DPWH to scrap Cabral's parametric formula for district budgets

Department of Public Works and Highways Secretary Vince Dizon announced that the agency will scrap the so-called 'parametric formula' used for district budget allocations amid corruption allegations. The reform aims to base projects on actual needs rather than political influence. He expressed confidence that President Marcos will approve the changes.

At a press conference in Manila on January 12, 2026, Department of Public Works and Highways Secretary Vince Dizon pledged to eliminate the 'allocables' and the parametric formula developed by the late undersecretary Maria Catalina Cabral for determining district budgets. 'The allocables will be gone. That allocable system — whatever it is, which to this day I still have a hard time understanding — is gone. We will do away with all of that. There will be no more favoritism and no more slipping projects in,' Dizon said, mixing English and Filipino.

The new approach will prioritize the needs of districts, provinces, municipalities, and regions, requiring all projects to have concrete plans and endorsements from development councils. 'All projects must have a plan. All projects must be endorsed by the development councils,' he added. Undersecretary Nicasio Conti will implement the new formula in the coming weeks to ensure budgets fund only essential items, not for officials' personal gains.

This reform addresses the flood control corruption scandal, where the formula allegedly favored districts of politicians like Rep. Sandro Marcos and Rep. Martin Romualdez, per a document released by Rep. Leandro Leviste. The Office of the Ombudsman is verifying the files. Dizon is 'quite certain' President Bongbong Marcos will approve it, preventing congressional overrides.

The changes align with DPWH's 2026 priorities, including Maharlika Highway rehabilitation and completing unfinished bridges, despite a budget slash from P881 billion to P530 billion.

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Rep. Leandro Leviste at podium exposing alleged budget manipulation via 'allocables' and incentives in Philippine Congress.
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Rep. Leviste details allegations on budget 'allocables' and 'incentives'

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Batangas Rep. Leandro Leviste has raised allegations of systemic budget manipulation, including the use of project allocations as leverage over Congress members during 2026 budget deliberations.

In a new development in the DPWH flood control scandal probe—following Sen. Lacson’s handover of the late undersecretary Maria Catalina Cabral’s documents—the legal counsel of Cabral revealed that House leaders, particularly Rep. Elizaldy Co, overrode a parametric formula designed to eliminate discretion in district budget allocations.

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Secretary Vince Dizon appealed to the bicameral conference committee to restore P45 billion in the Department of Public Works and Highways' 2026 budget. He argued that the Senate's reductions were based on flawed calculations regarding construction costs. Thousands of projects could be scaled back if the funding is not reinstated.

Public Works Secretary Vince Dizon has formed a task force for the government's Oplan Kontra Baha, to be led by the Department of Public Works and Highways this year. The order was issued on January 14, with similar units planned for the 17 DPWH regional offices nationwide.

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Senator Sherwin Gatchalian expressed confidence that President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. will approve the 2026 General Appropriations Bill following its bicameral committee approval. He highlighted a 'meeting of minds' between the Senate and House on the P6.793-trillion budget. Meanwhile, lawmakers are urging full disclosure of allocations per congressional district before the December 29 vote.

Following the bicameral conference committee's reconciliation of the 2026 budget, Senate President Pro Tempore Panfilo Lacson advocated for a reenacted budget in early January over a rushed one unresponsive to needs, allowing time for review of the P6.793-trillion proposal amid public funds controversies. Acting Executive Secretary Ralph Recto said President Marcos will scrutinize it before signing.

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The bicameral conference committee for the 2026 national budget began on December 13, 2025, focusing on reconciling versions for education, health, and agriculture sectors. Discussions stalled over farm-to-market roads funding due to corruption concerns, but lawmakers eventually agreed to increase it. Meanwhile, a congressman resigned from the House contingent amid complaints against him.

 

 

 

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