Families assail DSWD over rules; non-release of amelioration funds
>> Wednesday, April 22, 2020
Acknowledging Ibon Foundation for this infographic |
SAGADA,
MOUNTAIN PROVINCE- Nearly 50 families claiming they were affected due to the
enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) trooped to the office of the municipal social
welfare and development (MSWD) in the recent days asking why they were not
included as beneficiaries of the government’s emergency subsidy program (ESP)
of the social amelioration program (SAP.
This, as DSWD Spokesperson Irene
Dumlao advised families who think they are eligible to avail of the
P5,000-P8,000 ESP-SAP financial assistance but did not avail to appeal to their
respective local MSWDs; and for the local MSWDs to validate the list of
eligible beneficiaries outside of the target indicative beneficiaries.
The Bayanihan to Heal as
One Act or RA 11469 provides P200 billion fund for18 million low income and
poor families affected by ECQ with an ESP of P5,000 to P8,000 each for two
months with guidelines on target beneficiaries based on the Joint Memorandum
Circular No.1 series of 2020.
Said JMC refers to
special guidelines on the provision of social amelioration measures by the
department of social welfare and development IDSWD), department of labor and
employment (DOLE), department of trade and industry (DTI), department of
agriculture (DA), department of finance (DOF), department of budget and
management (DBM), and department of the interior and local government (DILG)t
to the most affected residents of the areas under the ECQ.
The ESP fund’s
implementation is managed by DSWD using quota system where each municipality or
city will be given a fixed amount from the P200-billion SAP fund based on the
Department of Finance’s data from the 2015 census.
Here in the Cordillera,
DSWD regional Director Leo Quintilla in an orientation in Baguio City for
barangay officials said the amount of P1.3 billion was allotted for 300,000
families for the Cordillera Administrative Region.
In Sagada only 1,510
families representing 43% of 3,500 families including stranded workers availed of the ESP. Sagada is a 5th class municipality with some
80% farmers, with some 570 registered businesses of which some 200 entrepreneurs
are into tourism based business including homestays and souvenir shops and nearly
900 tourist guides and some 200 drivers/operators affected with the ECQ.
In the same development,
Sagada resident- netizens complained of
not having availed of the ESP of the SAP given in the amount of P5,000 to P8,000
depending on regional geographical locations where low income families barely earn
less than the poverty threshold of P12,577.00 per month for a family of six.
Facebook posts of
aggrieved persons showed frustration from their comments followed up by this
writer.
For
one, couple Maria and John are senior citizens. Maria also maintains a little
store with stock they slowly consumed due to the lockdown. Both are rice farmers
on a small parcel of lot as they wait for the harvest season this July. In an
interview, Maria claimed they did not avail because MSWD said her family maintains
a store during the lockdown so they have a source of income.
John’s family did not
receive the ESP-SAP financial assistance from DSWD.
And many more.
Maritess Lawagey, MSWD
staff here said the complaining individuals have varied cases and cannot be
accommodated due to the guidelines of DSWD.
JMC No. 1 followed up
with the Memorandum Circular No. 9 of the DSWD providing omnibus guidelines in
the implementation of the ESP-SAP.
“We explained to them
the reasons why they cannot avail”, Lawagey said.
As provided in the JMC
No.1, target beneficiaries of the ESP of SAP are “families that belong to
either the poor or informal sector which are at risk of not earning a living”
during the ECQ who may have at least one member belonging to any of the vulnerable
or disadvantaged sectors.
Said DSWD guidelines provide
guidance on the implementation of assistance to individuals in crisis situations
(AICS) and livelihood assistance grants (LAG) in the provision of basic necessities
amelioration and recovery of target beneficiaries.
DSWD Memorandum Circular
No 9 lists those who shall avail namely the following: 4Ps beneficiaries,
families with low income or no income to draw from including those working in
the informal sector, and indigent indigenous peoples and vulnerable sectors of
society.
DSWD says families with
low income are those who have no income, low income or no savings to draw from including
those working in the informal sector as directly hired, subcontracted workers,
homeworkers, house helpers, homeworkers, drivers whose daily sustenance is
solely dependent on the income they derive from, micro entrepreneurs and operators
of sari sari stores, family enterprise owners managing family business, sub
minimum wage earners, farmer’s fisher folks and stranded workers.
As said DSWD memo circular
No 9 provides eligible families are indigent families of indigenous people are
other vulnerable groups include those living an ancestral domain whose income
solely depend on subsistence economy, under privileged and homeless individuals
whose income falls below the poverty threshold as defined by the National
Economic Development Authority (NEDA).
Said memorandum also
identified eligible as overseas Filipino workers (OFW) in distress and other
vulnerable groups including senior citizens, persons with disabilities,
lactating and pregnant women provided that in the determination of vulnerable groups
they are qualified as families.
Those who are excluded in
the ESP-SAP are elected and appointed government officials, contracted
personnel, employees in the private sector or those in the oral economy,
retired individuals who are receiving pension and families with independent
financial capacity.
Guidelines while these
were particularly identified however showed that "criteria has been open for misinterpretation by validators" as noted by netizen Modesto Gaab.
A Sagada resident- netizen,
CarmenBistang
CotengAbeya LebengGayyad claimed a 71-year-old woman who lived in the
barangay for eight years and not a registered voter was not given a Social
Amelioration Card (SAC) form to fill up and receive the ESP cash assistance.
Low Income
Families
with no or low income are an open scrutiny where some were listed as SAP
beneficiaries while others were not.
A couple, Pedro and Jane
are farmers. They have to wait for July to harvest rice before they can turn
the rice field patch into a vegetable garden. They have a passenger jeepney
which is not regularly operating due to the lockdown. Pedro claimed MSWD did
not include them because they are operating a jeepney during the lockdown so they
have a source of income.
Their verbal complaints
to MSWD eventually included them as ESP beneficiaries among other nine
complainants, Jane said.
Patricia
is a vendor who carries her basket of vegetables to the main town every market
day. She lives alone as her children have their own families to think of. Her
income reaches barely P10,000 a month.
Patricia said she was
not included and upon further follow up by this writer said she was told to
half the subsidy with his brother who has a separate family.
Another is Jessa, a
missionary and works as a tofu distributor to help her through her everyday
needs. She cannot anymore travel to the source of tofu due to the lockdown. A resident
who stays in the same barangay said
Jessa was not included as an ESP beneficiary.
Of particular case is a
daycare worker, frontliner at the hub, has a little store and has a child she
is sending to school. But she cannot qualify as an as ESP beneficiary because
she is working as a daycare worker in government. Day care workers barely
receive P5,000 honoraria a month.
Low income families are
a target group in the JMC guidelines and DSWD Memorandum No 9 but identifying
beneficiaries take a confusing and questionable way of how MSWD identifies ESP-beneficiaries.
Low
income families according to NEDA are those earning P12,577.00 per month for a
family of six based on the 2018 Family Income and Expenditure Survey (FIES).
The DSWD revealed that there are only 4 million low income families who availed representing
22.2% among targeted 18 million SAP beneficiaries as of April 16.
Also, among 435,619 PUV
drivers as research group Ibon Foundation noted, only 15,864 availed of the cash assistance while the
number of informal workers assisted is only 2.3 percent of 5.2 million
non-agricultural informal earners.
The number of assisted
drivers composes nine percent of the targeted 435,000 drivers.
Ibon also noted the
farmers who have received cash assistance is only 3.3 percent of the
Ibon-estimated 9.7 million farmers, farm workers and fisher folk needing
assistance.
Discrimination
Issues
of discrimination face the implementation of the ESP with complaints including a
market vendor here who claimed he was not given while another market vendor
availed of the cash assistance.
Questions hover on the
issue of a senior citizen not receiving ESP because she or he has a regular
pension from either SSS or GSIS or social pension (SocPEn) while another under the
care of her daughter who works in government received the cash assistance
anyway.
Most senior citizens are
in the care of their children and it is rare that they live alone.
Overseas Filipino Workers
Another
most asked question is an OFW expected to send money to their families back
home and family in Philippines not included as a SEP-SAP beneficiary.
OFWs in other parts of
the country are facing more or less similar situations where some were laid off
due to places in lock down situations thus the exodus of a number of OFWs who
went home during this Covid-19 pandemic.
Its effect in the
country is staggering where families dependent on OFW money are not listed to
avail of the ESP cash assistance.
Sagada resident and
netizen Schanaley
Pucay claims he was not identified as a SAP beneficiary because the
barangay did not list him as a beneficiary as his wife is an OFW. Karlo who
takes care of their two children and maintains a small parcel of rice field
said harvest shall yet be by July. He said his wife who went to Hongkong as a
domestic helper late last year has not yet transmitted any finance since
March.
Netizen Florence
Cayboen being an OFW at UK said
“na lockdown kmi gedan, kaaduan ken dakami isna, no work no pay, amed no
undocumented, am sure kaaduan ken dakami et maid nin paw it.” (we are also into
lockdown and most of those who came here are into ‘no work no pay’ situation
much more so if undocumented status. Am sure most of us did not send any money
back home)
Netizen JesRenz
Dicang based overseas said “md
inbgana cd en ban pamilyan d OFW et adida maagtan,,ty patin pamilya mi metlang
et na lockdown,,cna et adun namaid metlang ubla ty adun nin close ay
company,,force leave nan tapina,,umalaan d ngen metlang c ipaw it da,,dat no
work no pay py. (it didn’t say in the guidelines that families of OFWs shall
not be given because even our families are in a lockdown. Here many lost their
jobs because many closed their stores and many employees are on forced leave so
where shall OFWs get money to send home, much more so that it is no work, no
pay).
Similarly,
Sagada resident and netizen Cathy
Alisson, solo parent and stranded in Lepanto, Benguet did not receive any
cash assistance from DSWD. She said the local MSWD told her that she is not a
resident at Lepanto so she cannot avail.
Validation and SAC forms
ESP-SAP
beneficiaries are supposed to be profiled through the use of the social
amelioration card (SAC) where registration into the SAC is done by identified
personnel of the LGU on a house to house basis.
From the list that the
barangay shall give to the MSWD, the latter shall validate the listed name and given
the SAC forms and the validated families
avail of the ESP-SAP cash assistance.
Some complaining families
however complain of not being included as beneficiaries as previously noted.
Sagada resident and netizen
E
Gnab Nosira Nayelap asked how barangays came up with a list when they
did not interview families.
This probably explains
why some families, even if affected by the quarantine did not receive social
amelioration cards or forms.
Sagada resident and netizen
Richard
Yodong said there should be more field work to validate
beneficiaries. The Local Government Code
should be amended to include a mandatory permanent plantilla for a barangay
social worker, Yodong sa
Where
the barangay and/or the MSWD did not include
the name of a supposed eligible ESP beneficiary,
the DSWD has appealed that LGUs will shoulder the supposed financial aid under the LGUs own supplemental
social amelioration program.
Meantime, another
subsidy that DSWD provides for ECQ-affected informal family workers is the
amount of not more than P15,000 financial livelihood assistance grant (LAG) to be
given after the ECQ period.
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