Showing posts with label PhilHealth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PhilHealth. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Workers rally to protest zero subsidy for Philhealth and call for board resignation

 


In a protest at a Philhealth branch office today, workers decried the zero subsidy for Philhealth in the national budget that was signed by President Bong Bong Marcos, Jr. last December 30. Dozens of members of the Nagkaisa labor coalition picketed the Philhealth branch at Mother Ignacia, Quezon City and called for the resignation of the board of the public health insurance body.

 

“In the 2025 national budget, there is zero subsidy for Philhealth but full subsidy for trapos in the form of AKAP, AICS, TUPAD and confidential funds,” stated Judy Miranda, Partido Manggagawa (PM) secretary general, which was among the groups that participated in the protest.

 

PM called on workers and the poor to continue to press for the restoration of the Philhealth subsidy because this may be repeated next year if the Marcos Jr. administration does not see any outrage from citizens. “Senior citizens, poor mothers and indigent Filipinos who are supposed to be covered by Philhealth as per the Universal Health Care Act stand to lose their benefits due to the zero subsidy,” Miranda explained.

 

PM slammed both the executive and the legislative for not allocating any subsidy for Philhealth. “It is the confidential funds of Vice President Sara Duterte and all other officials that must be taken out, not support for health insurance of workers and the people. Zero subsidy for Philhealth, NO! Zero budget for confidential funds, YES!,” asserted Miranda.

 

However, the group added this is also partly the fault of Secretary Herbosa. PM called for the resignation of Herbosa for his failure to make good on commitments to improve Philhealth benefits for its members, many of whom are workers. “Sectary Herbosa should step down since he cannot do his job and make good on his promises. He committed to increasing by 50% across-the-board hike in Philhealth benefits which has not materialized. Philhealth has excess funds since it is scrimping on benefits. Herbosa, Alis dyan!,” Miranda asked.

 

PM’s demand for Herbosa’s resignation is part of the group’s advocacy for quality public services. PM earlier joined the Nagkaisa labor coalition in filing as intervenor in the Supreme Court case to oppose the transfer of P90 billion of Philhealth’s excess funds to the National Treasury. The group has also been demanding public laundromats and whole day childcare centers to ease the burdens of employed and unemployed women.  

Photos of the protest today can be accessed at https://www.facebook.com/partidomanggagawa/posts/pfbid02yrYgp8jD5bUoRBMDCX5HKcVUAM1d1Kva6BJcpve2o7mhh2vnwd81dtP2nGgiJEPml

Press Release

January 15, 2024

Sunday, January 5, 2025

2024 in Review: Philippine workers caught between economic difficulties and political intramurals [EXPANDED VERSION]


Last year, workers in Philippines faced severe challenges in their wages, benefits and working conditions as they were caught in the vise of economic difficulties brought about by the cost-of-living crisis and escalating intramurals between the two leading political dynasties[1] in the country.

 

Demands for wage adjustment

 

While the average inflation of 3.2% in 2024 was almost half compared to 2023, it continued to erode the purchasing power of wages. Relatively higher food prices also disproportionately hurt minimum wage earners and informal workers with 4.3% inflation for the bottom 30% of the income households. Thus, the demand for another round of minimum wage increases in 2024 was a recurring theme for organized labor. The campaign for a wage hike was two-pronged with wage bills for a PhP 150 (USD 2.58) increase filed in parliament and at the regional wage boards[2].

 

The Senate[3] approved a P100 (USD 1.72) increase in the minimum wage in February 2024. This advance was a result of organized labor successfully leveraging the rift between the upper and lower houses of parliament over the latest move to amend the Constitution. The Senate stood pat against charter change and instead enacted the salary increase. However, the reverse was the case in the House of Representatives[4]. Despite conducting hearings on pending wage hike bills, the House Labor Committee sat on the proposal and basically killed it. In contrast with this inaction on the workers’ demand for a wage adjustment, the House of Representatives was fast and furious with parliamentary hearings on the drug war and extra-judicial killings during former President Rodrigo Duterte’s administration and the investigation on the controversial budget of the Office of Vice President Sara Duterte and the Department of Education during her tenure.

 

The year ended with no legislated wage hike but with wage orders for several regions. Notwithstanding the wage orders, minimum wages in all the regions—including those which increased—remained below the official poverty line. Even though the threshold was assailed for being too low—as the controversy over the official daily food budget revealed. With the wage boards perpetuating a system of poverty wages, calls for the abolition of the regionalized wage mechanism became popular.

 


Fight over public health insurance

 

On another front, organized labor and civil society allies fought a defensive war to keep the funds of Philhealth—the public health insurance system—devoted to improving benefits services to members and providing services for indigents as mandated by the Universal Health Care law. PhP 60 billion (USD 1.03 billion) of Philhealth’s funds were transferred by President Bong Bong Marcos Jr. to fund unprogrammed items in the national budget before the Supreme Court in October stopped the last tranche of PhP 29.9 billion (USD 0.51 billion). The Nagkaisa (United) labor coalition was an intervenor in the Supreme Court case to oppose the transfer of PhP 90 billion (USD 1.55 billion) of Philhealth funds to the National Treasury.

