SPECIAL REPORT
State Employees Demand
P3,000 Pay Increase, Unpaid COLA
Government employees are
overworked and underpaid. Their security of tenure is threatened by
reengineering and privatization schemes. Worse, they have no right to strike or
undertake collective action. But now they are fighting back.
By Karl G. Ombion
Bulatlat
Bacolod City
– The government is the biggest employer in the country. According to official
records, government employees number almost a million and half. National line
agencies, with the exception of the Department of Education (DepEd), employ the
most number of people with 959,966. But the single biggest block of government
employees are under the DepEd with 850,445 employees, including 439,518 public
school teachers. The rest are found in local government units (LGUs), and in
government-owned and controlled-corporations (GOCCs).
State employees
are classified into career and non-career. Career employees are those who enter
the public service through their own merits and qualifications, passing the
interviews and appropriate tests, and with civil service eligibility. The
non-career employees are those who enter the service without necessarily going
through the standard qualification requirements. Most of them are in the lowest
rung, mostly casual and contractual employees, and political appointees.
Those with career
status account for 85 percent of all government employees. Most of them belong
to salary grades (SG) 11 to 23, the rest 24 and above.
Non-career
employees constitute 15 percent of the employees. Majority of them however
belong to salary grade 10 and below, receiving a salary of P9,939 (US$181.57 at
$1=Php 54.74). They are the rank and file employees, performing most of the
technical, clerical and messengerial work.
Below are tables
showing the distribution of government employees by employer or divisions.
|
Table 1:By
Divisions |
Major
Subdivision |
Total |
Career
|
Non-Career |
Total
|
1,455,493 |
1,250,510 |
194,988 |
|
NGA’s |
959,966 |
904,926 |
55,040 |
|
Non-Teaching |
410,927 |
|
|
|
Teaching |
439,518 |
|
|
|
Uniformed/PNP |
109,52 |
|
|
|
GOCC |
94,971 |
73,239 |
21,723 |
|
LGU’s |
390,561 |
272,354 |
118,216 |
|
Source: Civil
Service Commission (CSC) |
|
Table 2:By
Regions (selected) |
|
Region |
GE’s |
NGA’s |
GOCC |
LGU |
Philippines
|
1,455,493 |
959,966 |
94,971 |
390,561 |
|
NCR |
406,570 |
291,932 |
59,541 |
55,097 |
|
IV |
138,117 |
84,128 |
2,074 |
52,097 |
|
VI |
103,657 |
69,310 |
2,053 |
32,294 |
|
III |
96,385 |
55,686 |
6,425 |
34,274 |
|
XI |
82,654 |
51,574 |
4,207 |
26,873 |
|
VII |
80,464 |
51,775 |
3,085 |
25,604 |
|
Source: CSC |
|
Table 3:By
Levels of position |
|
Level
ofPosition |
Total |
NGA’s |
GOCC |
LGU’s |
|
Total Career |
1,455,493 |
904,926 |
73,239 |
272,345 |
|
1ST Level |
521,428 |
313,745 |
344,850 |
172,753 |
|
2ND Level |
709,429 |
517,014 |
35256 |
97,159 |
|
3rd
Level |
4,981 |
2,790 |
2,191 |
|
|
Non-Exec
Career |
14,672 |
11,327 |
912 |
2,435 |
|
1ST
Level - SG 1-10.
2ND Level - SG 11 –23
3RD Level - SG 24-33
Source: CSC |
Numerous problems
Employment in
government is no longer the stable job that previous generations knew it to be.
Government
employees suffer from low salaries and inadequate benefits. While entry level
salaries may seem high compared to those from the private sector, government
employees are usually stuck to a salary grade level for years.
A public school
teacher, for example, may be stuck to salary grade level 10, the entry level for
public school teachers, for 20 years. Most of their benefits are dependent on
the savings generated by their agency. The hazard pay for those in front line
work in critical areas is inadequate. They are not given overtime pay even if
they are required to work during weekends. Their pension is very low. Government
housing is expensive, if at all existent.
