The Philippine Star

Senator to refile vetoed endo bill

- By CECILLE SuERTE FELIPE

A day after President Duterte vetoed the Security of Tenure (SOT) bill, its author Sen. Joel Villanueva vowed to refile the measure this week.

Villanueva, Senate committee on labor chairman, said Senate President Vicente Sotto III advised him to just refile the bill and give it priority.

“We will not give up the fight. I will still refile it because at the end of the day, the social protection of our workers is important. It is more important than what unscrupulo­us business organizati­ons could gain,” Villanueva said over dwIZ.

While also entertaini­ng the possibilit­y of overriding the President’s veto by getting a two-thirds vote of both Houses, Villanueva said such move will not look good for the President and many lawmakers are not comfortabl­e doing it.

Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph Recto said Malacañang should file its

own version of the bill with an attached presidenti­al certificat­ion as to its urgency.

“This is needed because the veto message did not cite the specific provisions that triggered the veto. Let the burden of propositio­n fall on them this time. But this will be for the informatio­n of Congress only, and should not mean that it must be the one passed en toto,” Recto said.

Recto expressed support for Villanueva’s move to “reboot” his vetoed bill.

Villanueva described as baseless the decision of the President to veto the SOT bill, which was certified as a priority and urgent measure by Malacañang.

Villanueva said the veto reflects the growing problem of misinforma­tion and confusion in government.

Villanueva said claims that the bill widened the definition of labor-only contractin­g, prohibited legitimate job contractin­g and prevented business from contractin­g services out are baseless.

“While we respect the presidenti­al prerogativ­e, we maintain that the grounds of the veto are weak, if not flimsy,” Villanueva said.

He stressed the bill clarified the existing definition of labor-only contractin­g under the Labor Code and clearly establishe­d grounds that can determine its existence.

During deliberati­ons on the bill, Villanueva said companies complained about the arbitrary determinat­ion of labor inspectors on the existence of labor-only contractin­g. The clearer grounds should have addressed that gap had the bill passed.

Villanueva said the measure also mandates the licensing of job contractin­g firms, a guarantee that these companies engaged in legitimate job contractin­g adhere to pertinent labor laws and regulation­s such as the payment of minimum wage and statutory benefits.

“That’s why we find the claim that the bill will increase the cost of labor is nothing but a lousy excuse. Companies still need to pay minimum wage and statutory benefits like social security and health insurance because there are existing laws,” Villanueva said.

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