Wednesday, September 1, 2021

Gobyerno, mga kompanya dapat sagutin RT-PCR test ng mga manggagawa: grupo



MAYNILA - Nabibigatan pa rin ang isang labor group sa panibagong price cap na ipapataw ng Department of Health (DOH) sa mga RT-PCR test kontra COVID-19. 

Sabi ng ALU-TUCP, mabigat pa rin sa bulsa ng karaniwang economic frontliner ang inaprubahang price cap ng Department of Health, na tinatayang nasa P2,450 hanggang P3,360 depende sa kung saan magpapatingin. 

Giit nila, dapat gobyerno o mga kompanya ang umako sa gastos. 

"Stagnant ang wages simula noong March last year, walang dagdag. Pero yung mga presyo ng mga bilihin at mga serbisyo ay tumataas so ang value ng sahod ng mga manggagawa ngayong pandemya ay napakaliit. Kung idadagdag pa natin ang cost ng testing, wala na silang maiuuwi para sa kanilang mahal sa buhay," ani ALU-TUCP Spokesperson Alan Tanjusay. 

Simula Setyembre 6, nasa P2,450 hanggang P2,800 na ang RT-PCR test sa mga pampublikong pasilidad. Samantalang nasa P2,940 hanggang P3,360 naman sa mga pribadong pasilidad. 

Kung magpapa-home service ay dadagdagan ito ng P1,000. 

Noong Agosto 16 naman ay ginawang P960 ang price cap ng antigen testing. 

Ayon sa DOH, ginawa nila ito para umano pasok sa budget ng pubkliko, at para bumilis ang testing capacity ng bansa. 

"Meron tayong laging target for testing. nung una ang target natin 70K, sumunod 90-100k so that we can be able to decrease our positivity rate to 5%. Once transmisison had been reduced, we can see positivity rate decreasing as well," ani DOH Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire. 

Tutulong ang Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) at DOH sa pag-monitor sa mga laboratoryo at iba pang pasilidad na nagsasagawa ng testing kung nasusunod ito at walang nag-o-overprice. 

"So yung international price survey tapos yung mga suppliers and manufacturers nito, merong data ang DOH. We conducted also jointly with them, public consultations para sa mga suppliers, manufacturers, operators ng testing laboratories and private hospitals and public hospitals," ani DTI Undersecretary Ruth Castelo. 

Sagot naman ng Employers' Confederation of the Philippines (ECOP) na di rin kakayanin ng mga kompanyang akuuin ang regular na pagte-test ng mga empleyado. 

"At the end of the day, talagang ibaba mo man nang ibaba sa kalahati yan, mahal pa rin eh dapat talaga gumawa na ng remedyo ang gobyerno. Irepurpose nila ang budget," ani ECOP President Sergio Ortiz Luis. 

Pero sabi ng DOH, nag-donate sila ng testing kits sa maraming laboratoryo kaya operational cost lang dapat ang babayaran ng magpapa-test. 

Friday, July 9, 2021

Gov’t job recovery plan insufficient — TUCP

File photo


The government’s employment recovery plan lacks crucial details on the kind of jobs supposed to be created and whether there will be any temporary jobs for the millions of jobless during the pandemic, a major labor group said.

According to the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP), the two-year National Employment Recovery Strategy (NERS) that President Duterte signed last week “does not answer important questions.”

“What kind of jobs will be created? How long will it take for these industries to be set up? How will these industries be set up?” said TUCP Rep. Raymond Mendoza.

“What is even more crucial: What happens to our workers and what temporary work can they perform while waiting for these new, long-term decent jobs?” he added.

TUCP again called on the government to lead public employment measures through massive infrastructure spending.

Executive Order No. 140 formalized the adoption of the eight-point NERS agenda that excluded the top proposal of the NERS task force for a P24-billion wage subsidy program to save 1 million workers from joblessness through a monthly subsidy of P8,000 over three months.


TUCP said the national plan did not identify the priority industries per region that would determine jobs that would be available and the number of workers that could potentially be employed. —DONA Z. PAZZIBUGAN

Friday, April 23, 2021

Proposed police clearance for DOLE transactions has chilling effect on workers — solon

The Philippine National Police’s (PNP) proposal to require a national police clearance for transactions with the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) will have a chilling effect on the "free and unfettered" exercise of workers rights, TUCP (Trade Union Congress of the Philippines) party-list Representative Raymond Mendoza said Friday. 

In a statement, Mendoza described the police's suggestion as an "unwarranted infringement of the constitutional rights of workers to self-organization."

"On its face, the request of the PNP to require those dealing with the DOLE to submit national police clearances superimposes the heavy-handed police state security apparatus on our labor relations system," Mendoza said.

"It is violative of our right to organize and unduly expands the discretion of the State in intervening in the exercise of our constitutional rights," he added.