A qualified, civil
service eligible government employee used to be assured of employment till s/he
retires. But in recent times, their security of tenure is threatened by
streamlining, merging, reorganization, reengineering and rationalization
schemes, the privatization of government services, government budget cuts, and
in some cases, the interplay of patronage politics of officials. Oftentimes,
these result in poor working conditions in most government offices, especially
in the provincial and municipal levels.
Programs for
career advancement and professionalization are cornered by those close to
management. Local and foreign scholarships, and other incentive awards are given
to close relatives and friends of top managers. Promotions are given on the
basis of connections and patronage politics rather than merit and professional
qualifications.
The democratic
rights of government employees are suppressed. Employees are not consulted on
policies and programs affecting them. Their right to organization, assembly and
collective bargaining are tightly constrained by civil service rules. They can
only negotiate for non-monetary benefits. They have no right to strike or to
conduct any form of collective protest action.
They are used as
scapegoats in government campaigns against corruption while the biggest
beneficiaries of graft and corruption, the politicians and top government
officials, remain scot-free.
Case study:
Bacolod employees hard-up and mired in debt
Local data
obtained by Bulatlat from CIRMS, a local social research outfit, showed
that among the government employees of Bacolod City the lowest paid employee
receives a monthly salary of P10,805 and annual benefits worth P19,905. But a
cursory survey conducted by Bulatlat showed that their common take home
pay is only P3,389.69 per month, or P112.96/day. This is way below the
P535.68/day standard set by the National Economic Development Authority (NEDA)
for a family of six to live a decent life.
A study by DepEd
in Bacolod City early this year showed that 62% of public school teachers
receive a net income of P 5,000 and below. The breakdown are as follows, 38% of
public school teachers receive a net income of P5,000 to P9,000 per month, 24%
percent receive a net income of P5,000 and below, and 38 % receive P3,000 and
below.
The same study
showed that 72% of public school teachers allot half or more than half of their
salaries to pay their debts. The breakdown are as follows, 28% of public
school teachers spend 25-50% of their salary to pay for their debts, 36.3 %
allot 50% of their salaries for debt payments, and 35.7% spend more than 50% of
their salaries for payment of all sorts of debts.
CIRMS said an
increasing number of government employees, especially teachers, are attending
night classes on care giving, nursing and vocational courses to be able to apply
for work abroad.
Richard Gelangre,
president of the Association of Classroom Teachers-Bacolod (ACT-BA) told
Bulatlat that some of their members now work as English teachers in China,
Vietnam and Malaysia. He said that teachers in other Asian countries get a basic
salary of 30,000 to 50,000, far better than what they receive here. “More are
still applying for jobs abroad,” he added.
Data from the
Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) and Overseas Workers Welfare
Administration (OWWA) show that 3,269 teachers left the country from 2001 to
2004 to seek employment abroad.
Cora Semillano,
adviser of the Alliance of Concerned Teachers-Negros (ACT-Negros), said, “We
can't blame our state employees for leaving the country and working as domestic
helpers or whatever. Government is not giving them adequate compensation and the
respect they deserve as public servants. It is the government's inaction to the
employees’ legitimate demand for increases in salaries and other benefits that
drive more of them to work abroad.”
Semillano however
stressed that she encourages Filipino teachers to stay despite the hardships
because their main profession is “to raise the awareness of the students and
prepare them for their social responsibilities”.
Fighting Back
The sad plight of
government employees moved them to link arms and engage the government in
protest actions and court battles. Since 1998, Bacolod City has witnessed big
mass actions by government employees to fight for increases in salaries, unpaid
benefits, job security and their rights, and to protest against corruption in
government. Mobilizations of state employees ranged from a few hundreds to
thousands.
Dan Alcoriza,
Vice-chairman of the Confederation for Unity, Recognition and Advancement of
Government Employees (COURAGE) Western Visayas chapter, said that “From 2000 to
2004, government employees had staged numerous protest actions against
liberalization, privatization, rationalization and other destructive neo-liberal
policies of the government which threatened their job security and benefits.”
He enumerated the
various struggles of government employees: the protest action of water district
employees against privatization, the campaign of hospital and health workers
against “corporatization”, the fight of local government employees for the
recognition of their unions and implementation of the benefits they won through
collective negotiated agreement (CNA), among others. “Most of these campaigns
are still going on, but we are getting stronger,” added Alcoriza.
