Thursday, April 30, 2015

25,000 'frustrated' workers to march on Labor Day vs govt failure to address poverty, inequality



MANILA, Philippines -- A labor coalition that counts the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines said it will field 25,000 workers, including those from the informal sector, in a Labor Day protest “to express their collective frustration at President Aquino’s failure to initiate policy reforms to address deepening poverty and widening inequality in the country.”

Gerard Seno, vice president of TUCP-Nagkaisa, said in a statement that, on the fifth Labor Day under President Benigno Aquino III, “for the excluded basic social sectors there is still no one in government they can trust or run to. For them as the majority of Filipinos, the message to our President: ‘This is just not acceptable, we can do better’.”

Nagkaisa counts 49 labor groups in the private and public sectors.

The coalition’s May 1 protest will begin with a march from the Welcome Rotonda on Espana to Mendiola for a rally.

Earlier, Nagkaisa member organizations announced they were scrapping the annual Labor Day breakfast dialogue with Aquino over his “failure to deliver the workable and time bound 8-point policy agenda proposed by the group finalized in 2012 designed to mainstream the country’s economic growth down to the grassroots level.”

The 8-point agenda seeks the streamlining of the contractual job scheme, an increase in private and government workers’ wages, a reduction in rates and reliable supply of power, the implementation of an agro-industrial plan to create stable jobs, and the enforcement of the international convention allowing public sector workers to unionize.

“The eight policy issues have been painstakingly tackled and validated by bilateral technical working groups between Nagkaisa labor organizations and the different government agency policy people,” Seno noted. “What the President must do is approve and implement them or veto it altogether but he must not keep these groups waiting.”

Because of Aquino’s perceived inaction, he added, “TUCP-Nagkaisa sees a uniting thread of disengagement from the administration within the basic sectors of our society from labor to the farmers to the urban poor, to the middle class. The feeling that no one in government really cares, that everyone is a victim in system where personal control over their destiny has been lost, that nameless bureaucrats in a faraway, unknown office determine what will be and that each and every Filipino is hopelessly enmeshed in an unchanging political system serving the affluent elite and betraying the destitute millions. They sense that no one is fighting for them.”

Nagkaisa said it has other pending demands: expanding the coverage of tax exemptions, reforming the wage-setting mechanism, passing the Freedom of Information bill, in-city relocation for informal settlers, addressing migrant workers’ concerns, and a quarterly dialogue between workers and the Office of the President.

In the same statement, TUCP-Nagkaisa executive director Louie Corral noted a March survey by Pulse Asia highlighted the fact that four of Filipinos’ top five concerns “relate to the daily survival needs” of people: the high prices of basic needs, low wages, the lack of decent jobs, and the lack of substantial poverty reduction.

The fifth concern was corruption in government.

Corral also accused the administration Liberal Party and the opposition United Nationalist Alliance of “merrily plotting for 2016, “setting up the electoral circus in the hope that we will all forget that the unemployment level has been mired at 7.1 percent, the underemployment rate stuck at 22 percent, and that the daily minimum wage in (the National Capital Region) just increased by P15 from P466 to a still “unliveable” P481.” - InterAksyon.com TV5

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Philippine labor unions stand behind Veloso


Members of associated labor unions in the Philippines stand vigil for Mary Jane Veloso on International Workers's Memorial Day on Tuesday, April 28. Analy Labor / GMA News

Monday, April 27, 2015

Labor drops talks with Malacañang

A COALITION of labor groups will drop its annual luncheon meetings with Pres. Benigno S.C. Aquino III, sector leaders announced Monday, saying workers’ concerns have fallen on deaf ears in Malacañang these past five years.

“There will not be any dialogue between workers and Malacañang this May 1,” Annie E. Geron, convenor of the Nagkaisa  labor coalition that is composed of 49 organizations deemed the sector’s moderates, said as she read a prepared statement in Filipino in a press conference in the City of Manila yesterday.

“The entire force of Nagkaisa will take to the streets to seek justice for the Filipino worker.”

Pressed for details, Ms. Geron said the Aquino administration’s failure to act on concerns presented by labor groups in 2010 left them with no choice but to abandon talks with the Executive.