 

Another battle erupted in December when the Congressional bicameral conference committee removed the subsidy for Philhealth along with cuts in other social services. The labor coalition Nagkaisa led protests in key cities, including a major rally in the capital, to call for the restoration of the Philhealth subsidy and social services budget. But President Marcos Jr. did not heed the popular clamor as he signed the national budget by year end with the much-assailed budget insertions for political patronage funds kept intact. Among these was PhP 26 billion (USD 0.45 billion) in unprogrammed budget items which has been criticized as funding for electoral patronage and tagged as the brainchild of House Speaker and presidential cousin Martin Romualdez. This means that formal and informal workers will now have to beg politicians for assistance for medical and other emergencies instead of getting health insurance as a right. As if on cue, the election commission allowed the distribution of patronage projects even during the midterm elections this year—breaking with the long-established rule of prohibiting the disbursement of public money during the campaign period since such is easily exploited as a means for vote buying.

 

Prospects for the year

 

The start of the year greets workers with a higher social security contribution of 5% to be deducted from their wages. This will result in lower take-home pay for private sector laborers. To keep the social security system afloat while easing the burden on workers, the government should subsidize the employee share. This is a tough ask as the Marcos Jr. administration would rather have workers and the poor solicit patronage from politicians. This promises to be another plank of organized labor’s demand for quality public services and universal social protection.

 

Even as demands for higher pay, lower prices, more jobs and decent work remain very popular issues during the election period, prospects are bleak that the polls will result in positive outcomes for workers given that political dynasties—which are evolving from fat to obese[5]—dominate the landscape. Workers have no allies either in the two main political dynasties—the Marcoses and the Dutertes—which will be fighting for supremacy in the coming May 2025 polls.

 

Continuing recent trends, many labor-based groups have been eased out of the party list system[6] as it has been swamped by electoral vehicles for politicians who cannot compete in district polls. The party list system has warped into just another pathway for members of obese dynasties to enter the House of Representatives through the backdoor.

 

Nonetheless, groups such as Partido Manggagawa (PM) are engaging with local candidates for the establishment of public laundromats and whole day childcare centers to ease the care burdens of employed and unemployed women. Along with such low-hanging fruits, PM also is campaigning for the passage of the Prevention of Adolescent Pregnancy bill in response to the crisis level of teenage mothers. Against the tide of sleek TV and FB ads of national candidates, PM is conducting information dissemination in working-class communities during the elections for what it calls “Apat na Dapat” (Four Demands): wage hike, regular jobs, social services and national sovereignty.

  

Workers will have to endure worse economic difficulties as political infighting heightens in 2025 and the remaining years of the Marcos Jr. administration. Nonetheless, this situation also motivates organized labor to engage with public outrage over wanton government corruption and dynastic political dominance. A big multi-sectoral rally this month promises to jumpstart a robust movement for good governance, in which workers’ demands should be embedded and integral.

 

By Judy Ann Miranda, Secretary General of Partido Manggagawa and a labor feminist.



[1] Political dynasties refer to influential families dominating elected positions of power

[2] Appointed bodies with the mandate to decide on minimum wage increases

[3] Upper house of parliament

[4] Lower house of parliament

[5] Social scientists have used the terms thin and fat as a typology for political dynasties

[6] Party list was an innovation in the Constitution to facilitate the election of underrepresented groups, like labor, to the House of Representatives

Monday, December 30, 2024

Group lambasts PBBM as a Scrooge for not restoring Philhealth subsidy

 


The labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) lambasted President Bong Bong Marcos, Jr. as a Scrooge for not restoring the subsidy for Philhealth and funds for social services in the national budget that he signed today.

 

“President Marcos, Jr. is being disingenuous in his veto of a few line items as AKAP remains embedded in the national budget. Further, he is being dishonest in saying that Philhealth benefits will not be affected by lack of subsidy. Philhealth members and beneficiaries are demanding significant improvement of benefits—a 50% increase in coverage as was discussed in the budget deliberations & promised by Health Secretary Teodoro Herbosa,” stated Judy Miranda, PM secretary general.

 

PM was among the coalition of labor groups, health workers and medical advocates that held a big protest to ask for the restoration of the Philhealth subsidy in the 2025 national budget. Members of the Nagkakaisang Mamamayan para sa Pangkalusugang Pangkalahatan marched to Mendiola in Manila last December 18 to call on President Marcos, Jr. to veto the budget and reform the Philhealth. Last December 26, members of PM and Sentro also held a rally at the Philhealth office in Cebu City.

 

PM reiterated its demand for the resignation of Herbosa and the Philhealth board for their failure to make good on their promises as well as for their inefficiency that has become an alibi for the zero subsidy.

 

PM earlier joined the Nagkaisa labor coalition in filing as intervenor in the Supreme Court case to oppose the transfer of P90 billion of Philhealth’s excess funds to the National Treasury. Moreover, the group has been demanding public laundromats and whole day childcare centers to ease the burdens of employed and unemployed women. 

