Sunday, June 21, 2020

PH among 10 most dangerous work sites



The Philippines is among top 10 dangerous place for workers in 2020 based on the 2020 Global Rights Index issued by the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC), the Associated Labor Unions-Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (ALU-TUCP) said Saturday.

Other countries in the top 10 are Bangladesh, Brazil, Colombia, Egypt, Honduras, India, Kazakhstan, Turkey and Zimbabwe.

“The ALU-TUCP) are fully in accord with the findings of the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) and stand by their listing of the Philippines as one of the top 10 most dangerous countries in the world for workers,” the country’s biggest labor group said in a statement.

“We see the handwriting clearly on the wall: workers rights and workers are and will be victims in the current political environment,” the labor group’s spokesman Alan Tanjusay said.

This, Tanjusay said, was considering the current state of labor relations policy during the quarantine allowing wage reductions and suspending labor rights inspections, the anti-labor and the anti-consumer program of the economic managers to raise anew excise taxes and opposing security of tenure, and the “dangerous political slide towards authoritarianism” evidenced by passage of the Anti-Terror Bill.

“There remains unresolved assassinations, allegedly labor-related disappearances, various repressions, red-tagging and wanton attacks on workers and workers’ fundamental rights that makes the current environment dangerous and difficult for workers,” the group said.

The ALU-TUCP also foresee the conditions to get even worse in the days ahead because of the current full operationalization of police and military offices in ecozones to combat what they describe as “radical trade unions”, the inevitable enactment and enforcement of anti-terror bill and the current aggressive push by business owners in cahoots with the economic managers for increased labor flexibilization, wage reduction and the lowering of labor standards -- using the COVID19.

Tanjusay said it is the government that now makes the country more dangerous and more difficult place for workers to live and to work and as they are promoting unproductive and very dangerous class warfare.

“We urge our national government to listen to us and to remember the lessons to history. We plead to our national leadership to step back from the brink of this totalitarian temptation and accept the path of building back better by upholding our individual civil and political liberties, respecting our collective economic rights, and by putting our workers interests first. This is the path to saving jobs and saving lives.” he said.

The ITUC Global Rights Index depicts the world’s worst countries for workers based on the degree of respect for workers’ rights by rating 139 countries on a scale from 1 to 5. Workers’ rights are absent in countries with the rating 5 and violations occur on an irregular basis in countries with the rating 1. - by Vito Barcelo

Thursday, June 4, 2020

The Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) expresses its grave concern on the passing of HB 6875




TUCP fears that the provisions in the proposed law would be used to violate the worker's exercise of freedom of association. Furthermore, this organization fears that the proposed law may be used to quell the activities of legitimate trade union and labor organizations.

TUCP President and Congressman Raymond Democrito Mendoza believes that dissent must be heard and not silenced, and that a worker's freedom of expression and association must be honored at all times. Thus, the honorable representative voted against HB 6875.

𝙋𝙖𝙧𝙖 𝙨𝙖 𝙢𝙖𝙣𝙜𝙜𝙖𝙜𝙖𝙬𝙖𝙣𝙜 𝙋𝙞𝙡𝙞𝙥𝙞𝙣𝙤!

- TUCP Labor Center

Saturday, May 16, 2020

Labor groups urge government to provide service vehicles for workers during MECQ

Labor groups urged the government to provide service vehicles to ferry workers to their workplaces as some businesses will now be allowed to operate under the modified enhanced community quarantine.

The government can mobilize the fleet of cars sitting idle in various government agencies, departments, and government-owned and controlled corporations, said Associated Labor Unions (ALU) Executive Vice President Gerard Seno.

“We appeal to the chief executive to immediately mobilize all idle government-purchased service vehicles to shuttle daily-paid workers whose employers are unable to provide them with shuttle service due to economic difficulties brought by a sixty-day community quarantine lockdown,” said Seno in a statement.

To note, public transport is still not allowed in areas under the modified enhanced community quarantine.

“With government vehicles temporarily providing shuttle will help both the economically distressed businesses and incomeless workers who lost their sources of livelihood during the lockdown to slowly recover,” said Seno.

The Kilusang Mayo Uno said that workers should be provided with safe transportation as “returning to work in this epidemic is hazardous.”

“If the government and business want to resume operations, they should provide transportation for workers. Workers cannot be made to suffer from walking for hours over long distances. We want to work to contribute to economy, get the economy running again, and because there is no or very little aid coming to our families,” said KMU Secretary General Jerome Adonis in a statement.

Adonis suggested to resume the operations of public transportation on areas under modified enhanced community quarantine, “provided with operational guidelines for safety and health.”

“Companies should provide transportation to workers, but public transportation is really key to enable workers [to] traverse major thoroughfares of Metro Manila. Aside from trains and buses, public utility jeepneys are also needed at least for collector roads,” he said. - By Analou De Vera

Wednesday, May 6, 2020

TUCP expresses its concern and displeasure on the closure of ABS CBN: 11,000 workers impacted by closure


The Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) expresses its grave concern and its deep displeasure on the loss of jobs and negative impact on the fight against COVID-19 that the Cease and Desist Order of the National Telecommunications closing down ABS-CBN will have. With a single stroke of the pen, an unfeeling NTC has rendered 11,000 workers jobless, increasing the vulnerability of these workers and their families to both the ravages of COVID-19 and the economic recession. Truth and the ABS-CBN workers are the first victims of the NTC order.

The second victims of NTC will be the nation as a whole. Mean-spirited and unwise, the NTC Order will effectively raise COVID-19 incidence as our poorest people, without the distraction of their favorite tv shows inside their super-heated, locked down homes, start congregating outside their crowded communities without physical distancing. Further, without recourse to their trusted and credible news sources, people will be left adrift in the miasma and mess of fake news and myths that populates other media.

At this time when the nation's survival is at stake, at this point when real time information is crucial in battling the COVID-19 pandemic, and at this moment when national solidarity is forged through media and broadcast networks so our nation may heal as one, NTC by-passed the prerogative of Congress, as the representatives of the people, to properly rule on the fate of the ABS-CBN franchise renewal during an Enhanced Community Quarantine (ECQ).

Without legal basis for issuing the Order, NTC should have taken the higher moral ground by issuing a provisional authority to operate thereby allowing a comprehensive Congressional deliberation on the issues at hand.

Instead, NTC jumped the gun by foolishly putting its foot forward to derail the democratic process and in the process, hijacking a Constitutional mandate to Congress emanating from the people.

TUCP demands that the NTC provide its legal basis for issuing the Cease and Desist Order notwithstanding a Congressional consensus that a temporary permit must be issued to ABS-CBN while it works out its franchise renewal from Congress.

As the largest national trade union center, we remind NTC that it is not just shutting off a network, it is treacherously shutting off the hopes and aspirations of its workers and their families. It is treacherously shutting off all hopes and aspirations of its 11,000 workers and their families forged through hard work and perseverance to improve their lives through an honest living.

TUCP joins the Filipino nation in rallying behind the cause of the viewers of ABS CBN with their daily involvement and even commitment to ABS-CBN news and entertainment programs that soothes and makes it easier to bear with the hardships of their daily lives. The ordinary Filipino who voted for President Duterte could not have been more resilient, hopeful, creative and more hardworking if there was no ABS-CBN to accompany them in their daily struggles.

The TUCP, along with our member-federations and member-workers are one with ABS-CBN and its workers in this fight. This too shall pass. - TUCP Labor Center


Atty. Raymond Democrito C. Mendoza

President, Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP)
Representative, House of Representatives, TUCP Partylist