The list consisted of full employment, an across-the-board wage hike, quality public service, primary universal health care, protection for all Filipino migrant workers, and lower prices of goods and utilities. Particular reforms included the Security of Tenure bill and the proposed Freedom of Information act, both of which remain stalled in Congress.

TUCP-Nagkaisa started its annual May 1 talks with Mr. Aquino in 2012, but the group said these were fruitless.

“If the government did not act on our concerns these past five years, what else can we expect in this remaining one year of the administration, given that it faces so many issues: OFWs [overseas Filipino workers in trouble] and China,” Ms. Geron said, noting that “labor issues always take the back seat and are overshadowed by the emerging issues of the day.”

At the same time, however, Ms. Geron said members of her group will still negotiate directly with state agencies and private sector employers. “We need to go to each agency... rather than wait for him (Mr. Aquino) to give them orders (on labor concerns).”

A P15 increase in daily minimum wage for private sector workers in Metro Manila took effect on April 4, but this was far from the P136 wage hike sought by TUCP-Nagkaisa.

Sought for comment, Presidential Spokesperson Edwin S. Lacierda told reporters in a regular briefing yesterday that Malacañang will still reach out to labor groups.

“We will continue to engage any sector that is willing to listen to us. We have always spoken to TUCP. There are certain issues that have been discussed with the secretary of Labor and we continue to discuss those things,” Mr. Lacierda said.

“Perhaps, some of them may not be to the entire satisfaction but we have certainly addressed a number -- if not most -- of the issues that they have raised and we will continue to do so,” he added, citing, for instance, subdued increases in prices of basic goods.

“We always talk to people who would like to discuss matters with us. But if they chose not to, it’s our obligation to continue to fight for... and protect the rights of our workers.”

Rene E. Ofreneo, director of the Center for Labor Justice at the University of the Philippines School of Labor and Industrial Relations, said it is time for government to review its programs.

Noting that Mr. Aquino’s “term is ending”, Mr. Ofreneo said in a telephone interview: “Many labor groups have the same sentiment.”

“They have high expectations following Mr. Aquino’s social contract in 2010. They are now looking for results, asking: ‘Where are they?’”

TUCP-Nagkaisa has around 2.7 million worker-members, said the group’s spokesperson Alan A. Tanjusay, with most coming from the informal sector. At least 25,000 are expected to join the group’s Friday march in Metro Manila and similar protest actions will be held in other regions.

The Employers Confederation of the Philippines (ECOP) asked TUCP not to halt consultations with Malacañang.

“It will be unfortunate if TUCP will close the door on the presidential dialogue on employment issues,” ECOP President Edgardo G. Lacson said via text.

“The journey towards progress and full employment is a long-term aspiration that should not be put on hold by unmet present demand for short-term gains like a substantial wage adjustment now. ECOP urges TUCP to reconsider its decision to boycott the dialogue with the president even if it has low expectations on the outcome of such consultations.” By Melissa Luz T. Lopez, Reporter BusinessWorld

Aquino has not achieved anything to uplift the lives of the workers - TUCP

MALACAÑANG dismissed Monday the allegation of a labor group that the Aquino administration has not achieved anything to uplift the lives of the workers.

Presidential spokesperson Edwin Lacierda said that the government has been trying to address the labor issues being raised by different groups, such as the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP).

He said some of them might not be fully satisfied with what the government has been doing, "but we have certainly addressed a number if not most of the issues that they have raised; and we will continue to do so.

"I will certainly disagree with them that we have not done anything to improve the plight of workers in this country," he added.

Lacierda said that the Department of Labor and Employment has beefed up the labor standards and has made sure that employers complied with the law.

He also cited that since 2010, the number of strikes per year has been limited to less than 10.

"In 2014, for example, out of 159 notices of strike and lockout, only two finally pushed through. This is a result of the agency’s efforts in implementing the Single Entry Approach or SEnA, through which filed labor cases go through a 30-day conciliation-mediation period," the Palace official added.

TUCP has said that they would stop holding dialogue with the government as what they used to do in time for Labor Day, May 1.

The group has said that there was "no substantial progress" on the issues that they have raised during the past five years of the Aquino government.

