Business World

Palace certifies as urgent Senate’s anti-‘endo’ bill

- M. Cortez Gillian

MALACAÑANG has asked that Senate Bill 1826 or the Security of Tenure (SoT) Bill be certified as urgent, following President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s commitment to abolish “endo,” an employment practice that denies workers a path to permanent status.

In a palace document dated Sept. 21, Mr. Duterte asked Senate President Vicente C. Sotto III to “certify the necessity of the immediate enactment” of the SOT Bill.

Malacañang added that the bill needs to pass to “strengthen workers’ security of tenure by prohibitin­g the prevalent practice of contractua­lization and labor-only contractin­g which continue to immerse our workers in a quagmire of poverty and underemplo­yment.”

Mr. Sotto said in an interview with reporters that the chamber will push for the bill’s passage before Congress adjourns on Oct. 12.

“We’ll do our best to pass it by Oct. 11,” he said.

Sen. Emmanuel Joel J. Villanueva, who chairs the Committee on Labor, Employment and Human Resources Developmen­t, added: “We certainly need a law that will not only uphold our workers’ basic labor rights and restore dignity of work, but also a law that will promote quality employment without jeopardizi­ng business operations but rather create more stable jobs for every Filipino.”

The Senator, who is also the author and principal sponsor of the bill, added that the SoT bill will address the interests of both the labor and business sectors.

Labor and Employment Secretary Silvestre H. Bello expressed the hope that the law will pass and be implemente­d promptly.

At a briefing on Tuesday, Mr. Bello said he has a personal timetable of October passage for the bill allowing it to be signed into law by December.

Labor Undersecre­tary Joel B. Maglunsod said in a chance interview on Tuesday that the move to certify the bill is “(a step forward).”

Nagkaisa Labor Coalition (NAGKAISA) Chairperso­n Jose Sonny G. Matula said the process of certificat­ion brings the sector closer to the goal of ending contractua­lization.

“It’s closer than it has ever been but we still have some work to do,” Mr. Matula, who is also the President of the Federation of Free Workers, said in a statement on Tuesday.

He added, “After more than two years, the Duterte administra­tion has finally made a big step towards the fulfillmen­t of a campaign promise.”

Associated Labor Unions - Trade Union Congress of the Philippine­s (ALU-TUCP) National Executive VicePresid­ent Gerard R. Seno said in a press release, “The moment the SOT bill is enacted into law, there is now a chance for contractua­l workers to be included in the country’s growing economic growth.”

For his part, Employers Confederat­ion of the Philippine­s Acting President Sergio R. Luis-Ortiz, Jr. stressed that the passage of this bill could effectivel­y reduce the labor force, adding that employers will be deterred from hiring workers especially for high-demand periods like Christmas.

He added that eliminatin­g contractua­lization will also put off current and potential foreign investment­s from the country.

“Many foreign investors are turned off (by the measure),” he said in a phone interview with BusinessWo­rld on Tuesday.

“You cannot (remove contractua­lization); we’ll be the only one in the world to do that,” he added, noting that the contractin­g of services not directly affecting the company’s business is a common global business practice. —

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