Press Release

December 30, 2024


Friday, December 27, 2024

Ahead of expected signing of budget, PBBM asked to restore Philhealth subsidy

Photo from Freeman


With the expected signing of the national budget on December 30, the labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) called on President Bong Bong Marcos, Jr. to restore the subsidy for Philhealth and the budget cut for other social services.

 

“President Marcos, Jr., do you hear the people’s demand? Restoring the Philhealth subsidy and social services budget will be a great welcome gift for the new year. Do not be a Scrooge by affirming the flawed 2025 budget in toto,” stated Judy Miranda, PM secretary general.

 

She noted that the clamor for restoring the Philhealth subsidy and social services budget is widespread as workers in Cebu held a protest yesterday to highlight the demand. Members of PM and the labor group Sentro trooped yesterday afternoon to the Philhealth office at Cebu City to call for the restoration of the budget for social services.

 

Miranda criticized President Marcos, Jr.’s recent pronouncement that no Philhealth benefits will be affected even if there is no subsidy in the 2025 budget. She explained that “President Marcos Jr. is missing the point. The demand of Philhealth members and beneficiaries is the significant improvement of benefits and services. In 2025, we hope to see a 50% increase in Philhealth coverage—as was discussed in the budget deliberations and promised by Health Secretary Teodoro Herbosa.”

 

PM was among the coalition of labor groups, health workers and medical advocates that held a protest last Wednesday and asked for the restoration of the Philhealth subsidy in the 2025 national budget. Members of the Nagkakaisang Mamamayan para sa Pangkalusugang Pangkalahatan marched to Mendiola in Manila to call on President Marcos, Jr. to veto the budget and reform the Philhealth.

 

PM is also calling on the President to axe Secretary Herbosa and the Philhealth board for their failure to make good on their promises as well as for their inefficiency that has become an alibi by solon for the zero subsidy.

 

PM earlier joined the Nagkaisa labor coalition in filing as intervenor in the Supreme Court case to oppose the transfer of P90 billion of Philhealth’s excess funds to the National Treasury. The group has also been demanding public laundromats and whole day childcare centers to ease the burdens of employed and unemployed women.

 

Photos of the Cebu rally can be accessed at: https://www.facebook.com/partidomanggagawa/posts/pfbid0iwhgYKFUvWSUtktmQjgP9bqTGigyHRJWHK2nyS3ScFH7Z9tSfYpxapzQevsJ8T37l

Press Release

December 27, 2024

Friday, December 20, 2024

PBBM asked to restore Philhealth subsidy and not be a Scrooge

 


The labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) called on President Bong Bong Marcos, Jr. to restore the subsidy for Philhealth and the budget cut for other social services. “President Marcos, Jr., do you hear the people’s demand? Restore the Philhealth subsidy and social services budget as a Christmas gift to workers and the people. Do not be a Scrooge by affirming the flawed 2025 budget,” stated Judy Miranda, PM secretary general.

 

Miranda criticized President Marcos, Jr.’s recent pronouncement that no Philhealth benefits will be affected even if there is no subsidy in the 2025 budget. She explained that “President Marcos Jr. is missing the point. The demand of Philhealth members and beneficiaries is the significant improvement of benefits and services. In 2025, we hope to see a 50% increase in Philhealth coverage—as was discussed in the budget deliberations and promised by Health Secretary Teodoro Herbosa.”

 

President Marcos, Jr. has postponed the scheduled signing today of the 2025 national budget. Aside from the zero subsidy for Philhealth, several departments like DSWD, DepEd and DOLE suffered reductions in the bicameral conference committee version of the budget.

 

PM was among the coalition of labor groups, health workers and medical advocates that held a protest last Wednesday and asked for the restoration of the Philhealth subsidy in the 2025 national budget. Members of the Nagkakaisang Mamamayan para sa Pangkalusugang Pangkalahatan assembled at Morayta before marching to Mendiola to call on President Marcos, Jr. to veto the budget and reform the Philhealth.

 

PM is also calling on the President to axe Secretary Herbosa and the Philhealth board for their failure to make good on their promises as well as for their inefficiency that has become an alibi by solon for the zero subsidy.

 

PM earlier joined the Nagkaisa labor coalition in filing as intervenor in the Supreme Court case to oppose the transfer of P90 billion of Philhealth’s excess funds to the National Treasury. The group has also been demanding public laundromats and whole day childcare centers to ease the burdens of employed and unemployed women. 

Press Release

December 20, 2024

 

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Workers and allied groups rally to demand restoration of Philhealth subsidy


A newly formed coalition of labor groups, health workers and medical advocates asked for the restoration of the Philhealth subsidy in the 2025 national budget. Members of the Nagkakaisang Mamamayan para sa Pangkalusugang Pangkalahatan assembled this morning at Morayta before marching to Mendiola to call on President Bong Bong Marcos, Jr. to veto the budget and reform the Philhealth.

 

“In the 2025 national budget, there is zero subsidy for Philhealth but full subsidy for trapos in the form of AKAP, AICS, TUPAD and confidential funds,” stated Judy Miranda, Partido Manggagawa (PM) secretary general, which was among the groups that participated in the protest.

