
Dong denying. ABS-CBN
“MAY ALLEGED links kay
former Congressman Dong Gonzales ang kontratista, so we have to look into that…
Meron ding mga alegasyon na hindi talaga sila yung gumagawa, may ibang gumagawa.”
On national TV and social
media, Public Works Sec. Vince Dizon finally disclosed what just everyone in
Pampanga had long known – the former House senior deputy speaker’s alleged connection
with the contractor of the thrice-collapsed Candating flood control project.
Sec. Dizon alleging, ABS-CBN
Maybe in Dizon’s next flash
of revelation, he would divulge the blood, if not business, lines bonding
Eddmari Construction with 4th District Rep. Anna York-Bondoc’s
husband, San Luis Mayor Jay Sagum.
Eddmari Construction
owner Edgardo Sagum and company officials with unidentified DPWH functionary
and you know who at the company depot. Contributed photo
Anyways, Dizon’s (un)reveal
of late, a mere allegation at that, pales and fades under the brilliance of Ombudsman
Boying Remulla’s direct accusation of Gonzales: “Congtractor yan eh… People
didn’t believe that there would be accountability whatsoever in violating the
law, harap-harapan kasi nga walang manghuhuli. Bawal iyan eh. It’s a prohibited
activity, it’s a conflict of interest found in so many laws on corruption so
mahirap na makatakas diyan.” That was on Nov. 20, 2025.
Boying’s virtual indictment
of Gonzales. News 5
Unlike his reaction to
Remulla’s virtual indictment which he simply dismissed with the pro-forma: “While
I welcome any inquiry on the matter, I am not aware of an ongoing Ombudsman
formal investigation against me on prohibited interests,” Gonzales was vehement
in his denial of Dizon’s mere allegation.
“Hindi ko kilala si
Eddmari. Kung engineer man yan, engineer ako, di ko pa nakikita ng personal.
Okay, ang pamilya ko contractor yan, pero ako hindi ako congtractor… Bakit ko
pa hihiramin si Eddmari? Bakit di ko gamitin yung family ko kung ako ang gagawa?”
Gonzales said at the public hearing on Candating called by the local government
of Arayat with local DPWH officials and Eddmari Construction representatives.
Picture says it all. SunStar-Pampanga
To be fair, we give
Gonzales the benefit of the doubt: that he did not know Eddmari from any other
contactor, er, contractor. Out in the open though is his rather deep concern with
the Candating project.
In January 2025, still the
sitting House senior deputy speaker and Pampanga 3rd District representative,
Gonzales had this learned take of the August 2024 Candating collapse: “The
project, a 110.2-meter flood mitigation structure, suffered damage due to a
combination of natural forces and design vulnerabilities.”
Emphasizing: “The
repair is expected to be completed by April 2025 at no cost to the government,
as the project is still under warranty (by the contractor).”
Further noting that “Officials
are also considering additional measures to prevent future occurrences.”
More than congressman,
Gonzales took the role of contractor, construction foreman, and DPWH spokesman
rolled into one there. To no avail, as by July 2025, whatever repairs – completed
or not, whatever additional measures – instituted or not, were obliterated by another
collapse of the flood mitigation structure.
Still the civil engineer
that he is and the contractor that he says he once was, Gonzales attributed to “natural
forces” the 2024 collapse, the most recent one he deemed an “act of God” outside
human control. Where others point, all too loudly, to substandard sheet piles used
as retention walls.
Sheet piles become Dong
It is precisely to the sheet
piles that people in Pampanga, principally in Mexico and Arayat, made the most obvious,
if perceived, connection between Gonzales and the Candating project.
As early as August 2023 –
a full year before the first collapse in Candating -- Association
of Barangay Captains-Mexico president Terence Napao had called out: “Bagutan la
reng sheet piles,” referencing alleged anomalies in the flood control projects in
his town contracted to A.D. Gonzales Jr. Construction & Trading, the
congressman’s eponymous company.

Napao with complaint-affidavit vs.
Gonzales
Napao subsequently haled Gonzales to the
Ombudsman on graft and corruption charges which was unceremoniously junked for
“lack of evidence,” if memory serves right.
