As the controversy surrounding the UP CMC Foundation continues to unfold, a new question is beginning to emerge alongside concerns about finances, governance, and compliance.
What exactly did the foundation accomplish with the resources entrusted to it?
For weeks, much of the discussion has centered on reports that foundation funds once estimated at around P4 million have declined to approximately PHP400,000. Stakeholders have demanded a clearer accounting of the organization’s finances and sought explanations from its leadership regarding how those resources were utilized.
But some observers argue that focusing exclusively on the remaining balance risks overlooking a more fundamental issue.
The foundation was not created simply to hold money.
It was created to spend money in pursuit of a mission.
Established to support the UP College of Mass Communication and its constituents, the foundation was intended to help fund programs, training initiatives, scholarships, mentoring activities, industry engagements, and other projects that would benefit students, faculty members, alumni, and the broader MassCom community.
That has led some stakeholders to ask a different set of questions.
What programs were funded over the years? How many beneficiaries were reached? What projects were implemented? What outcomes were achieved? What records exist to demonstrate the impact generated by the foundation’s resources?
For critics of the foundation’s leadership, the issue is not simply whether funds were spent but whether stakeholders can clearly see what those expenditures produced.
Broadcast Communication professor Cecile Ilagan and other critics have repeatedly called for greater transparency regarding the foundation’s finances and operations. While questions surrounding fund management remain unresolved, some stakeholders believe a comprehensive accounting should include both financial records and evidence of program outcomes.
Supporters of the foundation’s leadership argue that nonprofit organizations should be assessed fairly and that expenditures often support activities whose benefits are not easily reflected in financial statements alone. They maintain that judgments should be based on documentation and factual records rather than assumptions.
That is precisely why many stakeholders are now seeking a fuller picture of the foundation’s activities.
Several alumni and former members have begun asking for reports detailing projects undertaken by the organization, beneficiaries served, partnerships supported, and programs implemented throughout the years. For them, transparency is not merely about knowing how much money remains in an account. It is also about understanding how the foundation advanced the mission for which it was established.
The issue has become increasingly important because the foundation’s future may ultimately depend on public confidence. If stakeholders can see clear evidence of impact, some of the controversy may be easier to contextualize. If questions remain about both finances and outcomes, however, scrutiny is likely to intensify.
As the debate continues, many observers believe the next phase of the controversy will move beyond accounting and into performance.
The question is no longer just where the money went.
It is what the money accomplished.