 

PM is demanding a “veto, restore and reform”: Veto the bicam version of the GAA; Restore the subsidy for Philhealth; Reform the system through the resignation of Department of Health (DoH) Secretary Teodoro Herbosa and a revamp of the Philhealth board. Aside from the restoration of the Philhealth subsidy, PM is also asking for the removal of confidential funds not just for OVP of Sara Duterte but for all other agencies including the OP.

 

PM slammed the Congressional bicameral conference committee for not allocating any subsidy for Philhealth. “It is the confidential funds of Vice President Sara Duterte and all other officials that must be taken out, not support for health insurance of workers and the people. Zero subsidy for Philhealth, NO! Zero budget for confidential funds, YES!,” asserted Miranda.

 

However, the group added this is also partly the fault of Secretary Herbosa. PM called for the resignation of Herbosa for his failure to make good on commitments to improve Philhealth benefits for its members, many of whom are workers. “Sectary Herbosa should step down since he cannot do his job and make good on his promises. He committed to increasing by 50% across-the-board hike in Philhealth benefits which has not materialized. Philhealth has excess funds since it is scrimping on benefits. Herbosa, Alis dyan!,” Miranda asked.

 

PM’s demand for Herbosa’s resignation is part of the group’s advocacy for quality public services. PM earlier joined the Nagkaisa labor coalition in filing as intervenor in the Supreme Court case to oppose the transfer of P90 billion of Philhealth’s excess funds to the National Treasury. The group has also been demanding public laundromats and whole day childcare centers to ease the burdens of employed and unemployed women. 

Press Release

December 18, 2024

Monday, December 16, 2024

Workers hold forum and rally vs zero Philhealth subsidy

 

Labor leaders and activists of the Nagkaisa labor coalition today held a forum then a rally against the zero subsidy in the proposed General Appropriations Act. “In the 2025 national budget, there is zero subsidy for Philhealth but full subsidy for trapos in the form of AKAP, AICS, TUPAD and confidential funds,” stated Judy Miranda, Partido Manggagawa (PM) secretary general.

 

PM is demanding a “veto, restore and reform”: Veto the bicam version of the GAA; Restore the subsidy for Philhealth; Reform the system through the resignation of Department of Health (DoH) Secretary Teodoro Herbosa and a revamp of the Philhealth board. Aside from the restoration of the Philhealth subsidy, PM is also asking for the removal of confidential funds not just for OVP of Sara Duterte but for all other agencies including the OP.

 

The activities today are buildup for a big rally on Wednesday, December 18. Tomorrow, Nagkaisa is launching a press conference to air its demands.

 

PM slammed the Congressional bicameral conference committee for not allocating any subsidy for Philhealth. “It is the confidential funds of Vice President Sara Duterte and all other officials that must be taken out, not support for health insurance of workers and the people. Zero subsidy for Philhealth, NO! Zero budget for confidential funds, YES!,” asserted Miranda.

 

However, the group added this is also partly the fault of Secretary Herbosa. PM called for the resignation of Herbosa for his failure to make good on commitments to improve Philhealth benefits for its members, many of whom are workers. “Sectary Herbosa should step down since he cannot do his job and make good on his promises. He committed to increasing by 50% across-the-board hike in Philhealth benefits which has not materialized. Philhealth has excess funds since it is scrimping on benefits. Herbosa, Alis dyan!,” Miranda asked.

 

PM’s demand for Herbosa’s resignation is part of the group’s advocacy for quality public services. PM earlier joined the Nagkaisa labor coalition in filing as intervenor in the Supreme Court case to oppose the transfer of P90 billion of Philhealth’s excess funds to the National Treasury. The group has also been demanding public laundromats and whole day childcare centers to ease the burdens of employed and unemployed women.

Press Release

December 16, 2024

Sunday, December 15, 2024

Advisory: Workers rally against zero subsidy for Philhealth


Media Advisory

December 15, 2024

Partido Manggagawa

Contact Judy Miranda @ 09175570777, 09228677222

 

Workers rally and forum against zero subsidy for Philhealth and full subsidy for trapos in GAA

 

Labor leaders and activists of Nagkaisa labor coalition to hold a forum then rally against the General Appropriations Act (National Budget) in which there is zero subsidy for Philhealth but full subsidy for trapos in the form of AKAP, AICS, TUPAD and confidential funds.

 

Nagkaisa is demanding a “veto, restore and reform”. Veto the bicam version of the GAA, restore the subsidy for Philhealth and reform the system through the resignation of DOH Secretary Herbosa and a revamp of the Philhealth board.

 

Aside from the restoration of the Philhealth subsidy, Partido Manggagawa is asking for the removal of confidential funds not just for OVP of Sara Duterte but for all other agencies including the OP.

 

2:00 pm Blended forum at Workers (94 Scout Delgado St., Brgy. Laging Handa, QC)

 

5:00 pm Indignation rally and candle lighting at the Boy Scout Circle, QC

 

These activities are buildup for a big rally at the Senate on Wednesday, December 18.

