Wednesday, November 24, 2021

‘No work, no pay’ rule for unvaxxed workers unfair, say labor groups



LOCAL labor groups and even business leaders cried foul over the proposed “no work, no pay” policy that the Department of Labor and Employment (Dole) plans to implement for unvaccinated employees starting December 1, 2021.

A representative of the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) claims that the policy is a form of punishment and discrimination for employees who have not gotten vaccinated against the Coronavirus disease (Covid-19).

Alan Tanjusay, TUCP national spokesperson, said the national government should provide incentives to their employees in order to convince them to get vaccinated such as giving them paid leaves, financial bonuses, rice allowance, or simply providing shuttle services going to vaccination sites.

The Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) has issued Resolution 148 and 149 that would require all on-site employees to be vaccinated.

Labor Assistant Secretary Teresita Cucueco said in an online briefing on Monday, November 22, that employees who don’t want to get vaccinated may opt to undergo RT-PCR (reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction) testing but the payment must come from their own pocket.

Cucueco added that the “No work, no pay” rule may be applied to on-site workers who refuse to be vaccinated and cannot present a negative RT-PCR test.

Aside from TUCP, the Associated Labor Unions (ALU) Central Visayas has condemned the move of the labor department, saying that vaccination is not mandatory under Republic Act 11525 or the Covid-19 Vaccination Program Act of 2021 that was signed by President Duterte in February 2021.

Lawyer Nora Ana Meterio-Diego, ALU Central Visayas vice president, told Sunstar Cebu that the government should shoulder the expenses for the swab testing and antigen test of unvaccinated employees.

“The government should incentivize rather than punish or deprive unvaccinated workers,” Diego said.

LOCAL labor groups and even business leaders cried foul over the proposed “no work, no pay” policy that the Department of Labor and Employment (Dole) plans to implement for unvaccinated employees starting December 1, 2021.

A representative of the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) claims that the policy is a form of punishment and discrimination for employees who have not gotten vaccinated against the Coronavirus disease (Covid-19).


Alan Tanjusay, TUCP national spokesperson, said the national government should provide incentives to their employees in order to convince them to get vaccinated such as giving them paid leaves, financial bonuses, rice allowance, or simply providing shuttle services going to vaccination sites.

The Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) has issued Resolution 148 and 149 that would require all on-site employees to be vaccinated.

Labor Assistant Secretary Teresita Cucueco said in an online briefing on Monday, November 22, that employees who don’t want to get vaccinated may opt to undergo RT-PCR (reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction) testing but the payment must come from their own pocket.

Cucueco added that the “No work, no pay” rule may be applied to on-site workers who refuse to be vaccinated and cannot present a negative RT-PCR test.

Aside from TUCP, the Associated Labor Unions (ALU) Central Visayas has condemned the move of the labor department, saying that vaccination is not mandatory under Republic Act 11525 or the Covid-19 Vaccination Program Act of 2021 that was signed by President Duterte in February 2021.

Lawyer Nora Ana Meterio-Diego, ALU Central Visayas vice president, told Sunstar Cebu that the government should shoulder the expenses for the swab testing and antigen test of unvaccinated employees.

“The government should incentivize rather than punish or deprive unvaccinated workers,” Diego said.

Diego said this will be a disadvantage to workers who have allergic reactions and may face serious illness when inoculated with the vaccine.

The Federation of Free Workers also questioned the legality of the policy since it contradicts Section 12 of RA 11525 which bars the use of vaccine cards as a requirement for educational, employment and other similar government purposes.

The labor groups also urged employers not to wait for any directive from the government in giving incentives since this is for the welfare of their workforce.

On the management side, an official of the Filipino Cebuano Business Club (FilCeb) said that although they are for the vaccination of employees, implementing a “no work, no pay” rule for unvaccinated workers is a “counterproductive” move.

FilCeb chairman Rey Calooy said human resource (HR) personnel for various firms should offer incentives to workers or proper counseling to persuade them to get vaccinated.

“We need education within the company on the benefits of getting vaccinated. And the HR should understand why that particular employee won’t get vaccinated. Maybe that person has psychological hesitance or phobia that they can talk about,” he said.

