Wonder no moreby Fil C. Sionil
4 February 2022
What gives? Wonder no more. Here’s the back story on the resignation of Mr. Gilbert or GSM.
GSM, who was then described as the “handpicked nominee of PAL 
Chairman and CEO Lucio Tan,” has caught the ire of the tigers (the upper
 echelons) of the flag carrier when he recruited two foreign 
consultants, whose pay scale believed to be at par with PAL’s top tier 
executives.
Engaged were Christopher Gartner, a former executive of Etihad and 
Air Berlin and Eric Anderson, who used to work with Delta Air and 
Amerijet. Mr. Christopher is consultant for network planning and fleet 
while Mr. Eric is for strategy and planning. During the time of Jimmy J.
 Bautista these two vital functions were handled by only one person, 
Lito Alvarez.
The uproar came when both foreign consultants came on board without 
passing through the good governance committee. This created a snag and 
when asked to justify and explain the circumstances behind the 
engagement, GSM simply responded “there is no need since both are not 
organic” to the flag-carrier.
My
 lion’s ear or better yet my tiger’s ear (simply because its Lunar’s 
year) heard that such a bit of a haughty response negatively roared 
along PAL’s corridors, which irked some of the workforce, allegedly 
tagging GSM as somewhat snobbish and a bit annoying.
As an avid observer of the flag-carrier, I remember distinctly that 
any appointments and/or hiring of top tier executives/consultants must 
pass through the scrutiny of the good governance committee and have to 
be presented and its merits discussed in the board.
I am not questioning the qualifications and the knowledge of the 
aviation industry of Mr. Christopher and Eric but it calls to mind a 
similar incident in not too distant past and GSM was already the chief 
steward of PAL.
Wasn’t
 there a lesson learned from previous incidents that evaluating the 
qualification of executives and consultants triggered a cerebral tussle 
between one of the Tan heirs and the chair of the good governance 
committee.
“Any plans and decisions must be presented to the board. If it’s not 
acceptable, so be it. GSM bypassed both,” explained my muted source.  
From what I’ve gathered, the appointment Capt. Stanley Ng, son-in-law
 of the cigarette tycoon, sits well with the airline working staff. Very
 acceptable.
He even impressed snooty board members with his updates on the 
financial performance of the flag carrier. “He has been presenting 
results of operations in the board meetings. He is very knowledgeable in
 this field, very clear and simple in his presentations.”
In the last meeting prior to the verbal tussle on the consultant 
issue, Capt. Stanley informed the board that PAL’s operations reverted 
to the positive territory with more flights mounted as travel 
restrictions loosened up.
Based
 on the announcement, Capt. Stanley’s stewardship is temporary – 
officer-in-charge. And from what I’ve gathered the appointment of the 
president is subject to process by the search committee composed of 
member of the executive committee with the young Lucio Tan III at the 
forefront.
With Alert Level 2 in place, the PAL’s propellers will churn even 
faster now amidst its provisional leadership. However, I wonder if the 
foreign consultants will remain on board following the departure of GSM.