Friday, December 13, 2024

Labor group slams zero Philhealth subsidy and asks for resignation of DoH Secretary

 


The labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) slammed the Congressional bicameral conference committee for not allocating any subsidy for Philhealth in the 2025 national budget. “It is the confidential funds of Vice President Sara Duterte and all other officials that must be taken out, not support for health insurance of workers and the people. Zero subsidy for Philhealth, NO! Zero budget for confidential funds, YES!,” stated Rene Magtubo, PM national chair and Marikina city councilor.

 

However, the group added this is also partly the fault of Department of Health (DoH) Secretary Teodoro Herbosa. PM called for the resignation of Herbosa for his failure to make good on commitments to improve Philhealth benefits for its members, many of whom are workers. “Sectary Herbosa should step down since he cannot do his job and make good on his promises. He committed to increasing by 50% across-the-board hike in Philhealth benefits which has not materialized. Philhealth has excess funds since it is scrimping on benefits. Herbosa, Alis dyan!,” stated Magtubo.

 

Philhealth announced a package of additional benefits for members last week. However, PM asserted that this falls short of the promised improved benefits that the DoH and Philhealth committed to during budget deliberations in Congress.

 

PM’s demand for Herbosa’s resignation is part of the group’s advocacy for quality public services. PM earlier joined the Nagkaisa labor coalition in filing as intervenor in the Supreme Court case to oppose the transfer of P90 billion of Philhealth’s excess funds to the National Treasury. The group has also been demanding public laundromats and whole day childcare centers to ease the burdens of employed and unemployed women.

 

PM’s call for Herbosa’s resignation follows the earlier demand of Agri partylist Representative Wilbert Lee. Magtubo averred that “A new DoH Secretary who is sincere in serving the people and delivers on promises would be a good Christmas gift to workers who deserve good governance and quality health services.”

 

Herbosa has also been criticized by other solons for lack of vaccines or expired ones in the DoH inventory. Last week the Commission on Audit flagged the DoH for P11 billion worth of vaccines, medicines and medical supplies which cannot be used anymore since they are past expiration dates.

 

“The wanton waste of people’s money is criminal. Resigning is the honorable thing to do. In other cultures, public officials even commit hara-kiri. But we don’t demand that. We only ask for better Health Secretaries who can do their jobs,” Magtubo explained.

Press Release

December 13, 2024

 

Tuesday, October 29, 2024

TRO on Philhealth fund transfer is a victory for workers


Nagkaisa welcomes the Supreme Court’s issuance today of a TRO against the transfer of the ₱89.9B Philhealth fund to the National Treasury.

 

As recognized intervenor for this case, leaders of the Nagkaisa labor coalition look forward to the more substantive discussions during the oral argumentation on the many issues surrounding the Palace’s action to transfer the fund, while members are denied extensive health coverage despite the availability of billions of unutilized funds.

 

We firmly believe that the transfer was both legally and morally flawed, thus we will continue to press on with the fight to protect the fund and to ensure that decisions are made with full knowledge and participation of Philhealth members, majority of whom are workers in the formal and informal sectors. 

PRESS STATEMENT

Nagkaisa Labor Coalition

29 October 2024

 

Friday, August 7, 2020

Diversion, fake news should not distract Philhealth investigation


It is in the interest of the working class who are the real owner-beneficiaries of the health insurance fund that investigation into the whooping P15-B Philhealth scam proceed unhampered and result to the ultimate prosecution of its corrupt officials.  With the fund’s life threatened by billions of losses due to alleged corruption, so as the health security of our millions of workers especially during a pandemic.


It is for this reason that we call on Congress as well as the Executive to ensure that neither delay nor diversion affect the ongoing investigation as the Filipino people deserve truth and justice on this issue.


We are alarmed, however, that alongside the ongoing investigation is the resurgence of vicious attacks against Sen. Risa Hontiveros whose issues during her stint at Philhealth have already been cleared by the COA and the fund itself. Is it part of a diversion, or simply an increase in production of fake news from a host of click farms?


We are likewise concerned with the statements of several congressmen calling for the abolition of Philhealth by replacing it with a new one. A health crisis is certainly not a good time to kill a health insurance system. Justice and total cleansing, we contend, is what will save the system from ultimate collapse.


07 August 2020

Sunday, May 3, 2020

Loopholes in DOLE-DTI guidelines will imperil workers

Coronavirus: Philippines' Luzon lockdown hits domestic helper ...
Photo from SCMP


The labor group Partido Manggagawa (PM) stated that loopholes in the DOLE-DTI workplace guidelines on covid will put masses of workers in danger when they return to work. “Weak enforcement instruments and the lack of penal provisions in the guidelines will incentivize non-compliance by employers and thus imperil the health and safety of millions of workers and of the population as a whole,” asserted Rene Magtubo, PM national chair.

He explained that “The government has imposed an iron fist policy on ordinary people violating quarantine rules on the streets but in contrast is using kid gloves on capitalists. This is a stark double standard or social distancing in a bad sense. Compliance with occupational health and safety is an expense for employers and thus a deduction on their profit. Thus penalties on non-compliance will deter employers from their default behavior.”

