Officer in Charge (Philippines)

The position of Officer in Charge (OIC) in the context of Philippine governance refers to an official serving their position in an interim or temporary basis. The position of OIC is distinct to an official serving in an "Acting" capacity.

Local government units

The local chief executive in local government units (e.g. the governor of province, mayor of a municipality or city), according to the implementing rules and regulations of the Local Government Code may designate an Officer in Charge (OIC) whenever they travel outside the area of their jurisdiction but still within the Philippines for a period not exceeding three consecutive days. The OIC of the local chief executive office is to be appointed in writing with duties to be performed by the temporary official also specified excluding powers to appoint, dismiss, or suspend government employees. The functions of the OIC is limited to powers involving administration and excludes discretionary powers.[1]

In contrast a local chief executive serving in an "Acting Capacity", the position may be assumed due to the temporary incapacity of the local chief executive due to filing a leave of absence, travel outside the Philippines, or physical and legal reasons.The deputy of the local chief executive (in case of the provincial governor and municipal/city mayor or the highest ranking member of the sangguiniang barangay in the case of the local barangay chief executive, physical and legal reasons. An acting local chief executive can only exercise powers to appoint, dismiss, or suspend government employees after 30 working days.[1]

By agency

Philippine National Police

In the Philippine National Police an Officer in Charge is different to an acting official in terms on how they gained the position. For example, Deputy Director for Operations General Leonardo Espina became the OIC Police Chief when Director General Alan Purisima was suspended and Deputy Director for Administration Felipe Rojas retired. An acting official gained position by appointment of a higher authority.[2]

When Oscar Albayalde went to non-duty status, the first chief to do so, amidst a controversy he was implicated in, Lt. Gen. Archie Gamboa, the Deputy Chief for Administration assumed the post of OIC of the police. Non-duty status is a status in the police similar to an employee on a terminal leave. Albayalde resigned from his position as chief while remaining a member of the police force until November 8, 2019 which is when he will reach the mandatory retirement age of 56.[3] While on non-duty status, Albayalde retains his four star (Police General) rank which meant his successor will not be able to hold the same rank while Albayalde is still on non-duty status.[4]

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References

  1. "DILG Opinion No. 2 s. 2018" (PDF). Department of Interior and Local Government. 18 January 2018. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  2. Cupin, Bea (12 December 2014). "What's in a word? Acting vs OIC PNP chief". Rappler. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  3. "Albayalde steps down from PNP top post; Gamboa takes over as officer in charge". BusinessMirror. 15 October 2019. Retrieved 21 October 2019.
  4. Felipe, Cecille Suerte; Tupas, Emmanuel (14 October 2019). "Albayalde goes on 'non-duty' leave". The Philippine Star. Retrieved 21 October 2019.
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