Senate okays bill increasing maternity leave to 100 days
>> Thursday, January 28, 2016
HEALTH UPDATES
The Senate has approved on third and final
reading a bill seeking to increase maternity leave for female employees in the
public and private sectors to 100 days regardless of the mode of delivery.
Currently,
our laws provide for 60 days of maternity leave for government employees and 60
to 78 days for employees in the private sector, depending on the mode of
delivery.
Senator Pia Cayetano,
chairperson of the Senate Committee on Women, Children, Family Relations and
Gender Equality and sponsor of Senate Bill No. 2982, said the current allowable
maternity leave is less than the 98-day minimum requirement of the
International Labor Organization (ILO).
According to
Cayetano, the Philippines is lagging behind other countries in the Asean Region
in terms of maternity leave duration. Vietnam for instance, she said, provides
120 to 180 days of mater, depending on the working conditions and nature of the
work. Singapore, on the other hand, provides 112 days of maternity leave.
Cambodia, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Myanmar, and Thailand all provide a maternity
leave period of 84 days, Cayetano said in her sponsorship speech.
She said SBN
2982, known as the Expanded Maternity Leave Law of 2015, aims to provide
mothers with ample transition time to regain health and overall wellness as
well as to assume their maternal roles before resuming full-time work. It would
also give mothers sufficient financial support while on maternity leave, she
added.
They can
also avail of an additional maternity leave of 30 days, without pay, provided
that the employee gives the head of the agency due notice, in writing, 45 days
before the end of her ordinary maternity leave.
“The
expansion of the maternity leave period shall not in any way diminish the
existing maternity benefits granted by the employer. It shall not affect the
female employee’s security of tenure”, Cayetano said.
According to
the proposed bill, employees from the private sector availing of the
maternity leave period and benefits must receive not less than two-thirds of
their regular monthly wages.
“Employers from
the private sector shall pay the salary differential between the actual cash
benefits received from the SSS by the covered employees and their average
weekly or regular wages, for the entire duration of the ordinary maternity
leave,” the bill said.
Data from
SSS show that for the years 2012 to 2014, the availment of the maternity leave
is less than two percent of the total female population of SSS members.
Exempted
from giving cash benefits are employers who are operating distressed
establishments and retail/ service establishments employing not more than ten
workers.
Also
exempted are employers who pay their workers on commission, boundary or task
basis and those engaged in the production, processing, or manufacturing of
products and commodities including agro-processing, trading, and services whose
total assets are not more than three million pesos.
“Through
policies like this, we aim to institutionalize standards that promote the
rights of working women and protect them from discrimination based on maternity,”
Cayetano said.
0 comments:
Post a Comment