Gilda Quiatchon,
Chairperson of ACT-Negros and a veteran street parliamentarian, told Bulatlat
that some of their struggles “have been won, others not completely, but it
strengthened and broadened their unity”. Quiatchon recalled that the biggest
struggle of public school teachers in recent years was the fight for payment of
their Emergency Cost of Living Allowance (ECOLA), which they won from the city
government. The ECOLA is a monthly special benefit taken from the City’s Special
Education Fund amounting to P1,000.00 per teacher.
She said the ECOLA
struggle began in 1998 when the previous two mayors refused to release it
claiming lack of funds. They engaged the city government in street protests,
pickets, walk-outs up to court battles. COURAGE supported their struggle. They
finally won in early 2004 when the Supreme Court ruled in their favor.
New wave of
struggle
Representatives of
COURAGE, ACT-Negros, ACT-BA, the National Federation of Teachers and Employees
Unions (NAFTEU), and the Alliance of Health Workers are planning a campaign to
demand for payment of their Cost of Living Allowance (COLA) and for a P3,000
across-the-board increase.
The campaign is
based on a Supreme Court en banc decision September 6, 2005 on G.R. No.
160396, Philippine Ports Authority employees hired after July 1, 1989 versus
COA , in which it ruled that all Philippine Port Authority employees who
were in service within the period of July 1, 1989 (date of effectivity of R.A.
6758 or the Salary Standardization Law) to March 16, 1999 (date of publication
of DBM Corporate Compensation Circular No. 10) are entitled to back payments of
their Cost of Living Allowance and amelioration allowance.
Gilda Quiatchon,
said that “this decision is extremely significant for public school teachers as
well as government employees in general. For the first time, the Supreme Court
has ruled specifically and categorically that the COLA was not integrated
into the basic pay of government employees when R.A. 6758 took effect in July
1, 1989”.
“This means, the
government owes us unpaid COLA from 1989 to 1999, and from 1999 to the present
because the government unjustly dissolved our COLA when Congress passed the RA
6758 or the Salary Standardization Law in 1988,” Quiatchon added.
Dan Alcoriza,
clarified further saying “that is why we are not only demanding payment of our
unpaid COLA but the restoration of our COLA unjustly dissolved by Salary
Standardization Law”.
Alcoriza also
chided the government saying “the Salary Standarization Law, which was supposed
to upgrade the salaries and benefits of state employees resulted instead to its
reduction. What kind of state measure was that?” he asked.
Gualberto Dajao,
an officer of ACT-BA for his part slammed the Arroyo administration for
backtracking from its commitment to “alleviate the plight of government
employees”. Dajao said, “the COLA and other benefits are ours, they are product
of our long and concerted struggles, they should be given to us”.
He also said that
“after imposing on us the heavy crosses of EVAT, oil price hikes, wage freeze
and surging prices of basic commodities and costs of public services, GMA has
still the gall to deprive us of our benefits”.
Secretary Romulo
Neri of the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) in his September 21
Memorandum to the President stated, “If the national government settles the
COLA following the latest Supreme Court ruling on the PPA case, the government
would be paying P68.75 B to P153.4B. We do not have the necessary appropriation
to pay this claim.”
Alcoriza however
hit back saying, “That is a big lie. How can the government afford to pay $228
million in foreign debt payment in 2004, including the $110.8 million in annual
principal and interest payments for the onerous BNPP loans of Marcos and the
billions for NAPOCOR debts and claim that it cannot pay government employees?”
“This clearly
shows the GMA government’s lack of concern for its people’s rights and welfare
and its bias for big business and transnational corporations, Alcoriza stressed.
Alcoriza revealed
that they have started their big campaign to press for the immediate payment of
their unpaid COLA estimated at P124,000 per government employee. He said that
the part of their demands are for the restoration of the COLA, and a P3,000
across the board increase nationwide.
He also revealed
that they are set to mobilize thousands of teachers and government employees
throughout Negros for a nationally coordinated protest action on December 7,
2005. Bulatlat
© 2005 Bulatlat
■
Alipato Publications
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