The Freeman

Gullas lobbies for 6-month cash aid for laid-off workers

- Mitchelle L. Palaubsano­n/KQD

Amid the mounting job losses due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Cebu First District Representa­tive Eduardo Gullas has urged Congress to boost the current unemployme­nt insurance cash payments being provided by the Social Security System (SSS) to involuntar­ily separated workers in the private sector.

“Retrenched workers should ideally receive cash benefits for a period of up to six months, because studies have shown that they need the same number of months on average to find a new job,” Gullas said in a press statement.

Gullas said that when Congress first tackled unemployme­nt insurance, the original submission was for the SSS to give cash assistance over a sixmonth period.

“However, the proposal was finally watered down to just two months of cash support,” Gullas said.

Gullas also called for an extra one-time “child support insurance” cash aid to be extended by the SSS to every laid off worker with at least one dependent child under 21 years old.

At present, workers covered by the SSS and involuntar­ily separated from their jobs may claim benefits in the form of monthly cash payments equivalent to 50 percent of the average monthly salary credit (AMSC) for a maximum of two months only.

If the worker’s AMSC is P20,000, he or she may claim a cash handout of P10,000 multiplied by two, or the sum of P20,000, paid only once.

As proposed by Gullas, the same P20,000 one-time cash benefit would increase to P60,000, plus an additional P10,000 if the claimant has at least one qualified dependent child.

Under Section 14-B of Republic Act 11199, or the Social Security Act of 2018, an employee who is involuntar­ily separated can only claim unemployme­nt benefits once every three years.

Involuntar­ily separated refers to those who lose their jobs due to retrenchme­nt or downsizing, closure or cessation of operation of a business, among other factors.

To avail of the benefit, the discharged employee must have paid at least 36 monthly contributi­ons to the SSS, 12 months of which should be within the 18-month period immediatel­y preceding the month of involuntar­y separation.

The Department of Finance earlier said the SSS is ready to provide up to P1.2 billion in cash payments to some 60,000 workers dismissed by tourismrel­ated establishm­ents hit by the COVID-19 outbreak. —

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