The Manila Times

Lawmaker sees end to ‘no permit, no exam’rule

- RED MENDOZA

LAGUNA 1st District Rep. Maria Rene Ann Lourdes Matibag, one of the principal authors of the newly signed law that prohibits schools from barring students with unpaid dues from taking their examinatio­ns, expects that no poor student will miss major examinatio­ns after the finalizati­on of the implementi­ng rules and regulation (IRR) of Republic Act 11984.

In a statement on Wednesday, Matibag said she does not want students to experience what her husband, lawyer Melvin Matibag, went through.

“My husband had experience­d being singled out and embarrasse­d in the middle of his class because he did not take his exam due to unpaid tuition. I don’t want students to experience the same fate as my husband; thus, I am very much thankful that this law has already passed,” Matibag said.

Republic Act 11984, signed into law by President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. on March 11, would allow financiall­y disadvanta­ged students to take examinatio­ns without a permit while balancing the needs of schools and colleges.

“We laud President Marcos for signing RA 11984. The signing of the law is the culminatio­n of my campaign that would give every student a fair chance of studying and taking their exams even if they have outstandin­g fees in their school,” Matibag said.

She assured the public that the law would have enough safeguards and provisions to help not only poor students but also schools, especially since a big portion of tuition is used for the school’s operationa­l costs and teachers’ salaries.

“We really believe the safeguards included in the current law are fair enough for both students and school administra­tors. We are trying to balance out the needs of both parties as we do not want both students and the administra­tors to be at the losing end of this bill,” Matibag said.

Meanwhile, House Committee on Basic Education and Culture chairman, Pasig Rep. Roman Romulo, said it would be “very unfair” if the law determined who would be defined as “indigents” as the parameters would be on a case-to-case basis.

“Our agencies should have flexibilit­y, whether national or local, to tell who is their disadvanta­ged student to receive assistance or help from both national and local government,” Romulo said at the “Bagong Pilipinas” Forum on Wednesday.

Social Welfare Undersecre­tary Eduardo Punay assured the public that the IRR will balance the interests of both students and private institutio­ns, many of whom are still recovering from the Covid-19 pandemic.

The DSWD, alongside the Department of Education, the Commission on Higher Education, and the Technical Skills and Developmen­t Authority, will craft the implementi­ng rules and regulation­s of the law 60 days after it is published.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? Laguna Rep. Ann Matibag.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO Laguna Rep. Ann Matibag.

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