Further, Mendoza is urging DOLE to reject the PNP's proposal. Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III has said the suggestion is already under consideration.

In a letter to Bello dated March 10, 2021, PNP chief Police General Debold Sinas said the PNP is hoping that the DOLE will support the National Police Clearance System (NPCS) “by making the NPC as one of your requirements in your various transactions.”

It was not specified what types of transactions would require the national police clearance.

For Mendoza, the said requirement would only intimidate and scare off workers from exercising their rights, noting that it may be an "insurmountable hurdle" in registering a union.

"It will emasculate the exercise of labor rights and will make a mockery of the labor justice system," Mendoza said.

The Associated Labor Unions also denounced the proposal, saying it is an added burden to workers and will threaten industrial peace in the country. — Anna Felicia Bajo/RSJ, GMA News

Saturday, April 17, 2021

TUCP backs calls for China pullout from reef



MANILA, Philippines — The Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) supports the statements of Secretaries Delfin Lorenzana and Teodoro Locsin Jr. in demanding the withdrawal of Chinese naval, militia and maritime presence in and around Julian Felipe Reef.

The TUCP believes that the Chinese presence is “an encroachment both of the territorial integrity of the Philippines and a denigration of national sovereignty.”

“With these senior officials of government, we cannot, as an independent, self-respecting people, allow this brazen effrontery and continuing Chinese incursion into the Philippines, to remain unmet and unchallenged,” the group said.

It added that “not only is Chinese presence violating the rights of our fishermen to Philippine fishing waters and denying them their right to their livelihood and a decent living, the Chinese are endangering our national food security. Further, they are denying the fundamental right of the Filipino people to develop and fully exploit the bounties of our territorial seas, as well as that of our exclusive economic zone and all that is above and beneath.”

In calling on Filipinos to support defense chief Lorenzana and Locsin of foreign affairs, the TUCP noted that “too much has transpired in the near-term, including Chinese reclamation work in what are clearly Philippine territorial waters, characterized by a not-so-veiled build-up of a threatening external military presence.”


“That makes it imperative for Filipinos to now demonstrate unqualified, multisectoral support for the strong, categorical statement of both Secretaries Lorenzana and Locsin demanding that the Chinese leave and vacate what is ours,” TUCP stressed.

It noted that the Filipino people and workers are long-time friends of the Chinese working class.

“The long history of struggle of both the Filipino working class and the Chinese working class in our respective countries have been animated by both strong nationalist fervor and a rejection of foreign encroachment into our respective territories. Hundreds of thousands of Chinese now work in the Philippines, even as there are hundreds of thousands of Filipinos also working in Chinese territories,” the group said.

“We have both contributed to creating employment opportunities for each other’s peoples, as well as helping each other’s economies progress. This is the kind of confidence building and trust which our respective peoples should foster. It is in this spirit that we speak candidly and call on China to match deed to words, and respect, observe and abide with Philippine national sovereignty, if we, as peoples and nations, will truly keep the peace and build prosperity for all,” TUCP said.

Meanwhile, Sen. Risa Hontiveros said yesterday that President Duterte’s plan to use his “friendship” with Chinese President Xi Jinping to ease tensions in the West Philippine Sea “will not work as Beijing has never acted as a friend of Filipinos.”

She issued the statement following presidential spokesman Harry Roque’s assurance that Duterte would privately resolve the alarming intrusion of hundreds of Chinese militia vessels in the West Philippine Sea as he is “friends with Xi.”

“It would be a good thing if that (friendship) had been marked by mutual respect. But we’ve been too respectful that even if China has been blatantly doing wrong, we bow to them, and they’re not showing friendship or respect to us,” Hontiveros told CNN Philippines.

She said Beijing’s violations of the country’s sovereign rights and international laws have been flagrant – from enacting a sweeping and draconian coast guard law to driving away Filipino fishermen, from harassing an ABS-CBN news crew to building militarized artificial islands.

Hontiveros described Roque’s statements as a double-whammy against proper diplomacy and freedom of information.

“MalacaƱang, do something. China is becoming the region’s biggest bully. It’s time to unequivocally stand up to her. We must confront who supposedly is our best friend. Those vessels have been in our waters for the past many weeks. When will all these lies stop?” the senator said.

For her, the Duterte administration must be ashamed that the country does not have freedom of navigation in its own waters.

“And it’s infuriating to repeatedly hear statements from the highest office of our government, of our nation, that the Philippines and China will resolve these issues because we are ‘friends’,” Hontiveros said.

“So the call remains: we demand that every single Chinese vessel leave Philippine territory. Their continued and obstinate presence is a direct challenge to the international rules-based order in the oceans that has maintained stability in the region for so long,” she added. — Paolo Romero (The Philippine Star )  / Catherine Talavera