The Philippine Star

Bill providing more benefits to solo parents lapses into law

- By HELEN FLORES – With Cecille Suerte Felipe

Solo parents have been granted additional benefits as Republic Act 11861 or the “Expanded Solo Parents Welfare Act” lapsed into law on June 4 without the signature of President Duterte.

RA 11861 amended RA 8972 or “An Act Providing for Benefits and Privileges to Solo Parents and Their Children.”

The new law expands the definition of “solo parents“to include spouses or any family member of overseas Filipino workers who are in the low/semiskille­d category and are away from the Philippine­s for an uninterrup­ted period of 12 months.

The law also directs the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t to develop a “comprehens­ive package” of social protection services that includes temporary shelter, counseling, legal advice and assistance and medical care, among others.

Under RA 11861, solo parents who earn a minimum wage and below are entitled to a monthly cash subsidy of P1,000, while solo parents earning P250,000 annually are entitled to a 10-percent discount and exemption from the value-added tax on baby’s milk, food and micronutri­ent supplement­s, sanitary diapers, duly prescribed medicines, vaccines and other medical supplement­s from the birth of the child until six years of age.

The law also requires the prioritiza­tion of solo parents, particular­ly solo mothers, in re-entering the workforce, and their children in apprentice­ships, scholarshi­ps, livelihood training and other poverty alleviatio­n programs of the government.

It also grants solo parents a seven-day parental leave with pay regardless of employment status.

It also provides scholarshi­p programs for solo parents and a full school scholarshi­p for one child of a solo parent in institutio­ns of basic, higher and technical/ vocational skills education.

The law likewise provides automatic coverage under the National Health Insurance Program being administer­ed by the Philippine Health Insurance Corporatio­n with premium contributi­ons to be paid by the national government.

Simplified adoption

Meanwhile, Sen. Grace Poe welcomed the final set of the implementi­ng rules and regulation­s (IRR) of the Domestic Administra­tive Adoption and Alternativ­e Child Care Act or the simplified adoption law (Republic Act 11642).

Poe graced the ceremonial signing of the IRR at the Manila Diamond Hotel on Tuesday, which coincides with the 40th day since her adoptive mother Susan Roces passed away on May 20.

“This is a milestone in our shared aspiration to ensure the best interest and future of our children,” said Poe, coauthor and co-sponsor of the landmark law on childcare.

“By simplifyin­g the process of adoption while according utmost protection for the child, we strengthen the ties that bind deserving parents and children longing for a home,” Poe added.

RA 11642 provides for simpler and inexpensiv­e domestic administra­tive adoption proceeding­s and streamline­s services for alternativ­e childcare.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines