Angara presses for completion of unfinished classrooms

The Department of Education is intensifying efforts to complete unfinished classroom projects nationwide, as it also prepares to broaden delivery options starting this year to address long-standing gaps in basic education facilities, DepEd Secretary Sonny Angara said.

DepEd Secretary Sonny Angara noted that based on the latest data, over 8,000 classroom projects are being worked on simultaneously. The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) has already completed about 3,600 classrooms, and the DepEd continues to monitor the construction of unfinished ones.

In previous years, classroom construction for public schools has largely been implemented through the DPWH, which is mandated to undertake school building projects. The DepEd is working closely with the DPWH to resolve unfinished projects carried over from earlier years and ensure that classrooms are completed and turned over for use by learners.

The DepEd proposed P3.192 billion under the 2026 national budget to complete 3,614 classrooms. Congress has approved P2.282 billion, which the education chief said will cover 2,067 classrooms. Despite funding constraints, the agency is pressing ahead with concrete measures to fast-track completion, in line with the President’s directive to prioritize school infrastructure and learner safety.

The DepEd and DPWH are jointly conducting nationwide validation activities covering 384 schools with unfinished or for-completion classroom projects.

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Education Secretary Sonny Angara warned that delays in infrastructure and limited digital access continue to constrain learning opportunities for millions of Filipino students, urging business leaders to play a central role in addressing the country's 165,000-classroom shortage and modernizing public schools.

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As the Senate continues its review of the government’s expanded public-private partnership program, Sen. Raffy Tulfo called on the Department of Education to strengthen screening and monitoring of contractors involved in the Public-Private Partnership for School Infrastructure Project 1 and 2.

Private schools are free to adopt their own calendar structures, Education Secretary Sonny Angara said, following statements from the Coordinating Council of Private Educational Associations that private schools need not follow the three-term school calendar.

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The National Parents-Teachers Association has backed the Department of Education's proposed trimester scheme amid reservations from some groups. NPTA president Willy Rodriguez noted that the system is already in use in countries like Singapore, Japan, and Finland. DepEd is continuing consultations in line with Malacañang's directive for stakeholder dialogues.

Three officials from the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) second engineering district in Pampanga have been relieved of their duties for allegedly demanding up to eight percent commissions from government contracts. Public Works Secretary Vince Dizon announced the move during an inspection of the Candating flood control project in Arayat. A full investigation will determine if the allegations hold true.

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House Speaker Bojie Dy delivered a strongly worded speech on March 18, 2026, urging the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) to speed up its processes so government funds reach the public promptly. The remarks followed criticism from Deputy Speaker Ronaldo Puno two days earlier over the lack of materialized public works projects in the first quarter of 2026.

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