Marcos bats for better standards, conditions for workers

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    Marcos bats for better standards, conditions for workers

    Addressing problems hounding the labor sector to ensure better labor conditions for the country’s workforce shall be among the priorities of Partido Federal ng Pilipinas (PFP) standard-bearer Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. if he will be elected president in the May 9 national and local elections.

    In a meeting with officials of the labor-focused party-list groups, Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) and the Associated Labor Unions (ALU), Marcos discussed the problems and issues that lay siege to the sector and outlined his plans and programs to address them.

    While he supports the creation of a separate department for migrant workers, Marcos said all the other agencies that deal with the labor sector should be streamlined.

    “I will have to put the layout in detail because the issue has become so involved. Maraming dapat ayusin, structurally maraming dapat ayusin. Dapat i-streamline ang mga agencies, dahil masyado nang marami [ang mga opisina], ang mga workers natin, nalilito kung saan sila dapat lumapit (Structurally, there are many things to fix. Agencies should be streamlined because there are too many them that confuse our workers where to go),” he said in a news release on Wednesday.

    TUCP party-list Rep. Raymond Mendoza, meanwhile, conformed with Marcos’ plans to streamline agencies, noting that overseas workers have met difficulties in their overseas employment, especially among household contract workers in the Middle Eastern countries.

    In line with his aim of ensuring better labor conditions for workers, Marcos also expressed interest in making into a priority bill the Security of Tenure Act, which aims at amending the Labor Code to further protect workers’ rights by prohibiting labor-only contracting in the private sector.

    He, however, pointed out that the version of the bill that President Rodrigo Roa Duterte vetoed in 2019 for “unduly broadening” the scope of labor-only contracting, and effectively banning other forms "that are not particularly unfavorable to employees," should be amended to ensure that it will live up to its aim of further protecting workers’ rights.

    “Kailangan pag-aralan ng husto kung paano ito i-aamend na talagang magbibigay proteksyon ito sa ating mga manggagawa para maisabatas ito. Kailangang ayusin natin dahil ang ating mga kababayan, napipilitang magtrabaho overseas dahil mababa at hindi maayos ang labor conditions dito (We need to study carefully how to amend it so that it will really provide protection to our workers so that it will be finally enacted into law. We have to fix it because our countrymen are forced to work overseas because of low salaries and not good labor conditions here),” he said.

    Meanwhile, Mendoza, who is also TUCP president, raised the need to hire additional manpower for agencies such as the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration and the Overseas Workers’ Welfare Administration to enable these agencies to better serve the welfare of at least 10 million migrant Filipino workers.

    “Sa isang araw, ilang libong kontrata ang prinoprocess nila, tapos iilan lang ang tao nila. Kulang sila sa mga foreign language interpreters na makakatulong sa mga OFWs na may kinahaharap na problema sa mga trabaho nila. Milyong-milyon ang mga OFWS natin at malaki ang kontribusyon nila sa ating ekonomiya, kaya kailangan naman na may nakatutok sa kanila (They process thousands of contract in one day, and yet they only have a few employees. They lack foreign language interpreters who can help OFWs facing problems in the jobs. We have millions of OFWs and they contribute a lot to our economy, so we need an agency to focus on them),” he said.

    Marcos said this is why he sees the need for streamlining the agencies concerned so that there will be an agency focused solely on local workers and another one on overseas workers.

    He, however, said the end goal would be to make overseas employment merely an option for Filipinos.

    Aside from Mendoza, others present at the meeting were House Majority Speaker Martin Romualdez and his wife, Tingog Sinirangan party-list Rep. Yeda Marie Romualdez, ALU-Transport Vice President Michael Mendoza, and ALU National Executive Vice President Gerard Seno, among others.

    TUCP, the country's largest labor group, earlier endorsed the candidacy of Marcos and his running-mate Inday Sara Duterte in the upcoming 2022 national elections.

    TUCP spokesperson Alan Tanjusay said there was an overwhelming response from their 1.2 million-strong members to support the UniTeam tandem (Marcos and Duterte) when they recently held a string of consultation meetings with TUCP members all over the country.

    Founded in 1975 by 23 labor federations, TUCP is currently the Philippines' largest alliance of labor federations.

    Most of its members come from major industries such as service, agriculture, and manufacturing from Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao. (PR)(PNA)

    (Photo credits to: Inquirer)