TUCP is one of the members of Nagkaisa, an organization of labor federations planning to mobilize some 25,000 people for a protest march on Labor Day.

Nagkaisa spokesperson Alan Tanjusay said the march from España to Mendiola in Manila will start at 8 a.m.

Simultaneous protests will also be held in Cebu, Bacolod, Davao, General Santos, Cagayan de Oro, Cavite and parts of Southern Tagalog. - SunStar (SDR/FP/Sunnex)

Labor groups to hold prayer, candle vigils for Mary Jane Veloso on Tuesday

Mary Jane Veloso (Photograph: Jefta Images/Barcroft Media)

Various labor organizations will hold prayer and indoor candle-lighting vigils for Mary Jane Veloso, the 30-year-old Filipino scheduled to be executed in Indonesia on Tuesday.

The vigils will be held at the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) compound and Occupational Safety and Health Center in Quezon City at 9 a.m. and 10:30 a.m., respectively, on April 28.

Veloso, arrested in an Indonesian airport for carrying 2.6 kilos of heroin in 2010, is scheduled to be executed by firing squad on Tuesday afternoon.

The TUCP-Nagkaisa is still hoping that the Indonesian government will reconsider the sentence imposed on Veloso.

“While we fervently hope for the Indonesian government to stay her execution,” the group said in a statement Monday.

“We also hope that the painful process will translate into real, immediate reforms in job-creation and wage policies so that Filipinos will no longer aspire to work abroad,” it added.

Incidentally, the group will be celebrating the International Workers Memorial Day (IWMD) and the launching of Workers' Rights on Wheels on the same day, to commemorate victims of construction accident and intensify calls for safe, decent work for all in Diliman, Quezon City.

Members of the Global union federation Building and Woodworkers International (BWI) together with affiliates Associated Labor Unions (ALU-TUCP) and National Union of Building and Construction Workers (NUBCW) will be joining the event.

Monday activities

For Monday, the Church Task Force to Save the Life of Mary Jane Veloso will be holding a candle-lighting and "prayer action" gathering in front of the Indonesian Embassy in Makati City at 6 p.m.

The group previously started an online petition calling on Indonesian President Joko Widodo and President Benigno Aquino III to save Veloso via clemency and pardon.

As of this posting, the petition has gathered more than 31,600 supporters.

The group invited signatories to the online petition, as well as supporters on Twitter using the hashtag #SaveMaryJane, "to offer a prayer and light a candle for Mary Jane."

"Bring your family, friends, classmates, or officemates. The bigger we are, the stronger our message will be," their invite said. "If you are living outside the Philippines, we encourage you to do the same. Please light a candle in front of the Embassy of Indonesia in your country and say a prayer."

For its part, the Asia Pacific Forum on Women, Law and Development called on Widodo to halt Veloso's execution and grant her "a full re-trial."

In a statement, the group pointed out that Veloso was not granted a fair trial because she wasn't given the free assistance of an able interpreter as well as the denial for review of the case.

It added that Veloso's case should instead instigate a look into the plight of Indonesian women and migrant workers.

Veloso, a mother of two, vehemently denied that she's a drug smuggler, saying she was tricked into carrying the suitcase by a Filipino friend who also acted as her recruiter.

Veloso, who was transferred to Indonesia's execution island last Friday, is set to be executed by firing squad.

The Philippine government has already filed its second appeal for judicial review on Veloso's case, hoping to commute her sentence to life imprisonment

Manila first sought an appeal last March, questioning the competence of the translator provided to Veloso during the trial. It was rejected by Indonesia's Supreme Court, but its laws allow death penalty cases to be appealed and reviewed despite a final ruling.

The second appeal includes proof that Veloso is not a drug smuggler based on the findings of a Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency team who visited her in prison last month. — with Rose-An Jessica Dioquino/KBK/RSJ, GMA News


Tuesday, April 21, 2015

House bodies approve bill creating a regulatory framework for LPG industry

LPG cylinder

The House Committees on Energy and Trade and Industry have reported out for floor deliberation a measure seeking to establish a regulatory framework for the safe operations of the Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) industry.

