45-day public works ban should not lead to job losses

Latest News

Latest Reviews

Basketball

  • Raptors smack wounded Warriors 123-109 despite Curry’s 47

    The shorthanded Golden State Warriors were pushed around by a focused Toronto Raptors squad in...

  • Boxing

  • Bakbakan sa Ilocos Sur 2022: Knockout win target ni Toyogon kontra Tejones!

    Isasagad na nina boxing prodigy Al Toyogon at kalabang Joe Tejones sa main event ang kani-kanilang natipong...

  • Golf

  • Glutamax Men strengthens hold on lead

    BAGUIO CITY—Aian Arcilla once again led with his 25 points as Team Glutamax Men soared to an 87...

  • Popular News

    Fil-Am sensation Victoria Bossong nakopo ang gold medal

    by Marlon BernardinoKagaya ng inaasahan ay nakamit ni Fil-Am sensation na si Victoria Bossong ang...

    Fury-Usyk & and a championship undercard will stream LIVE on Top Rank on ESPN+ PPV TOMORROW at 12 p.m. ET/9 a.m. PT

    ESPN and Top Rank, together with DAZN, will bring the undisputed heavyweight championship of the...

    Patchy Mix retains Bantamweight World Championship at Bellator Champions Series Paris

    Patchy Mix (20-1) reminded the MMA world that he is one of the best fighters on the planet today...

    45-day public works ban should not lead to job losses

    The 45-day public works ban that will take effect on March 25 should be implemented in a way that it “will not affect jobs nor delay the completion of infrastructure projects in calamity areas,” Senator Joel Villanueva said on Sunday.

    “Employment should not be a casualty of election. And pandemic recovery should not t

    ake a back seat to polls,” Villanueva, chair of the Senate labor committee, said in a statement. “We have 10.1 million unemployed and underemployed. Let us not worsen this already bleak jobs picture.”

    He noted that the number of construction workers dipped after the pandemic lockdowns stopped work on public and private projects.

    Government expenditures account for about 16 percent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), “so any slowdown in public construction will drag down growth,” the senator said.

    Villanueva said halting construction of schools and hospitals “during summer when it is the best time to build before the rains come” will set back their completion.

    “We should also take advantage of the ‘good weather window’ to fix farm infrastructure like roads and irrigation,” he added.

    Funding for PHP1.183 trillion worth of government infrastructure has been authorized in the 2022 national budget.

    Villanueva said the government is still in a catch-up mode as a large chunk of 2020 and 2021 funds for infrastructure was shifted to boost health facilities and as aid to economically-hit households.

    “If we press the ‘pause’ button, lalong atrasado na tayo (the more we will lag behind),” he warned.

    Election laws and a Commission on Elections (Comelec) resolution, however, “grant a wide leeway in the handing out of exemptions to the public works ban,” Villanueva said.

    “Ito ang assurance na konti lang ang maapektuhan ng tigil trabaho (This is the assurance that work stoppage will affect only a handful of workers),” Villanueva said.

    Among projects exempted are those ongoing or awarded before March 25, as well as “emergency work necessitated by the occurrence of a public calamity.” (PR)(PNA)

    (Photo credits to: PNA)