This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 7, March 20-26, 2005
Gov’t Employees Take to
Streets for Higher Pay
Marcial Araba has been a street sweeper for 18 years. He works eight hours a
day, five times a week for a monthly salary of P5,800 (US$106.74 at P54.34 =
$1). To survive, he constantly borrows money at 20 percent interest, plunging
him even deeper in poverty. BY
RONALYN V. OLEA Marcial Araba has been a street sweeper
for 18 years. He works eight hours a day, five times a week for a monthly salary
of P5,800 (US$106.74 at P54.34 = $1). To survive, he constantly borrows money at
20 percent interest, plunging him even deeper in poverty. Araba joined the rally
of government employees last March 16 in the hope that this time, government
will listen to their demand for a P3,000 across-the-board salary increase.
Low pay Araba listed their usual
expenses: “Upa sa kwarto P3,000, tubig P500, ilaw P1,600. P3,000 inaawas sa
sweldo, P1,500 lang ang take home pay.” (Room rent costs P3,000, water bill
is P500, electricity bill is P1,600. Three thousand pesos is deducted from my
salary. My take home pay is only P1,500.) His wife is also a Metro
aide. To survive, he said they constantly borrow money. “Nakasanla lagi ang
[ATM] card namin sa 5-6.” (Our ATM cards are always pawned to creditors who
get high interest rates.) They also sell plastic materials gathered from
sweeping to earn extra income. Araba has three children.
He said two of them will graduate this month, one from elementary and another
from high school. “[Kaso] Wala nga kaming pambayad ng diploma, P300 din iyon.”
(Only, we cannot pay for their diploma which costs P300 each.) Araba added, “’Di ko
alam kung makakapag-aral pa sa kolehiyo ang mga anak ko. Hirap na hirap na kami.”
(I don’t know if we will be able to send them to college. We are already in a
deep crisis.) Cora Manansala is a public
school teacher at Maligaya High School in Fairview,
Quezon City.
Like most of her co-teachers, she receives the salary grade 2 of P10,180.
She said their monthly
expenses reach P20,000. “Pahirap sa akin yung Meralco.” (Meralco is a
burden to me). Manansala’s electricity bill amounts to P3,500 a month, the
telephone bill more than P1,000. “Tipid pa kami niyan sa pagkain dahil
vegatarian kami. Tipid ako sa pamasahe dahil sumasabay ako sa company
service ng mister ko. Pambayad pa ng insurance, medical
allowance...Updated din ako sa loans.” Manansala said, “Kulang
talaga sweldo. Kung iyon lang, baka kahit bagoong araw-araw, hindi matugunan.”
(The salary is really not enough. Even if we eat shrimp paste everyday, it
would still no be enough.) Manansala has two
children. Her youngest is enrolled at a private pre-school. She said she pays
P26,000 a year for tuition and other fees. The eldest goes to a public
elementary school. She said it was good her
husband, also a former teacher, is a project engineer and earns extra income as
an agent. Remedios Maltu, on the
other hand, has been a nursing attendant at the San Lazaro Hospital for 19
years. She earns P7,000 a month. She said they spend P250 a
day for food, P1,000 for electricity and P500 for water. “Kulang talaga ang
sweldo. Sa mahal na bilihin, hindi aabot. Pamasahe, tumataas din.” To
augment their income, she would sometimes sell viands to her co-workers. Maltu, president of the San
Lazaro Hospital Employees Association, an affiliate of the Alliance of Health
Workers revealed that at least 20 percent of their members have a sideline.
Maltu said one of her three
children is a nursing student. They spend P20,000 each semester for tuition and
other fees. “Nangungutang ako sa mga government agencies.” (I get loans
from different government agencies.) She said, “Sweldo namin,
hindi kayang umagapay sa pag-aaral ng aming mga anak. Paano pa iyong may mga
anak sa elementary at high school?” (Our pay is not enough for our
children’s education. How much more those who have children in elementary and
high school?) Utility workers in
government hospitals receive P5,082 a month. Nurses are paid P9,939.30 while
resident doctors get only P15, 841.35. According to the Department
of Labor and Employment (DoLE), a family of six needs P17,820 a month in order
to survive. Debt servicing over
salary hike Antonio Tinio, chairperson
of the Alliance of Concerned Teachers (ACT) said, “The Macapagal-Arroyo
government’s 2005 budget, signed into law March 15, has no provisions for salary
increases of state workers while it authorizes the P646 billion for debt
payments.” The government needs P56.4
billion to respond to the demand of 1.4 million government employees for a
P3,000 salary increase. Ferdinand Gaite, president
of the Confederation for the Unity, Advancement and Recognition of Government
Employees (COURAGE), said, “Our just demand for the immediate passage of a
supplemental budget for P3,000 salary increase will provide some relief amid the
skyrocketing prices of oil, utilities and basic goods.” Since 2001, the salaries of
government employees have been frozen. In 2000, they received a ten-percent
(P440) and five percent in 2001 (P242). The Alliance of Health
Workers (AHW), meanwhile, lambasted Macapagal-Arroyo’s Executive Order 366 for
the retrenchment of 30 percent of 420,000 government employees. Health workers from the
Jose
Memorial Medical Center, San Lazaro Hospital,
Tondo
Medical Center, National Center for Mental
Health, Philippine Heart Center, Lung
Center of the Philippines, Philippine
Children’s Medical Center also joined the protest. Nationwide protest The National Day of Protest
reverberated across the country. Protest actions were also staged in Pampanga,
Bulacan, Tarlac, Bataan, Cabanatuan,
Iloilo, Bacolod, Ilocos Sur, Bontoc,
Isabela, Baguio, Albay, Masbate,
Cebu
City, Tacloban, Butuan
City, Kidapawan, Davao
City and General Santos City. In Maguindanao and Lanao
provinces, some 4,000 public school teachers boycotted their classes against the
delay of their salary for three months. Bulatlat © 2004 Bulatlat
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