It’s
past 3 p.m. before I remember to give our help her salary. I could kick myself.
Poor
Fedela must have been wondering if she should remind me about her salary. I know her well enough to say that she may have kept quiet about it, knowing I would have to go out to an ATM to get the cash to pay her.
She confirms it, telling me that I could put it off till my next food run since we are
taking care of her needs anyway. I am touched and thank her, but I remind her
that while she may not need it for herself right now, she has family members in the province who are not as well placed.
She
hesitates, but only for a moment. Now that Cebu Province is under enhanced
community quarantine, most of her immediate family members have had to leave
their jobs in the city and are now in their home town. No work, no pay.
Two of
her nieces, she says, were asked to join a skeletal work force at an export
processing zone (EPZ) but the mother felt that the risk of them getting stranded
in the city at such an uncertain time was too great. Almost all of the
companies in the EPZ have closed shop and let their workers go. Some were given
wages; others, food packs; and the rest, nothing.
She
also disclosed that several of her relatives work for just one firm
manufacturing a popular food pasalubong, albeit in different branches. When the
firm decided to close shop for the duration of the lockdown, all of them lost their sources of income. Only some
received cash subsidies, the rest got food packs.
Photo taken from Top Gear Phils. |
Some
of them have a family member/s who continue/s to provide a basic service at
this time, like a bank security guard, supermarket cashier, hospital cleaner,
purified drinking water delivery boy, etc. There’s money coming in, but it is not enough
to cover for the loss of income from the rest.
The rest, well...they look to government and civic-minded individuals, groups and companies for help.
When
President Rodrigo Duterte placed the entire Philippines under a six-month state
of calamity last March 16, he allowed national and local governments to access
their quick response funds to bankroll COVID-19 interventions.
This
is how local government units (LGUs) were able to buy food packs which, in most
cases, were distributed a week after the effectivity of the lockdown.
So many barangays are still waiting for those family food packs.
On
March 25, the President signed the "Bayanihan to Heal as One Act,"
which gives him, among others, the power to give 18 million low-income families
P5,000 to P8,000 in emergency cash aid, depending on the prevailing minimum
wage in the region.
I was
listening to DSWD Director Irene Dumlao being interviewed over DZMM’s special
coverage of the COVID-19 Pandemic a
while ago, and she could not even give an estimate as to when the agency could
start giving the emergency cash aid.
The
President’s emergency powers also allow him to augment the budget for the Department
of Labor and Employment's (DOLE) Tulong Panghanapbuhay sa Ating
Disadvantaged/Displaced Workers (TUPAD) and COVID-19 Adjustment Measures
Program (CAMP).
Under
CAMP, DOLE has P1.3 billion to provide a one-time P5,000 cash aid for about 250,000
quarantine displaced workers.
Meanwhile,
TUPAD-BKBK (Barangay Ko, Bahay Ko) is a P180-million emergency employment program that pays some 18,000 informal sector workers minimum wage to disinfect
homes around their area.
All that money looks good on paper. I'm sure it would look even better in the hands of those that need it. Eventually.
DoH
update: As of 4 p.m. of March 30, the Philippines has reported 1,546 confirmed
corona virus cases, including 42 recoveries and 78 deaths.
1Patty Pasion, “FAST FACTS: What you need to know about PH's informal sector workers”, May 09, 2017, https://www.rappler.com/newsbreak/iq/169006-fast-facts-philippines-informal-sector-workers