House Bill 5617, which substituted House Bill 396 authored by Rep. Susan A. Yap (2nd District, Tarlac) and House Bill 756 filed by Rep. Arnel U. Ty (Party-list, LPGMA), also sets standards of conduct and codes of practice for the industry.

Hon. Susan A. YapYap said the measure, to be known as the "LPG Industry Regulation and Safety Act," would address quality and safety concerns and uphold the rights of consumers to freely choose the LPG brand they want to purchase.

"The LPG industry has already marked a significant portion in the market due to its high demand. Operating under a regulated downstream oil industry structure, it allows its market participants to engage in unfair and unsafe trade practices, hurting consumers and to a large extent, causing negative externalities to society," Yap said.

The measure establishes a regulatory framework for the importation, refining, refilling, transportation, distribution and marketing of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), and the manufacture, requalification, exchange and swapping or improvement of LPC cylinders.

It also creates the LPG Monitoring and Enforcement Task Force to assist the Department of Energy (DOE) in monitoring and compliance standards inspection, and in the exercise of other powers and functions necessary to give force and effect to the proposed Act.

The bill mandates the DOE to deputize the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) in the processing of the License to Operate for dealers and retailers, subject to the standards set in the proposed Act.

Under the bill, engaging in business without license to operate, engaging in business without accreditation, refusal or obstruction of inspection, failure to post license to operate, failure to submit reportorial requirements, illegal storage, failure to comply with product standards, adulteration, underfilling, illegal refilling, hoarding, unauthorized trading of LPG cylinders are prohibited and fined with a maximum of P500,000 for an individual and P1,000,000, for a corporation.

Upon prior consultation with the LPG industry participants and government agencies concerned, the DOE shall determine the mechanics, rules, and regulations needed for the implementation of a newly established Philippine LPG Cylinder Improvement Program with the objective of safeguarding and ensuring the safety of the consumers.

The measure also stipulates the monitoring and enforcement mechanisms for the LPG industry, specifically the reports and disclosures required to be submitted by the LPG industry participants to DOE, and the central database of LPG Industry Participants to be created by the DOE.

To enhance awareness among LPG consumers and end-users, the measure requires DOE and the DTI to disseminate information about the proposed Act.

A Joint Congressional Oversight Committee shall be created to monitor the implementation of the proposed Act.

The measure directs the effective coordination between the DOE and the DTI, and grants certain powers and functions to the DTI, the Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG), the Philippine National Police (PNP) and the local government units (LGUs) for the effective implementation of the proposed Act.

Aside from Yap, Ty and Reps. Reynaldo Umali (2nd District, Oriental Mindoro) and Mark Villar (Lone District, Las Piñas City), who chair the Committee on Energy and the Committee on Trade and Industry, respectively, other authors of the bill are Reps. Wilfredo Caminero (2nd District, Cebu), Walden Bello (Party List, AKBAYAN), Lawrence Lemuel Fortun (1st District, Agusan Del Norte), Felix William Fuentebella (4th District, Camarines Sur), Jesus Sacdalan (1st District, North Cotabato), Rosenda Ann Ocampo (6th District, Manila), Gwendolyn Garcia (3rd District, Cebu), Ann Hofer (2nd District, Zamboanga Sibugay), Celso Lobregat (1st District, Zamboanga City), Ma. Valentina Plaza (1st District, Agusan Del Sur), Rosemarie Arenas (3rd District, Pangasinan), Juliet Cortuna (Party List, A Teacher), Isagani Amatong (3rd District, Zamboanga Del Norte), Pryde Henry Teves (3rd District, Negros Oriental), Henedina Abad (Lone District, Batanes), Sherwin Tugna (Party List, Cibac), Silvestre Bello III (Party List, 1BAP), Michael Angelo Rivera (Party List, 1CARE), Isidro Ungab (3rd District, Davao City), Dakila Carlo Cua (Lone District, Quirino), JC Rahman Nava (Lone District, Guimaras), Mariano Piamonte, Jr. (Party List, A TEACHER), Leopoldo Bataoil (2nd District, Pangasinan), Leah Paquiz (Party List, ANG NARS), Juliette Uy (2nd District, Misamis Oriental), Jose Atienza, Jr. (Party List, BUHAY), Arthur Defensor, Jr. (3rd District, Iloilo), Jesulito Manalo (Party List, ANGKLA), Ronald Cosalan (Lone District, Benguet), Sonny Collantes (3rd District, Batangas), Arthur Yap (3rd District, Bohol), Antonio Lagdameo, Jr. (2nd District, Davao Del Norte), Jorge Almonte (1st District, Misamis Occidental), Raul del Mar (1st District, Cebu City), Cheryl Deloso-Montalla (2nd District, Zambales), Jonathan Dela Cruz (Party List, ABAKADA), Benhur Salimbangon (4th District, Cebu), Samuel Pagdilao (Party List, ACT-CIS), Raymond Democrito Mendoza (Party List, TUCP), Rogelio Espina (Lone District, Biliran), Jose Tejada (3rd District, North Cotabato), George Arnaiz (2nd District, Negros Oriental), Carlos Isagani Zarate (Party List, Bayan Muna), Neri Colmenares (Party List, Bayan Muna), and Fernando Hicap (Party List, ANAKPAWIS).