Last Labor Day, one of the main demands in the online protest was for #BalikTrabahongLigtas. PM also announced its support for the proposed bill by Sen. Risa Hontiveros entitled the Balik Trabahong Ligtas bill which seeks to augment health care coverage for all workers regardless of employment status.

The group insisted that with more than 90% of establishments comprised of MSME’s which even before the covid pandemic are notorious for violating labor standards, strict monitoring and enforcement is needed to ensure occupational safety and public health when millions of workers return to work.

“Employers cannot be relied upon to voluntarily comply with labor and safety standards while the DOLE is sorely lacking in its record of enforcement. We propose that a mechanism be setup comprised of representative of DOLE, DTI, employers and workers to monitor compliance and enforcement, and to propose amendments to the guidelines,” Magtubo elaborated.

Further the group proposed the following changes to the guidelines:

1.      Coverage by Philhealth of the full cost of hospitalization of workers infected with covid.
2.      Provision by employer of wage subsidy for workers who are put on 14-day quarantine.
3.      Payment of hazard pay for workers in workplaces with imminent danger.
4.      Right to refuse by workers if working conditions are unsafe.
5.      Consultation with unions in enterprises that are organized.

3 May 2020

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Labor party calls for strict regulation of labor standards in BPO industry


Press Release
August 2, 2012

The Partido ng Manggagawa (PM) today called on the government to strictly monitor and enforce labor standards in the business process outsourcing (BPO) industry in the wake of the abrupt closure of a call center in Cebu City which left more than 600 workers without jobs and with unpaid wages, benefits and unremitted social security contributions.

“In the SONA of President Benigno Aquino III he applauded the BPO industry but behind this so-called sunrise industry lurks storm clouds that batter workers’ working conditions. Within an industry which prides itself with above-standard systems are substandard practices that are common in other businesses. The Labor Department and other agencies cannot be complacent that all is well for workers in the BPO industry. But the best regulator of labor standards are empowered workers and so we call for representatives to be elected by workers with the mandate to talk with management regarding working conditions, terms of employment, employee benefits and work load including setting of quotas, metrics and performance indexes,” said Renato Magtubo, PM national chairperson.

PM is assisting the employees of Direct Access Corporation, a locator in the Asiatown IT Park in Cebu City, which shutdown without due notice last July 30 to the surprise of its workforce. In arguably the first such protest among BPO workers, hundreds of Direct Access employees spontaneously held a rally last Monday in the prestigious ecozone.

Dennis Derige, PM-Cebu spokesperson, announced that the scheduled teleconference today between leaders of the Direct Access workers and the US-based owner was postponed for tomorrow. He also explained that no agreement was reached yesterday at mediation called by the National Conciliation and Mediation Board, and a meeting with the Cebu tripartite industrial peace council. “Direct Access workers welcome the offer of employment at other BPO companies even as they press for their demands with the different institutions that are intervening. They demand justice for workers, the payment of some PhP 6.4 million in wages and other emoluments, and the company’s culpability for violations of labor laws,” Derige insisted.

Magtubo recognized that numerous studies have called attention to health and safety concerns specific to the BPO industry, especially due to the graveyard working shift prevalent in call centers. “BPO companies must provide health insurance that is on top of the mandatory Philhealth membership and guarantees wider coverage and better benefits that especially address call center-specific health issues and afflictions.”

“Further, government must push for industry-wide standards for wages, benefits and entitlements that is well above the minimum set by law and commensurate to the dollar-earning nature of the BPO sector.” Magtubo argued. In the SONA, President Aquino mentioned that the BPO industry already employs more than 600,000 workers and earns revenues of some PhP 11 billion, equivalent to 5% of the country’s GDP.

Monday, February 14, 2011

PM holds Valentine’s Day visit to Senate to push for RH bill

Press Release
February 14, 2011

Women members of the Partido ng Manggagawa (PM) paid the senators a Valentine’s Day visit carrying red pillow hearts to push for the passage of the RH bill. Big hearts were presented to senators who are supporting the bill and smaller ones to those whom working women are yet to convince to fully support RH.

Around fifty (50) PM members gathered at the gates of the Senate of the Philippines from 10:00 in the morning to 12:00 noon. PM is pushing for the passage of the House consolidated version of the RH bill.

“Eleven (11) poor working women are dying every day from pregnancy and birth delivery complications alone. Don’t we want an end to this continued ‘daily slaughter’ of women? With the passage of the RH bill, we can avoid losing 4,015 precious women’s lives per year,” asserted PM Secretary General Judy Ann Miranda.

Miranda further explained that, “Women workers have been pushing for the RH bill since 1998, almost 12 years have passed – 4,015 times 12 years is 48,180 women’s lives! Wala bang kwenta ang mga nalalagas na buhay na ito ng kababaihan sa gobyerno at sa Simbahang Katoliko!?”

