STAGES OF ENVIRONMENTAL
LOBBYING
by Antonio C.
Antonio
November 25, 2014
“An advocacy is a
structured process to gain public support for or recommendation of a particular
cause or public policy.” (Antonio, 2014)
“Environmental lobbying is
defined as the process of putting pressure on members of the legislature or seeking to influence a politician or public official to
pass bills on an environmental issue or established public policies on the
environment. The normal targets of
environmental lobbying are the elected senators and congressional district
representatives since our legislative branch is bicameral in structure. Environmental lobbying with the legislative
branch is effective on non-existent public policies of measure that are still
to be passed as bills and enacted into laws or republic acts. However, lobbying could also be done with
the executive department particularly the department secretaries especially on
laws that still lack the implementing rules and regulations or are presently
being implemented.” (Antonio, 2014)
The Philippines is
a democracy no matter how some might view it as a dysfunctional one. Being a functioning democracy means we are
ruled by laws and public policies. It is
therefore in the crafting of bills and laws that legalizes and
institutionalizes public concerns… including the environment. Towards this end, lobbying becomes
important. But how do we lobby?... and
where? Here is to answer the “wheres”
and the “hows”.
The Lobbying could
actually be done in every legislative stage.
It is important to note that lobbying is easier in stages where
membership and participation is less.
Plenary lobbying is harder on account of the sheer number of senators
and congressional representatives involved.
STAGE 1 –
Congress: (Senate and House of Representatives) This is where proposed Senate
and House Bills are submitted to the Senator or Congressman in charge of the
appropriate Congressional Committee for sponsorship. After the proponent Senator or Congressman
submits the proposed bill to the Plenary, the proposed bill is normally
assigned to the Congressional Committee for further study.
STAGE 2 –
Congressional Committees: (Senate and House of Representatives) The Senator and
Congressman call for a series of meetings or congressional investigation, in
aide of legislation, to engage the services of resource persons and get the
opinions of SMEs (subject matter experts) on the proposed bill. Several meetings are called for this purpose
so that the proposed bill can be polished as to its responsiveness to public
need.
STAGE 3 – Plenary:
(Senate and House of Representatives) There are normally three readings that a
bill has to go through at the plenary level.
The appropriate Congressional Committee or the sponsoring Senator or
Congressman takes charge of presenting the proposed bill to the plenary. The bill is finally approved (normally on
third reading) or sent back to the Congressional Committee for further study.
STAGE 4 –
Bicameral Conference Committee: (Senate and House of Representatives) In most
instances, related bills approved by both Houses of Congress (Senate and House
of Representatives) differ in substance.
To harmonize these different bills, they are assigned to the Bicameral
Conference Committee which is composed of Senators and Congressmen for further
deliberation. The objective of the
Bicameral Conference Committee is to come up with a single-unified-harmonized
bill. The harmonized bill is then
transmitted by the Senate President and the Speaker of the House of
Representatives to the President of the Philippines for his final approval and
signing into law.
STAGE 5 – The
Executive Branch: (The President). The
President could either approve the bill and signs it into law or vetoes the
same. A Presidential veto means the bill
does not progress to become a law. On
the other hand, signed bills are assigned to the concerned Department where the
IRR or Implementing Rules and Regulations are crafted.
STAGE 6 – The
Executive Branch: (The Department Secretaries) After the concerned Cabinet
Secretary receives the approved and signed law, it now becomes the concerned
department’s responsibility to craft the Implementing Rules and Regulations
(IRR).
Laws passing
through these six stages take months (some even years) before they become part
of the laws of the land. Advocates and
lobbyists can take advantage of any of these stages to include their concerns
to the proposed bill and/or law. For
environmental issues and concerns, we could call these the stages of
environmental lobbying.
Just my little
thoughts…
(Please visit,
like and share Pro EARTH Crusaders and Landscape Ecology UPOU on Facebook or
follow me at http://antonantonio.blogspot.com/.)
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