by: Jazmin S. Camero, Media Relations Service-PRIB

Sunday, April 19, 2015

P89 wage increase in Northern Mindanao pushed

CAGAYAN DE ORO. In an ongoing construction along the Cagayan de Oro riverbank, Johnny measures these steel bars. On Friday, the Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Board-Northern Mindanao held a public consultation on the P89 wage hike pushed for by the workers in the region. (Harold Jess Siason, Liceo intern)

CAGAYAN DE ORO -- Workers in Northern Mindanao are pushing for the P89 wage increase in the region to cope with the soaring prices of basic commodities.

On Friday, April 17, the Department of Labor and Employment (Dole) regional office, through the Regional Tripartite Wage and Productivity Board (RTWPB), and the National Economic Development Agency (Neda) and Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) conducted a public hearing to provide stakeholders a platform to discuss the impact of the daily minimum wage increase petition.



With the petition, the daily minimum wage will be P395 from the current P306.

High economic growth

During the public hearing, Neda-Northern Mindanao Director Leon Dacanay Jr. updated the audience of the economy in the region since 2013. He emphasized that Northern Mindanao has maintained its P250 billion economic growth and its Gross Regional Domestic Product (GRDP) of P55.06 billion, which remains to be the highest among Mindanao regions.

Dacanay, who is also the vice chairperson of RTWPB-Northern Mindanao, said the value of rice production increased to 8.79 percent or 3.9 billion metric tons, resulting in the stabilization of the rice prices in the middle of 2014.

Dacanay cited that in the coconut industry, the nut production in the region has increased to 1.18 percent or P1.8 billion from 2013 to 2014, while the copra production remained stagnant with 0.03 percent or P438,852. The overall production of major crops like vegetables, fruits and root crops rose to 4.4 percent or 7.8 million metric tons last year.

But Dacanay said that despite the high economic growth, the magnitude of poor people continues to rise although the employment rate is relatively stable.

"Inflation rate continues to fall since the decline of the world oil prices that started in the middle of last year. However, the purchasing power of the peso declined by 3.6 centavos as of February 2015 from June 2013," he said.

Soaring prices of basic commodities

In the public hearing, the Associated Labor Union–Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (ALU-TUCP) presented its petition for the P89 increase and the reason why it should be granted to the workers.

According to Nicandro Borja, regional vice president of ALU-TUCP, 42 percent of a worker’s daily wage goes to food.
The 42 percent of the minimum daily wage in the city is P128.52. "And when you subtract that amount to P306, the amount left for the worker would only be P177.56 per day," Borja said.

With the continuing rise of the prices of basic commodities every day, workers are left destitute with what they can take home to their families given their minimum starvation “dying wage,” he said.

He added the daily minimum wage is insufficient especially that workers spend the expenses on the transport fare and meal plus the payment of electric and water bills.

If a worker has children who are students, their budget would be divided to the tuition, as well as the “baon” or allowance of the children, he said.

Aside from those expenses, a worker also spends for clothing, medicines and/or vitamins and and [of course] recreation, he added.
“And if their family does not have a house, they would [again] slash out their budget to paying the monthly rent,” he said.

