NEWS

DOJ pushes tighter monitoring to boost justice delivery

Lade Jean Kabagani

The Department of Justice (DOJ) is tightening its monitoring and reporting systems following internal assessments that highlighted gaps between program outputs and their real-world impact on justice delivery.

Justice Secretary Frederick Vida said the DOJ is prioritizing reforms in data tracking, evaluation, and compliance following a series of workshops held alongside its Year-End Performance Assessment (YEPA). 

“The objective is straightforward: to establish more reliable monitoring systems, ensure clearer reporting mechanisms, and improve overall performance,” he said, adding that stronger systems would support better decision-making and more efficient use of resources.

The push comes as DOJ officials acknowledged that some initiatives, despite adequate funding or rollout, have not produced transformative results. 

DOJ Undersecretary Majken Anika Gran-Ong said performance reviews must go beyond metrics and focus on outcomes that directly affect the public. 

She pointed to instances where programs failed to improve processing times or strengthen protections for vulnerable sectors despite being fully implemented.

“These discussions are about looking for the story behind the numbers,” Gran-Ong said, stressing the need to measure qualitative impact alongside quantitative targets.

The reforms were shaped during breakout workshops for focal persons from the National Prosecution Service and the DOJ Central Office, where participants were given technical guidance on improving compliance with the Strategic Performance Management System (SPMS). 

The sessions aimed to standardize reporting and build a more responsive evaluation framework across offices.

The workshops capped a four-day YEPA and SPMS monitoring and evaluation program held from April 13 to 16, covering both prosecutors nationwide and central office units through a hybrid format.

DOJ’s Senior officials, including Undersecretaries Garney Candelaria and Ian Norman Dato, led the review of the National Prosecution Service, while Vida, Gran-Ong, Assistant Secretary Maria Elisa Germar, and Assistant Secretary Ma. Charina Dy Po assessed the performance of central office units at the Justice Hall.

Facilitated by the DOJ’s Planning and Management Service–Evaluation and Statistics Division, the sessions evaluated office accomplishments against targets under the Philippine Development Plan 2023-2028 and the 2025 national budget.

Vida emphasized that closing the gap between planning and execution remains central to the agency’s mandate. 

“Programs and plans do not succeed by design alone. They succeed through disciplined execution, constant monitoring, and accurate evaluation,” he said.