Minister Flávio Dino, of the Federal Supreme Court (STF), determined this Monday that collective amendments for the payment of personnel in the health sector must follow the same rules of transparency and traceability as individual amendments.. 
One of the main orders was for anyone whose salary was paid via parliamentary amendments to have their name and Individual Taxpayer Registration Number (CPF) published on the Transparency Portal, indicating the amounts they received, as long as “the guidelines defined by the General Personal Data Protection Law (LGPD) are observed”, wrote the minister.
Dino is the rapporteur of an action that specifically deals with traceability and transparency criteria for amendments. In addition to the list of beneficiaries, he stressed that collective amendments for healthcare personnel must follow rules already established by the Supreme Court, such as the use of a single and specific account for each type of amendment.
THE The decision was taken after Congress approved, in November, a new resolution to regulate parliamentary amendments to the Union Budget, replacing the previous rule from 2006. The rule now authorizes the allocation of committee and bench amendments for the payment of health personnel.
Dino also highlighted that the Constitution expressly prohibits the use of individual amendments to pay personnel expenses, thus there is “strong plausibility that the same legal regime should be applied to collective amendments”.
The minister said, however, that his actions at the moment are restricted to the criteria of traceability and transparency of these collective amendments, whose constitutionality itself must be analyzed in its own action..
