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Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Solon OK with more benefits for LGU workers

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A HOUSE leader has backed proposals to provide additional insurance benefits to barangay workers, and institute retroactive pay increases for local government employees in recognition of their indispensable roles as facilitators of good governance.

Bicol Saro party-list Rep. Brian Raymund Yamsuan rallied behind Speaker Ferdinand Martin G. Romualdez’s plan to work on providing Social Security System (SSS) coverage for barangay officials and workers.

Yamsuan said he also agrees with the recommendation of Department of Budget and Management (DBM) Secretary Amenah Pangandaman on amending provisions of the Local Government Code (LGC)   to allow for the retroactive salary increases of workers in the local government units (LGUs).

Implementing the retroactive pay hikes of LGU employees is in keeping with the equal protection clause enshrined in the Constitution, Yamsuan said. 

He pointed out that there is no substantial distinction between the plantilla positions of staff members in LGUs and in other government agencies, hence, they should enjoy the same benefits.

“Local government workers, including those in the barangays, serve as frontliners in providing basic services to the people and in maintaining peaceful, vibrant and resilient communities,” Yamsuan said.

Yamsuan said the Speaker’s proposal to provide SSS coverage for village officials is a significant step in expanding the benefits due them and complements a measure he has co-authored that aims to  provide death, disability and accident insurance coverage to barangay tanods and other village workers.

House Bill (HB) 9976 seeks to amend Republic Act 6942 to include the barangay tanods, health worker, day care givers, and members of the Lupong Tagapamayapa in the grant of death, burial and accident insurance benefits provided for local government officials not receiving fixed salaries.

Under RA 6942, only the punong barangay, the Sangguniang Kabataan (SK) chairperson, and other selected barangay officials are entitled to these insurance benefits.

“There are instances when barangay workers, especially our barangay tanods, are exposed to dangers in carrying out their duties and responsibilities,” said Yamsuan, a former Assistant Secretary of the Department of the Interior and Local Government.

Yamsuan also expressed support for Speaker Romualdez’s proposed legislation of providing a six-year fixed term for elective barangay officials to provide them enough time to plan, provide budget, and execute their development programs and projects.

Yamsuan also recalled that he, along with Camarines Sur lawmakers LRay Villafuerte and Miguel Luis Villafuerte, have jointly filed HB 10344 seeking to postpone the Dec. 1, 2025 Barangay and SK elections to Oct. 26, 2026 and every three years thereafter. The idea was to ensure that these elective officials get to complete their full three-year term, which will be cut to two years if the polls were held next year.

“If three years is not enough, what more if their term is shortened to two years? It will adversely affect their performance and diminish their obligations to serve their constituents,” Yamsuan said.

On Pangandaman’s call to amend the LGC (RA 7160)   to ensure the retroactive effect of the salary hikes of LGU officials and employees, Yamsuan said the proposal  will  require a detailed study to determine how this could be done in relation  to  existing jurisprudence on the prohibitions on retroactivity under Section 325 of the local government law.

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