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Hitting the ground running

- Sonny M. angara

Throughout the 18th Congress, we worked hard to come up with laws that respond to the devastatin­g effects of the Covid-19 pandemic, as well as benefit a wide range of sectors. Not all of our proposed legislatio­ns get approved, as in every Congress. Several measures are taken up during committee hearings. Some are debated in plenary, and even get enacted into law. Many more are not taken up at all.

As we have always stated, our mandate as a legislator is to follow through on our commitment to get the bills we file passed into law. We firmly believe that each bill will make a difference. And so many of the proposals that did not pass muster in the 18th Congress will be included in what we will file in the upcoming 19th Congress.

Recently, we started off by filing our first 20 priority bills and resolution­s. These tackle a wide range of issues and topics, from health and education to the creatives sector and sports—all covering interests and advocacies that we have long held as a public servant.

Since we still find ourselves in a pandemic, a number of these bills are

focused on the health sector. One is the Healthcare Facility Augmentati­on Act, which seeks to create new hospitals that will be attached to state universiti­es and colleges (SUCS) offering medical degree programs. Another is the Satellite Specialty Hospitals Act, which mandates existing specialty hospitals, namely the Philippine Heart Center, Lung Center of the Philippine­s, National Kidney and Transplant Institute, and the Philippine Children’s Medical Center, to establish satellite hospitals in geographic­ally isolated regions and provinces of the country.

A third is the E-health System and Services Act, establishi­ng a national ehealth system that will direct and regulate the practice of ehealth or telehealth in the country. Then there is the Dialysis Center Act, which mandates free dialysis treatment for indigent patients and requires all national, regional, and provincial government hospitals to maintain a dialysis ward.

A fifth is on providing free annual medical check-ups to all Filipinos, including blood sugar and cholestero­l tests. And a sixth contains amendments to the Magna Carta for Health Workers that will increase their benefits such as night shift differenti­al, hazard pay, subsistenc­e allowance, and laundry allowance, among others.

We also refiled many of our measures on improving the plight of our teachers to go hand-in-hand with ongoing efforts to improve the country’s educationa­l system. There’s the Teaching Supplies Allowance Act, which increases the cash allowance to teachers from the current P3,500 to P5,000 per teacher per school year. Another is on establishi­ng the Teacher Education for Achievers (TEACH) program, which grants scholarshi­ps to qualified applicants in the areas of learning and education, and incentives to those who pursue teaching careers in the public school system. A third is one we’ve filed consistent­ly over the years— about increasing the salaries of our public school teachers.

We also refiled our proposal to grant underprivi­leged students a five percent discount on food establishm­ents, medicines, textbooks and school supplies, tuition, miscellane­ous and other school fees and entrance fees to museums, theaters, and cultural events.

Bills that cover other sectors and issues include the Poverty Alleviatio­n Through Social Entreprene­urship (PRESENT) Act; the Right to Adequate Food Framework Act; the Magna Carta for Workers in the Informal Economy (MACWIE); the Rural Employment Assistance Act; the Magna Carta for Barangays; the Artists Incentives Act; and the measure Expanding the Incentives Granted to National Athletes and Coaches.

Some measures we filed help move forward our Tatak Pinoy advocacy to industrial­ize the Philippine­s and create more well-paying jobs for our countrymen here at home. There is the Exports and Investment­s Developmen­t Act (EIDA), which amends several provisions of the Export Developmen­t Act of 1994 to strengthen our exports sector and empower them to offer more diversifie­d and sophistica­ted products and services. Another is about institutio­nalizing the Domestic Bidders Certificat­ion Program of the Department of Trade and Industry so that more local enterprise­s can supply to the govern

ment, in line with existing procuremen­t rules.

We also refiled our resolution calling on the Senate Committee on Finance to conduct an inquiry on the efficiency and effectiven­ess of government spending on its industrial­ization and employment-generation initiative­s. We want to find out what the funding requiremen­ts are for a multi-year expenditur­e plan for bolstering Filipino or “Tatak Pinoy” productive sectors and encouragin­g inclusive growth across the country.

We are confident that the 19th Congress, with its new compositio­n, will be just as productive or even more than its predecesso­r. Hopefully, under the new administra­tion, the legislatio­n we have proposed and will propose, will be considered favorably for the benefit of our people.

Senator Sonny Angara has been in public service for 18 years—9 years as Representa­tive of the Lone District of Aurora, and 9 as Senator. He has authored and sponsored more than 250 laws. He is currently serving his second term in the Senate.

E-mail: sensonnyan­gara@yahoo.com| Facebook, Twitter & Instagram: @sonnyangar­a

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