The Philippine Star

Workers displaced due to quarantine hit 630,000

- By MAYEN JAYMALIN – With Alexis Romero

More than 630,000 workers nationwide have been displaced by the impact of the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III reported yesterday.

“As of March 31, our field monitoring already recorded more than 630,000 workers displaced either by reason of temporary closure or flexible work arrangemen­ts as reported by 15,213 establishm­ents. Of these figures, 169,232 belong to the informal sector,” Bello said.

Bello appealed to employers to immediatel­y submit reports to the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) so that they could extend financial and other necessary assistance to the displaced workers.

“DOLE is bent on providing assistance to as many of our workers in the formal economy sector as much as we give to informal sector workers,”

Bello said, although noting that some companies refuse to submit their reports along with the payroll to the detriment of workers.

He said DOLE has distribute­d P160 million and is accelerati­ng the release of financial assistance to affected workers.

According to Bello, the cash aid provided by DOLE is different from the P5,000 to P8,000 subsidy from the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t (DSWD) and assistance other agencies are providing under the Bayanihan to Heal As One law.

The new law provides a cash and non-cash Emergency Subsidy Program (ESP) for two months based on the prevailing regional wage rates, but he said DOLE’s subsidy is a onetime quarantine assistance.

Meanwhile, DOLE informed employers that the one-month enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) period is excluded in the six-month probationa­ry period of employees.

In an advisory, DOLE said the period within which the ECQ is imposed will not be included in counting the time an employee is under probationa­ry employment.

Under the Labor Code, probationa­ry employment shall not exceed six months from the date the employee started working. It mandates that an employee who is allowed to work after the six-month probation shall be considered a regular employee.

Yesterday, the Sentro ng mga Nagkakaisa at Progresibo­ng Manggagawa (SENTRO) sought the implementa­tion of income guarantees for each worker, including those in the informal economy and the unemployed, affected by the lockdown.

The workers said the current programs of the government are steps in the right direction, but still insufficie­nt for sustaining the needs of the population.

SENTRO secretary general Josua Mata said the solution is to ensure that working families are able to support themselves through the provision of income guarantees for all affected workers.

“All workers hit by the lockdown should receive government support equivalent to the prevailing regional minimum wage,” Mata said.

More than 6,000 establishm­ents that employ about 190,000 workers have suspended operations because of the Luzon-wide lockdown for COVID-19, a report submitted by President Duterte to Congress showed.

Duterte placed Luzon, home to more than 57 million people, under enhanced community quarantine from March 17 to April 13 because of the rising cases of COVID-19. The policy, which was intended to contain the disease, forced several businesses to close temporaril­y and informal and daily wageworker­s to depend on food aid from government. Data cited in Duterte’s first weekly report to Congress showed that more businesses chose to close shop temporaril­y compared to those who adopted flexible work arrangemen­ts.

“The DOLE has likewise noted 3,082 establishm­ents (with 137,496 affected workers) implemente­d flexible work arrangemen­ts while 6,060 (with 190,932 affected workers) opted temporary closure,” the report read.

All government offices in the executive branch, meanwhile, have adopted alternativ­e working arrangemen­ts, the report said. To provide relief to the affected workers, the administra­tion has announced an unpreceden­ted P200-billion aid package that will provide emergency support to low-income households for two months.

The assistance will come in the form of cash assistance and food aid to families with at least one member belonging to vulnerable or disadvanta­ged sectors including senior citizens, persons with disability, pregnant and lactating women, solo parents, indigents, indigenous people, public transporta­tion, drivers, informal economy workers house helpers, operators of small stores and vendors.

The social welfare department will also provide P5,000 to P8,000 subsidies to 18 million low-income households for two months.

Earlier, the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority said the COVID-19 pandemic may slow economic growth to 4.3 percent or may even contract the country’s economy by 0.6 percent this year if mitigation measures are not undertaken. About 116,000 to 1.8 million jobs in the country may be lost because of the disease, the agency said.

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