If this crack will not be corrected, it will result in a major catastrophe, Cruz said.
Rep. Victor B. Hocog, Ind.-Rota, on Monday toured the power plant with four other House members and observed the crack that causes the vibration of the engine.
When Cruz questioned Muna about the delay in the rehabilitation and repair of CUC’s power generation facilities undertaken by the DCM group, the CUC executive official told him in an e-mail: “Your issues are with regards to oversight. Call OPA or FBI to resolve.”
Cruz said Muna’s reply only shows that CUC is not cooperating to ensure the welfare and safety of the public.
Muna also told Cruz: “I do not need lectures or have the time to engage in a debate.”
Cruz said Taotao Tano is not in the business of debating because “we are talking here about a serious matter about a contract that was not completed.”
He said he will file a complaint with the Office of the Public Auditor or the Federal Bureau of Investigation regarding the contract between CUC and the DCM Group.
Taotao Tano has been asking Muna about the status of engines 1, 7, 3 and 4, saying that these should be producing 34.85 megawatts already as stipulated in CUC’s contract with DCM.
The engines, he added, should already be operational as scheduled in the 90-day rehabilitation plan of DCM which was awarded a $5.6 million contract by CUC on Dec. 13, 2007.


