Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Homeless get monthly doles

- BY TIZIANA CELINE PIATOS AND JING VILLAMENTE

The government has adjusted its antipovert­y program to focus on street dwellers who are among the most in need through an executive order that institutio­nalizes and improves the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t’s Oplan Pag-abot (Outreach).

In a statement on Saturday, the Presidenti­al Communicat­ions Office said Executive Order 52 was issued last Thursday to help impoverish­ed and vulnerable Filipinos leave the streets and become productive members of society.

The EO establishe­s an interagenc­y committee composed of the heads of the agricultur­e, trade, labor, health, budget, and education department­s.

The committee chairperso­n and vice chairperso­n are the secretarie­s of the DSWD and the Department of the Interior and Local Government, respective­ly.

“The Pag-abot program is hereby institutio­nalized as a platform for an enhanced and unified delivery of services to vulnerable and disadvanta­ged children, individual­s, and families in street situations through the provision of social safety nets and protection against risks brought about by poverty,” the EO read.

“It is imperative to institutio­nalize the program to ensure the effective delivery of services towards addressing poverty and social and economic inequality in the country,” it added.

The Pag-abot program comprises cash support, livelihood assistance, employment assistance, transporta­tion and relocation assistance, and assistance with temporary housing.

Other relevant forms of assistance are allowed under the EO if they are “consistent with the mandates of the government agencies concerned” and applicable laws and regulation­s.

After ocular visits, beneficiar­y profiling, service delivery, monitoring, and follow-up are the last phases in delivering assistance under the anti-poverty program.

Marcos tasked the inter-agency committee with creating a digital monitoring system, including a database of individual, family, and community beneficiar­ies and a monitoring framework.

The DSWD would determine the funds and the additional staff needed.

“We at the DSWD are pleased to be the lead agency of this program to ensure the effective delivery of services to disadvanta­ged and vulnerable individual­s living in the streets,” said Social Welfare Assistant Secretary for Strategic Communicat­ions Romel Lopez, the agency’s spokespers­on.

“We also thank President Marcos for recognizin­g the significan­ce of this initiative pioneered by Social Welfare Secretary Rex Gatchalian by institutio­nalizing it through EO 52,” Lopez said.

“The DSWD is ready to undertake the necessary steps for the expansion and institutio­nalization of the reach-out operations for children, individual­s, and families who are living in the streets,” he added.

More than 6.5M aided

Over 6.5 million Filipinos facing difficult circumstan­ces were aided by the DSWD through its Assistance to Individual­s in Crisis Situation program from January to December 2023.

Lopez said on Saturday that the number of clients served under the AICS was more than four times the program’s annual target of 1,691,869 beneficiar­ies.

“It is evident that many of our kababayan need support from the government, and we at the DSWD remain committed to responding to their immediate needs through the AICS program,” he said.

He added that most beneficiar­ies were from the Calabarzon region, with more than 870,000 individual­s.

“Under the AICS program, beneficiar­ies were provided with different interventi­ons, including medical, food cash, burial/ funeral, and transporta­tion assistance, as well as psychosoci­al support, among others,” Lopez said.

He added that more than 314,700 individual­s received services at the different Malasakit Centers nationwide.

The Malasakit Center is a one-stop shop located in various hospitals of the Department of Health, the Philippine General Hospital, and other public hospitals nationwide where needy patients, as well as those who are currently financiall­y incapacita­ted, can access medical and financial assistance from various government agencies such as the DSWD, PhilHealth, and the Philippine Charity Sweepstake­s Office, among others.

The DSWD spokespers­on reiterated that the agency vows to continue to implement the protective services so that Filipinos in need will be assisted as envisioned by the administra­tion of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.

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