People discriminating Covid patients, front-liners face fines
>> Thursday, June 4, 2020
BAGUIO CITY – People
discriminating against health care workers and front line workers against the
coronavirus disease (Covid-19) will be penalized after the city council here ,
approved an ordinance imposing fines.
In a semi-virtual
session, the city’s 14 councilors, half of who were online, voted recently for
the passage of the ordinance authored by councilor Betty Lourdes Tabanda
imposing penalties on people discriminating against health care workers who are
at the front line in curing people with Covid-19.
The ordinance is
entitled “An ordinance penalizing acts of discrimination committed against
persons affected by Covid-19, medical personnel, other health workers, and
essential workers in making the city Covid free.”
In filing the
resolution, Tabanda took note of some narratives of harassed health care
workers.
Tabanda said that at one
instance, a nurse who was at the city market was refused service by vendors
after finding out that she is a front line health worker.
The nurse happens also
to be a mother and was at the market after her duty to buy food for her family.
In one incident, a nurse
was asked to leave the boarding house where she stays.
“Pinapaalis yung nurse
(The nurse is being asked to leave). This is why she opted to stay in the
designated hotel,” Tabanda said.
Some hotels in Baguio
have opened their doors to health care workers like Starwood Hotel near the
Baguio General Hospital and Medical Center (BGHMC) where some of its rooms are
used by health care workers for free.
On Session Road, Baguio
Central Hotel has also allowed the use of its rooms for health care workers.
“Our health care workers
are doing their best to cure people with the disease and stop the spread of the
virus and that is what they get,” she said.
She said that this is
also the case for other front line workers like police and relief providers who
spend time and risk their health to help stop the spread of the disease.
Tabanda said that the
resolution will impose penalties on violators.
A P3,000 fine will be
imposed for derogatory remarks a, denying access to basic goods and inflicting
physical harm to Covid-19 patients, health workers, and essential workers.
A P5,000 fine will be
charged on persons who publish names or whereabouts of people with Covid-19.
If a violator is unable
to pay the fine, 30-day imprisonment will be imposed.
Government officials, on
the other hand, are given the maximum penalty aside from administrative
charges. (PNA)
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