bonoan said he was not involved in any corruption.
“No. I can shout [it]. I am not involved,” Bonoan said in a media interview at the House.

Bonoan attended as a resource person in the investigation of flood control projects.
- Trump moves to end US tariff exemption for small packages
- Social pension eyed for indigent seniors
- Zelenskyy seeks talks with Trump and European leaders on slow progress of peace efforts with Russia
- Napolcom probes former Highway Patrol chief over P7M bribery case
- Thai court dismisses prime minister over compromising phone call with Cambodian leader
- National Guard troops begin carrying weapons in US capital
- Maduro hits ‘illegal’ US troops deployment
- Hawaii's Kilauea volcano erupts with lava pouring out from multiple vents
- Hopes dim for Putin-Zelenskyy peace summit
- South Korea to ban mobile phones in school classrooms