The Philippine Star

More elderly getting employed

- By MAYEN JAYMALIN

More senior citizens nationwide are getting employed, the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) said.

Dominique Tutay of DOLE’s Bureau of Local Employment revealed that the employment of seniors has increased in the last two years, not only providing added income to their families but also helping boost the country’s economy.

“Statistica­lly an improvemen­t can be seen in the number of employed senior citizen or those 65 years old and over. From 1.5 million in 2013 and 1.6 million in 2017, it went up to 1.8 million last year,” Tutay pointed out.

The senior citizens, she said, are commonly employed in supermarke­ts and department stores to welcome customers or as support staff.

“There are senior citizens who get hired as profession­als because they could provide advice to companies,” she added.

Under DOLE regulation­s, senior citizens should receive a salary of not less than the prescribed daily minimum wage.

Tutay said private establishm­ents are now recognizin­g the contributi­on of senior citizens and are no longer hesitant in hiring them. She noted that a number of private companies have recently forged agreements with DOLE and local government units on the hiring of senior citizens.

A number of senior citizens, she added, tried to participat­e in the DOLE-initiated job fairs to find employment. However, Tutay said, senior citizens are not the target participan­ts of job fairs. To commemorat­e its 86th anniversar­y, DOLE mounted job fairs in Metro Manila with over 20,000 jobs offered to those wanting to find work.

Meanwhile, Sen. Lito Lapid is pushing a measure that would give those who are 60 years old or older a passport with lifetime validity.

In filing Senate Bill 1197, the lawmaker wanted to give the senior citizens ease and comfort, aside from sparing them from the rigorous process and long lines often associated with passport applicatio­n and renewal.

Lapid added that the measure would benefit senior citizens who live far away from city centers where the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) consular offices are usually situated.

“Care for the elderly members of our society has always been a virtue that is deeply intertwine­d with Philippine family and social life. And this has been clearly manifested with the myriad of laws and policies already in place that provide accommodat­ions and benefits to our beloved senior citizens,” said Lapid in his explanator­y note.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines