The Philippine Star

Group bucks overtime pay for BI personnel

- By EVELYN MACAIRAN

Member associatio­ns of the Joint Foreign Chambers of the Philippine­s (JFCP) are asking legislator­s not to pass the cost of overtime of Bureau of Immigratio­n (BI) personnel to airline companies and shippers.

The JFCP appealed to the Senate and the House of Representa­tives committee on justice not to include in their deliberati­on on the proposed Philippine Immigratio­n Act a provision that would authorize the charging of overtime fees against airline companies and shippers.

The group argued that overtime pay of BI personnel should be shouldered by the government, a practice being observed in other countries.

“Part of the modernizat­ion of immigratio­n services is the ability of the government to match the 24/7 operations of internatio­nal airlines, our major partner in tourism developmen­t. The practice of charging overtime fees, meals, and transporta­tion allowances to internatio­nal airlines should now be removed and replaced with one where services provided by BI personnel, as employees of the government, are duly compensate­d by the state from its budget. This will accord with internatio­nal practice and the current policy of the Aquino administra­tion,” the JFCP said in a statement.

The business groups said this setup would generate jobs across export-oriented sectors and, at the same time, boost the country’s tourism industry.

The JFCP asked the lawmakers to consider deleting the section authorizin­g the BI commission­er to assign immigratio­n employees “to do overtime work or services to be prescribed at rates fixed by the commission­er of immigratio­n when the service rendered is to be paid for by the airline, shipping companies or other persons served.”

Instead, the group said the bureau should be authorized to allocate a percentage of its income to pay for 24/7 operations and to include overtime payments in its annual budget.

For his part, BI Commission­er Siegfred Mison said it is up to Congress to decide on issue of overtime payment of their personnel.

“We will defer to the wisdom of Congress in retaining or deleting this overtime provision. For now, BI needs more personnel for its workforce. Since we have a shortage in manpower, we resort to requiring our employees to render overtime work,” Mison said in a text message to The STAR.

The JFC is a coalition of the American, Australian-New Zealand, Canadian, European, Japanese and Korean chambers of commerce and the Philippine Associatio­n of Multinatio­nal Companies Regional Operating Headquarte­rs Inc.

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