The minister of the (Supreme Federal Court) set new deadlines this Sunday (22) for bodies to improve control mechanisms over the execution of parliamentary amendments. The dates were determined after the federal government sent the court a technical note on a work plan in relation to the amendments.
AGU (Attorney General of the Union), (Companhia de Desenvolvimento dos Vales do São Francisco and Parnaíba), Dnocs (National Department of Works against Drought) and DenaSus (National Audit Department of the Unified Health System), especially, have new answers to give to the minister by the end of the semester.
“I emphasize that most of the measures defined in the Technical Note must be implemented by 05/30/2026, especially within the scope of Dnocs, where —apparently— a situation of more anomalies, lack of control and defects reigns”, said the minister.
From then on, Codevasf has 60 days to initiate a procedure to determine and reimburse irregularly applied amounts. These are TCEs (Special Account Taking), a process for when embezzlement, deviations, omissions in the reporting of accounts or failure to prove the correct application of resources are found.
In the decision, the rapporteur renewed demands for compliance with the Supreme Court’s decisions on transparency and traceability of amendments.
In relation to Dnocs, there are detailed guidelines, such as prioritizing transfer contracts instead of agreements to increase control, requiring calculation memories and technical tests to prove the quality and quantity of services billed, establishing objective criteria for choosing roads to be paved.
To continue monitoring the work plan sent by the Executive and Legislative branches, the minister set the date of June 10th for the Powers to provide new information, especially regarding the rapporteur’s and committee’s amendments.
Furthermore, the rapporteur once again reinforces his determination to restructure Denasus to ensure effective audits of funds allocated to public health. Dino gave another 30 days to present an emergency plan to recompose the body’s staff to improve the capacity to monitor values.
The first decision in this regard was given on January 16th.
“If Denasus is not restored within a reasonable period of time, exceptional audit and inspection measures will be immediately adopted, as a segment such as Public Health cannot continue executing tens of billions of reais in parliamentary amendments (and other transfers) without the controls established in the Federal Constitution”, he stated.
The decision also extends deadlines for several ministries to adjust their internal rules, aiming to align political appointments with the federal government’s strategic planning.
Dino is the rapporteur of an ADPF (allegation of non-compliance with a fundamental precept) that deals with the lack of transparency and traceability in the indication and execution of parliamentary amendments. This is a sum that deputies and senators send to their electoral bases, the value of which has grown in the face of hypertrophy in Congress.
In 2026, the estimated value for amendments with mandatory payment by the government reached R$37.8 billion. Since 2024, Dino has given contrary decisions demanding more transparency and methodology for indicating these values, mainly in the headings of thematic commissions and state benches, which are collectively signed.
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