Nature however fortuitously provided the
evidence veritably vindicating Napao, when, in September 2024, heavy rains
washed out a P199.495-million flood control project along the Abacan River in Barangay
Suclaban, Mexico, unearthing visibly short-of-specification sheet piles. The
contractor: A.D. Gonzales Jr. Construction & Trading. Project duration:
June 13, 2022 to June 7, 2023.
Unearthed sheet piles at Gonzales-contracted
flood control project
Thence, Napao’s call Tagalized to “Bunutin ang
sheet piles” reverberated across Pampanga in the aftermath of the August 2024
unraveling in Candating.
By induction, the image of the dug-up seemingly
shortened sheet piles in the Gonzales project in Mexico readily affixed to the damaged
Eddmari project in Arayat, with the all too ubiquitous smiling mug of the
congressman attached.
Is not, is not, is
“Si Dong Gonzales po ay hindi congtractor…hindi
po ako congtractor. Ako po ay isang mambabatas.” Insistent was Gonzales in
defining himself during the Jan. 26 Arayat public hearing. Noting that he divested
from his eponymous company in 2007 when he first won as congressman and
throughout his House incumbency until June 2025, interrupted only with his loss
in 2013.
A.D. Gonzales Jr. Construction & Trading
getting government infrastructure projects contemporaneous with the honorable
A. D. Gonzales Jr. holding prime positions in Congress, culminating in the
senior deputy speakership in his last term, does not exactly hew to Gonzales’ take
of his entrepreneurial-political dichotomy.
It makes the exact definition of the term “Congtractor,”
a rather recent portmanteau referencing
congressmen who also own, manage, or profit from construction
companies that have secured DPWH contracts.
Pampanga’s Top 10 partaking of P15-B
Of the Top 10 contractors
that snagged the lion’s share of DPWH flood control contracts in Pampanga
culled from the “Sumbong
sa Pangulo” website last August, A.D. Gonzales Jr. Construction and Trading Co. Inc.
ranked only Top 5 but was awarded the largest funded single flood control
projects in the province, to wit:
1)
the
Abacan River diking and slope protection project in Mexico, Pampanga at a cost
of P270.194 million reported completed on March 6, 2024; and
2)
flood
control works on the Pasig-Potrero River and the San Fernando-Bacolor section
of the San Fernando-Sto. Tomas-Minalin Tail Dike at a cost of P257.255 million
and completed on June 5, 2024. (Erroneously placed in La Union in the sumbong
website).
Gonzales’
tail dike project
One more
project listed under A.D. Gonzales Jr. Construction
is another Abacan River diking, also in Mexico but distinguished as Phase I,
with a cost of P96.496 million and completed on Nov. 23, 2023.
Gonzales may have divested
from his company, but self-named as it is, he is the very face of it, with his
family as the functioning body.
All in the family
matrix
In Napao’s complaint with
the Ombudsman, listed as officers of A.D. Gonzales Jr. Construction &
Trading were Gonzales’ son Aurelio Brenz, then a councilor now vice mayor of
the capital city, as the company’s president and majority shareholder; daughter,
then-provincial board member now Pampanga 3rd District Rep. Alyssa
Michaela Gonzales, as secretary and treasurer; son Aurelio III, as vice
president; daughter Aurelio Michaline as director; and the Gonzales’ elder
sister Zenaida Quiambao also director.
“Any right-minded citizen
would easily figure out why and how a senior deputy speaker, a city councilor
and a bokal (provincial board member) owning a construction company and with
DPWH officials under their beck and call were favored with hundreds of millions
worth of government contracts,” Napao alleged at the time. “With huge projects
such as these, it would be the height of naiveté not to sense a collusion
between the congressman’s company and the DPWH.”
Reminded we are here of an
urban legend at the DPWH-3 office first heard before the Covid pandemic: An
unnamed honorable member of the House frequenting the director’s office with
the standard intro: “I am not a congressman here now. I am a contractor.”
“Si Dong Gonzales po ay hindi congtractor.”
Don’t us!