Calooy said only a small group of employees remains unvaccinated. However, to pave the way for economic recovery, there should be understanding and assessment of employees who remain unvaccinated.

Calooy said instead of forcing them to get vaccinated, employers could offer their workers paid leave for a day just to convince them to get vaccinated or offer free rides to their workers if they are going to vaccination centers.

Meanwhile, Tanjusay added that they support the three-day national vaccination drive organized by the government and said that if November 29 and December 1 will be declared as special non-working holidays, then this is something that they would consider as an incentive for workers. (IRT, JOB)


Wednesday, November 3, 2021

TUCP condemns police ‘intrusion’ of group’s HQ


The Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) condemned the latest intrusion of six armed policemen inside the TUCP Labor Center compound along Elliptical Road corner Maharlika St., in Diliman, Quezon City last Tuesday.

“This is a clear act of harassment intended to send a chilling message to the trade union movement and specifically to cow TUCP in its advocacy and union organizing work in both the private and public sectors,” said TUCP President Raymond Mendoza.

“Without permission or even a courtesy request, the policemen, using the CIDG blue-and-white sedan vehicle with plate number SKM 714 from QC-76, entered the TUCP compound and arrogantly roamed inside our private premises, took photos of the daily attendance list, and interrogated our staff without a search warrant,” Mendoza said in a statement.

“We remind all - especially the PNP and the CIDG - to adhere and strictly observe the rule of law. The TUCP will not countenance or tolerate any legal short-cuts, especially by our supposed lawenforcers. Further, this is the fifth time that an unwarranted police intrusion has occurred within our Quezon City premises, and it has also occurred in offices and buildings of our affiliates in Mindanao,” he said.

Mendoza said “we feel that the pattern to scare off legitimate labor groups is patently clear. What they are doing to TUCP is deeply alarming in this time of profiling and ideological-tagging of labor groups.” 

“The police entered without the courtesy of a request or approaching any responsible officer of the union in the Compound to explain their purpose and in contravention of an existing protocol on rules of engagement between the PNP and trade unions,” he added.

The TUCP is the largest trade union center in the country, and an affiliate of the Brussels-based International Trade Union Congress (ITUC), which has been at the forefront of defending workers’ rights and welfare globally.

Mendoza said the police intrusion into the TUCP compound is a direct assault on the  Constitutional rights of workers and is a violation of ILO Conventions 87 and 98 which the Philippine government has ratified and is obligated to observe. -

- by Vito Barcelo

Monday, October 18, 2021

DOLE urged to act vs. 'no jab, no pay' policy

The Associated Labor Unions-Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (ALU-TUCP) on Monday bared a "no vaccine, no salary" policy being implemented by a company in Metro Manila.

Interviewed on Dobol B TV, ALU-TUCP spokesperson Alan Tanjusay said such policy is illegal as he urged those affected by the policy to bring it to the attention of the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) for proper action.

"Bawal na bawal iyan, may kaukulang fines 'yan doon sa employer na napatunayan na gumagawa nito [that's illegal and the employer could be fined if found guilty]," he said.

Tanjusay said a group of employees of a company in the National Capital Region (NCR) informed them about the policy. He then urged DOLE to issue a labor advisory warning employers against implementing such policy.

"Sa tingin namin hindi lang isang insidente ito [We don't think this is an isolated case]," he said.

DOH

Meanwhile, in an media briefing, Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire reiterated that being vaccinated against COVID-19 is not a requirement for workers to receive their salaries.

"Hindi po dapat maging basis ang pagbabakuna para mabigyan ng sweldo 'yung mga nagbigay na ng trabaho para po dito sa kanilang mga work [Vaccination should not be a basis for giving workers their salaries]," Vergeire said.

"Unang-una, wala po tayong batas pa na nagsasaad na kailangan mandatory 'yung pagbabakuna [We still don't have a law on mandatory vaccination]. And that was verbalized by the Department of Justice,” she added.

She stressed that the government only aims to encourage the public to get vaccinated by giving them incentives

Vergeire also deferred to DOLE to address the issue. —with Joahna Lei Casilao/KBK, GMA News

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.