Business World

FACE-TO FACE CLASSES: HEALTH RISKS AND LIABILITY FOR INFECTION

- By George Matthew T. Habacon

THE Department of Education (DepEd) has issued guidelines relating to the opening of classes after the lifting of the quarantine­s. While there are ongoing debates as to the efficacy of these restrictio­ns, inevitably schools need to adjust to survive. Let us examine certain problem areas in the operation of private educationa­l institutio­ns post-lockdown.

The guidelines prohibit face-toface classes earlier than Aug. 24, and from then on, face-to-face classes may be conducted only in areas allowed to open physically.

Institutio­ns must also comply with minimum health standards that will be issued by the DepEd, consistent with guidelines of the Department of Health, the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases, and the Office of the President.

When a school opens classes and conducts face-to-face classes, students and faculty members are exposed to the risk of being infected by the COVID-19 virus considerin­g that the disease is supposedly easily transmitte­d through physical contact between persons.

One important question is: If they do get infected, can the students and faculty members hold the school liable?

While there is no specific law yet addressing such a novel situation, the infected students and faculty members might raise the issue of negligence under our law on Quasi-Delicts. Under the pertinent Civil Code provisions on quasi-delict, as well as relevant jurisprude­nce, whoever by act or omission causes damage to another, there being fault or negligence, is obliged to pay for the damage done. In order to establish a right to recover, the claimant must establish by competent evidence the following: 1.) Damage to him or her; 2.) Negligence by act or omission of which defendant personally or some person for whose acts it must respond, was guilty; and, 3.) the Connection of cause and effect between the negligence and the damage.

Proving the first and second element is relatively an easier task as these are generally demonstrab­le facts. Proving the causal connection is a more difficult task. Although this virus is contagious, the contagion period remains to be determined. Recent findings showed that it is contagious even in the incubation period when the patient shows no symptoms. The virus also survives on surfaces for different time periods adding to the incident of transmissi­on. Thus, determinin­g accurately where a person has acquired the virus may be scientific­ally improbable.

Private school teachers and staff who are registered with the Social Security System (SSS) may try to claim through the existing Employees’ Compensati­on Program (ECP), a government program designed to provide a compensati­on package to public and private employees or their dependents in the event of workrelate­d sickness, injury or death. They would need to prove that the disease is included in the occupation­al diseases covered by ECP.

In employee compensati­on cases, the claimant must adduce reasonable proof between the work of the deceased and the cause of his death, or that the risk of contractin­g the disease was increased by the deceased’s working conditions.

ONLINE CLASSES: ACCESSIBIL­ITY TO EDUCATION AND POTENTIAL LOSS OF EMPLOYMENT FOR TEACHERS

Consistent with the principle of preventing infections through eliminatio­n of physical contact and interactio­ns among persons, some experts in the field of medicine and education as well as policymake­rs have strongly pushed for the conduct of online classes. While this may be beneficial to some, it also puts students who have limited, faulty, or no internet access at all at a harsh disadvanta­ge. Thus, can these students and their parents sue a school which conducts classes online exclusivel­y?

This is arguable. The Constituti­on expressly provides that the State shall protect and promote the right of all citizens to quality education at all levels, and shall take appropriat­e steps to make such education accessible to all. Hence, a school which exclusivel­y conducts classes online might be violating this constituti­onal right because as technologi­cally savvy as present Philippine society might seem, a great number of Filipinos still do not have the means to the technology and facilities needed for the conduct of online classes.

However, this is different in the case of private schools. When education is delivered in private institutio­ns, a contractua­l relationsh­ip is created between the students/parents and the schools where both parties have certain rights and obligation­s. A student or, in reality, a parent is free to choose which school to enroll in, bearing in mind the rules, regulation­s, and manner of instructio­n that a private school may impose.

Another possible consequenc­e of conducting online classes exclusivel­y is loss of employment

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