“Although the family planning provisions of the bill are equally important, hindi lang naman ito ang laman ng RH bill. May probisyon para sa dagdag na skilled midwives to attend to pregnant women in rural and urban communities which we extremely lack; upgrading of health facilities to address emergency obstetric care; PhilHealth coverage expansion to include family planning and reproductive health conditions such as breast, cervical, ovarian, prostate and testicular cancers – for both women and men, respectively; paid half-day leaves per year of pregnancy for women workers’ pre-natal consultations, to name a few,” added Miranda.

PM believes that the Catholic Church’s position on the issue of family planning does not only confuse the people from the importance of allowing women to make decisions that concerns their reproductive health without discrimination, coercion and violence, but at the same time with the rest of the important aspects of the bill. “This rigmarole is not helping women at all. We sincerely hope that from this day on, sa araw ng pag-ibig sa kapwa lalong-lalo na, our senators this time will try to listen to the poor and working women na siyang higit na apektado – ang mga kababaihang nagbubuntis, nanganganak, nag-aalaga ng mga anak na kasabay nito ay naghahanapbuhay para mabigyan ng magandang kinabukasan ang susunod na henerasyon ng mga Pilipino,” said Miranda.

Finally, the women also criticized PNoy for easily giving into the Catholic Church’s pressure instead of closely considering the reproductive health needs of whom he referred to in his inaugural address as his “bosses.”

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

PM Legislative Agenda for Labor and the Poor


Congress must make concrete the government’s declaration that democracy should work for all by drafting and legislating a set of pro-labor, pro-poor, pro-women and pro-people reforms.

First, reform the wage-fixing mechanism since the yawning disparity between the minimum wage and the cost of living is the clearest expression of a system failure. The national floor wage proposed by the National Wages and Productivity Board (NWPC) should be based on the cost of living of a working class family and indexed to inflation. The industry-based productivity schemes recommended by the NWPC should be drafted through industry-wide bargaining agreements. A National Wage Commission should replace the regional wage boards. The Wage Commission will have the mandate to fix wages based on the single criterion of cost of living instead of the present contradictory 10-point formula. The Wage Commission should equalize the floor wage to the level of the cost of living by a host of mechanisms among which are direct wage increases, tax exemptions, price discounts and social security subsidies for workers.

Second, establish a rudimentary unemployment insurance scheme for newly retrenched workers. The government must subsidize all workers who will be retrenched because of the global crisis. The Social Security System (SSS), Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) and the Overseas Workers Welfare Authority (OWWA) must use its funds to subsidize private sector workers, government employees and overseas contract workers respectively until they can find work up to a maximum of six months.

Third, improve the present public employment program. It is imperative to give jobs to the millions who are unemployed or underemployed. The emergency employment program must be reformed. Patronage politics must be exorcised from it by putting the employment program under the co-ownership if not control of people’s organizations. Minimum labor standards must be guaranteed instead of the present setup where the ‘kamineros,’ ‘oysters’ even nurses are hired on a contractual basis for below minimum wages. No matter that it is a dirty job as long as it is decent work. The public employment program should not be limited to street cleaning and whitewashing walls but must include restoring the environment and building housing for the poor aside from the usual public works projects. Given the sorry state of the environment and the backlog in public housing, just these two sectors are significant enough to provide millions of jobs for a start.

Fourth, extend health insurance thru PhilHealth to displaced workers, either domestic or abroad, for at least six months or until they can find a new job. This need is validated by research on displaced workers that show a substantial number fall victim to serious illnesses given that the stress of joblessness aggravate their health condition. The state must shoulder the expense of extending their PhilHealth coverage after their retrenchment.

Fifth, declare a three-year moratorium on demolitions and evictions, and a condonation of penalties and interests on low-cost and socialized homeowners. Violent demolitions should stop. The moratorium is not meant to block the implementation of government projects and private development. A moratorium on demolitions will however ensure that honest-to-goodness negotiations proceed based on the provision of decent relocation agreed upon by the affected communities. Social progress should be founded upon social justice.

Sixth, promote job security and regulate contractualization schemes by drafting a law that will put a cap on the number of contractual workers compared to the regular employees in an establishment. Contractual workers should not go beyond 20% of work force of an enterprise.

Seventh, enact the reproductive health bill that will guarantee the provision of public health services to women workers and poor.

And lastly, ratify the freedom of information act in the interest of accountability and transparency in government.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Labor group demands full blown inquiry into Philhealth’s bad health

PRESS RELEASE
21 August 2009


A labor partylist group, Partido ng Manggagawa (PM), is calling for a full blown inquiry by Congress on the reported impending collapse of the Philhealth system so that the people, especially the working class, can get into the bottom of what could be another scam or lest a case of wanton neglect of the government’s soleuniversal health care system.

“Workers cannot afford to lose their only source of universal health care system, thus whoever would be found responsible for its collapse must be tried for committing this kind of horrendous act,” PM chair Renato Magtubo said.

Reports that unpaid government accounts amounting to some P20-B, contributed mainly to the financial hemorrhage of the system. The labor group wanted to know why this happed and where did their contributions go amid persistent allegations that the fund has been used by the administration during the 2004 elections and for patronage politics. Just a few years back, Philihealth had been boasting of a huge surplus.

