Manila Bulletin

Private sector response to COVID-19

- IGNACIO R. BUNYE

It is heartwarmi­ng to read about the response of the private sector in helping alleviate the impact of widespread disruption caused by COVID 19. A restaurant owner opened her establishm­ent to more than a dozen homeless persons, providing them hot meals and sleeping and shower facilities. A group of concerned ladies offered to ferry health workers to and from their place of work. The exclusive Palms Country Club in Filinvest Alabang has accepted, as temporary boarders, health workers from nearby RITM, who find it virtually impossible to go home. Artists and talents of ABS-CBN staged a virtual musical concert that raised over P270 million for relief purposes.

Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI) is giving Greg O, and others similarly situated, a 30-day reprieve on his monthly installmen­t payment which falls due on April 1st, at no interest. BPI is granting an even longer reprieve of 90 days for borrowers classified as “front-liners’ in the fight against COVID 19.“Feel free to use this money for your more urgent needs. This is the least we can do for your sacrifices,” BPI President Bong Consing said.

Marina D, who operates a salon at an Ayala Mall, feels relieved that she will not have to pay rent for the duration of the lockdown period.

Lino S, a daily-paid constructi­on worker in a project of Makati Developmen­t Corporatio­n, is assured food on his table during his forced layoff. Greg O, Marina D, and Lino S are typical of the beneficiar­ies of a COVID 19 emergency response package announced by the Ayala group recently.

In a letter to employees, partners, and friends, the brothers Jaime Augusto and Fernando Zobel de Ayala announced a relief package that will benefit thousands of workers because their places of work have been closed. They include retail workers, constructi­on workers, service providers, security men, and employees of many similar businesses who are largely on a no-work-no-pay type of employment.

For non-employees (i.e., the extended workforce of Ayala’s partner employers), Ayala is allocating a total of P2.4 Billion as follows:

P600 million – for salary continuanc­e for the displaced workers from constructi­on sites, shuttered malls and retail spaces of Makati Developmen­t Corporatio­n and the Ayala Malls group.

P270 million – Globe Telecoms’ allocation for its retail store support staff and vendor partners.

P130 million – other Ayala companies contributi­on for personnel-related financial support.

P1.4 billion – for the rental condonatio­n of tenants of Ayala malls during the lockdown period.

For Ayala’s own employees: Accelerati­on of mid-year bonus, deferment of payables to the Ayala Multi-Purpose Cooperativ­e and a new special financial assistance program at subsidized rates.

Earlier, Ayala joined a consortium of around 20 like-minded business groups which will raise P1.5 billion to fund P1,000 grocery vouchers for an estimated 1 million urban poor families in Metro Manila. The distributi­on of vouchers will be undertaken by ABS-CBN’s Pantawid ng Pag-Ibig and Caritas Manila’s Project Damayan.

Included in the group are the Aboitiz Group, ABSCBN and the Lopez Group, Alliance Global, AY Foundation and RCBC, Ayala Corp., Caritas Manila, Century Pacific, Concepcion Industrial Corp., DMCI, Gokongwei Group of Companies, Enrique Razon-led Internatio­nal Container Terminal Services Inc., Jollibee Foods Corp., Leonio Group, Mercury Drug, GT Capital, Nutri-Asia, Liwayway Marketing Group, the MVP Group, Puregold, San Miguel Corp., the SM Group, Sunlife of Canada and Suyen Corp.

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