No dramatic surge of prices on basic commodities

But the DTI said there is no dramatic incident where the price of the basic commodities has increased.

Lawyer Fel Lester Brillantes, DTI-Northern Mindanao chief of Consumer Welfare Division (CID), said that in the comparative price monitoring report from the second quarter of 2014 to the first quarter of this year, the products monitored like canned goods, instant noodles, iodized rock salt, flour and processed canned pork have maintained their suggested retail price (SRP).

The DTI considers a red flag when the increase of prices is more than 10 percent.

Brillantes said not all products are monitored by DTI because there are other implementing agencies like the Department of Agriculture (DA), which monitors prices of agriculture produce.

“In the case of the daily minimum wage of 306 pesos, investors may look at this as preference in choosing where to invest. And that is our advantage,” Dacanay said.

He added that the capacity of the region to give a wage increase depends to more than 95 percent of small and medium enterprises, which need to be taken into consideration.

Cagayan de Oro Chamber of Commerce president Cerael Donggay said the P89 minimum wage increase is too much.

“The increase should not be too drastic to prevent an adverse effect to the business sector. Maybe a P4 increase will do,” Donggay said. (Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro)

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Illegal foreign workers on the rise in Phl – TUCP

MANILA, Philippines - More foreigners are entering the country to illegally seek employment, according to the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP).

TUCP spokesman Alan Tanjusay said the number of illegal foreign workers in the country has been increasing in the past years.

“The influx of migrant workers is a growing phenomenon in the country today,” he said.

TUCP estimates that over 3,500 foreigners are working in the country illegally.

The figure is expected to increase unless the government takes the necessary measures to control the entry of illegal foreign workers, he added.

Tanjusay said the bulk of undocumented foreign workers are Chinese nationals and others are South Koreans, Japanese, Indonesians, Malaysians and Vietnamese.

Undocumented foreign workers are often employed in the construction, manufacturing, electronics and services industries in Metro Manila, Central Visayas, Davao region, Zamboanga peninsula, Bataan and Batangas, he added.

The increasing number of migrants working without government permits and without fulfilling other requirements for alien workers has very serious implications in the current employment and underemployment situation, Tanjusay said.

Secretary Rosalinda Baldoz said only legal foreign workers pass through the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE).

The entry of undocumented foreign workers is a concern of the Bureau of Immigration (BI), she added.

TUCP is pushing for the creation of a tripartite committee comprised of representatives from DOLE, BI and other concerned government agencies to stop the influx of illegal migrant workers in the country.

Tanjusay said the proposed committee is to ensure migrant workers go through the legal process and comply with the requirements of the Alien Employment Permit (AEP).

“The number of illegal migrants is growing very fast that it immediately needs government oversight to ensure that labor laws and standards are in place and are working to make sure there are no abuses and exploitations taking place,” he said. - By Mayen Jaymalin (The Philippine Star)

Monday, April 13, 2015

TUCP submits May 1 agenda

The Trade Union Congress of the Philippines-Nagkaisa submitted to Malacañang its proposed discount card and unemployment insurance programs for minimum-waged workers for approval of President Aquino during the traditional Labor Day breakfast with labor groups in the palace on May 1, a press release from the TUCP said.

The group also proposed to Aquino the approval of a majority coconut-farmer administered trust fund to ensure that the proceeds of the P77 billion coco levy are used to promote jobs in the coconut industry and to set up coco-industrial hubs, ensure the completion of CARP with respect to lands under current Notice of Coverage;

Assist the peasant farmers through appropriate support measures and financing including trainings, appropriate technology, and easy-term credit; a return of the subsidy for MRT and LRT users to cushion rising costs for ordinary workers; and pass the Freedom of Information law, the press release said.

The measure, under the proposed Labor Enhancement Assistance Program will assist and empower the basic sectors, include an unemployment insurance policy for the 3.4 million minimum wage earners providing three months of minimum wage salary coverage in cases of retrenchment and a minimum discount card that serves as a voucher or CCT-like program for minimum wage employees to give them a monthly discount on tuition fees, purchase of rice, basic food commodities, medicines worth P2,000, it said.