During a Senate hearing early this week, Philhealth officials admitted that the health care system has a life of only up to 2016 if government debts are not settled.

Magtubo said the impending collapse of Philhealth will not only jeopardize the health coverage of more than 16 million wage and salaried workers but also the stake of voluntary members and non-salaried workers whose meager income made private health care a non-viable option for them.

Moreover, the labor leader said, Philhealth’s current ‘bad health’ dooms any expansion of the health care program which is a necessary step at improving the country’s human development index. Extension of universal health care for employed and unemployed persons is one of Partido ng Manggagawa’s demand for abailout package for workers.

The group pointed out that it is also during times of crisis, like this ongoing recession, where health care is doubly threatened as a consequence of job loss and chronic unemployment.

Universal health care is becoming a fundamental demand being pushed by labor groups around the globe. In the United States, for instance, a proposed legislation that would expand medicare coverage for another 50 million Americans is now hotly being debated in Congress.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Workers picket PhilHealth to demand longer health coverage for laid-off workers

Press Release
April 23, 2009


Members of the militant Partido ng Manggagawa (PM) picketed the PhilHealth main office in Pasig to ask that it extend health coverage for retrenched workers by six months to one year. This was the group’s reaction to the announcement last April 15 by Dr. Rey Aquino, president and chief executive officer of PhilHealth, that the agency will give three months coverage to displaced workers.

“PhilHealth is in the pink of health thus should help workers who are in the red. To continue PhilHealth coverage to worker formerly earning P10,000, the government just needs to subsidize P375 in employee and employer contributions per month or P4,500 in a year. To cover 100,000 retrenched workers, a mere P450 million is needed,” argued PM secretary-general Judy Ann Miranda.

In the picket, some 50 PM members carried an oversized doctor’s prescription containing the demand for longer health insurance coverage. In addition they made mock pills and capsules to symbolize their message that “a workers bailout keeps the doctor away.”

Miranda explained that “Three months is too little since it takes around 12 months for a retrenched worker to find a new job according to an independent study. The longer the PhilHealth coverage, the better to secure the health needs of a worker’s family during unemployment.”

Under the rules, Philhealth coverage is good only until a member is employed thus one of the major consequences of job loss is the inability to access health care previously enjoyed during employment.

“Loss of income as a consequence of job loss falls heavy on workers and the termination of their PhilHealth coverage undermines their health security, especially on women and children. With the loss of work-related health insurance, laid off workers cannot afford the high cost of drugs and health care. It is also during hard times that health problems arise as displaced workers grapple with stress and other problems that affect their well-being,” Miranda said.

Extension of health care benefits to displaced workers is one of the demands in the “bailout package for workers and the poor” advocated by the PM. Other demands include unemployment subsidy, tax refund, reform and expansion of public employment program and moratorium on demolitions. The group is also pushing for the reversal of the policies of liberalization, deregulation and privatization.

The PhilHealth picket is the start of a series of buildup activities for Labor Day next week. The highlight of the PM-led activities is a Lakbayan by more than 1,000 displaced workers and urban poor to start on the eve of May 1.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Labor party demands extension of health coverage to laid-off workers to at least 6 months

PRESS RELEASE
19 April 2009


A militant labor party is demanding the government to extend to at least six months the health coverage for retrenched workers, saying that the three-month extension announced by the Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (Philhealth) the other day may not be enough to secure the health needs of a worker’s family during interim dislocation as a consequence of job loss.

Partido ng Manggagawa (PM) secretary general Judy Ann Miranda, said one of the major consequences of job loss to a worker is the inability to access health care he or she previously enjoyed during employment. Under the rules, Philhealth coverage is good only until a member is employed.

The problem with this, Miranda said, is that a time lag before a worker finds another job is long, an average of 12 months, according to a study, especially if a displaced worker surpasses the “age limit” required for a new job. Thus, stressed Miranda, “a longer extension of health coverage is necessary to protect the worker and his family during this transition.”

“Loss of income as a consequence of job loss falls heavy on workers and the termination of their Philhealth coverage undermines their health security, especially on women and children,” said Miranda.

With the loss of work-related health insurance, laid off workers cannot afford the high cost of drugs and health care. Miranda explained further that it is also during hard times that health problems arise as displaced workers grapple with stress and other problems that affect their well-being.

The labor group said the state has an obligation to secure the health needs of its people with or without work, adding that universal health care is a right and should not be treated as collateral damage resulting from job loss.

Extension of health care benefits to displaced workers is one of the demands in the “bailout package for workers and the poor” advocated by the Partido ng Manggagawa. Other demands include unemployment subsidy, tax refund, reform and expansion of public employment program, and moratorium on demolitions and evictions.

The group is also demanding the reversal of liberalization, deregulation and privatization policies, which it claims, were responsible for the country’s chronic underdevelopment.

PM, along with other labor groups, are set to launch series of protest actions to press for those demands leading to a bigger Labor Day action on May 1.