The March 1 to 7 Pulse Asia Survey on urgent national concerns showed that 4 of the top 5 concerns relate to the daily survival needs of ordinary Filipinos. It showed 46 percent are crying out at inflation, 44 percent have said salaries are too small to cover daily expenses and another 34 percent said there are no decent jobs, the press release added.

TUCP-Nagkaisa executive director Louie Corral said they told Aquino to tap the 2014 P300B excess funds as reported last week by National Economic Development Authority chief Arsenio Balisacan as possible source of the proposed program, the press release added. - The Visayan Daily Star

Sunday, April 12, 2015

TUCP seeks Labor Day breaks for PH workers

The Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP)-Nagkaisa has submitted to the government its proposed discount-card and unemployment-insurance programs for minimum-wage workers for approval by President Benigno Aquino 3rd during the traditional Labor Day breakfast with labor groups to be hosted by Aquino in Malacañang on May 1.

“We have submitted to President Aquino our agenda on the May 1 breakfast meeting agenda. These are what we believe as amelioration programs aimed at empowering workers to cope with rising cost of living,” Gerard Seno, the group’s executive vice president said over the weekend.

The group had also proposed to Aquino to approve a majority coconut-farmer administered trust fund to ensure that proceeds from the P77-billion coconut levy fund are used to promote jobs in the coconut industry and set up coco-industrial hubs; ensure completion of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program with respect to lands under current notice of coverage; assist farmers through appropriate support measures and financing including training, appropriate technology and easy-term credit; return of subsidy for Metro rail Transit 3 and Light Rail Transit 1 and LRT 2 users to cushion rising costs for ordinary workers; and pass the Freedom of Information bill.

The Labor Enhancement Assistance Program seeks an unemployment insurance policy for the 3.4 million minimum wage earners, providing them three months of minimum wage salary coverage in cases of retrenchment; and a minimum discount card that serves as a voucher for minimum wage employees, giving them a monthly discount of P2,000 on tuition, purchase of rice, basic food commodities and medicines.

On March 1 to 7, a Pulse Asia survey on urgent national concerns showed that 4 of the top 5 concerns relate to daily survival needs of ordinary Filipinos. It found that 46 percent cried out at inflation, 44 percent said salaries are too small to cover daily expenses and 34 percent said there are no decent jobs.

On March 18, the wage board approved a P15-increase in the minimum wage in Metro Manila as against the TUCP-Nagkaisa petition of P136.

TUCP-Nagkaisa executive director Louie Corral said they had asked the President to tap the reported P300 billion in excess government funds in 2014 to finance the proposed unemployment insurance and the discount card programs. - by JING VILLAMENTE / The Manila Times

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Group’s take on maternity bills

THE EMPLOYERS Confederation of the Philippines (ECOP) on Tuesday sought further clarification regarding several bills that expanded the benefits of women in the workplace.
ECOP President Edgardo G. Lacson: Clarify maternity benefits -- BW File Photo

“ECOP fully supports the objective of the bill raising the maternity benefits for women. There is, however, a need to clarify some ambiguities in the bill, if it is raising monetary benefit or number of maternity leave days, or both. Until such clarification is made, ECOP reserves the right to submit its official position on the bill,” Edgardo G. Lacson, ECOP president, said in a text message.

Three weeks ago, the group was unable to attend a hearing held by the Senate committee on women, family relations and gender equality, which discussed maternity leave benefits provided under Senate bill Numbers 288, 2083 and 2084. Senate Bills 2661 and 2710 also aim to prolong the maternity leave benefits of female employees, married or unmarried, in the government and private sectors.

Maternity leave for normal birth is only 60 days and 78 days for caesarean birth.

In a document submitted by ECOP, the group enumerated the “ambiguities” it found in the bills.

The group also refused to issue comments until they are clarified.

“Until the ambiguity is resolved, ECOP cannot offer any position,” the document read.

For its part, the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) expressed full support for the proposed law. According to TUCP Spokesperson Alan A. Tanjusay, employers must not deprive nursing women their due compensation. -- Jauhn Etienne Villaruel / BusinessWorld