Massacre aftermath:Teachers, easy targets for loan sharks
>> Tuesday, October 14, 2014
LINGAYEN, Pangasinan -- That a public school
teacher like Linda Sison had to resort to taking out loans with exorbitant
interests just to augment her meager income is, in itself, a tragedy of the
country’s educational system.
Sadly, for Sison who was said to have racked
up loans totaling over P250,000, she had to pay with her life in the hands of
the loan shark, himself, PO3 Domino Alipio.
Last Sept. 1, Alipio, armed with a
.45-caliber pistol, a carbin rifle and a hand grenade, went on a shooting
rampage at the Pangasinan National High School (PNHS), killing Sison, two co-teachers
and a man said to be the policeman’s collector and injuring three others.
Alipio, a policeman assigned with the Anda
Municipal Police Station here, had reportedly gone berserk after failing to
collect on mounting debts by some PNHS teachers and personnel and suspecting
that Florenda Flores, a teachers from Labrador, and his collector Jonalito Urayan
were in cahoots for not remitting collections. Flores and Urayan were the first
ones that Alipio gunned down. He has since been transferred detention from
Lingayen to a facility of the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP) in
Dagupan City.
In the aftermath of the incident, it has now
become more evident that public school teachers continue to be among the
country’s lowest-paid government workers.
Lorena Barongan Echalar, an instructor at the
Pangasinan State University (PSU) in San Carlos City, admits she had been force
to take out loans, sell beauty products and even do private tutoring well into
the night just to make ends meet.
“Kung mayroon lang sana ng sapat na suweldo
ay hindi ko naaabut nang gabi sa lansangan at mapahamak (If only the salary is
enough, I don’t have to stay out late and be exposed to danger).
Kulang pa rin ang kita kaya hindi na maiwasan
na ang mga guro ay makapangutang lalo na may mga pangangailangan din ang pamilya
at dagdag pa kung may emergency napagkagastosan (the salary is not enough that
is why we borrow, worse if there are emergencies that requires money),” Lorena
narrated.
Cheryl Bauzon, a Home Economics teacher at
Calasiao Comprehensive National High School said obtaining loans had become a
normal thing among their ranks. She also bakes cakes on Fridays and sells them.
“Tuwing Friday lang ako puwede tumanggap ng
order at iyon ang maluwag naman sa akin. Maliit na kita pero masaya ka naman sa
iyong ginagawa (I only take orders on Fridays because that’s when I’m free. I
earn a little but I’m happy with what I’m doing), Cheryl said.
With such a meager income and the rising
costs of living, teachers fall easy prey to loan sharks who charge as high as
10 percent interest.
Worse, teachers here draw their salaries only
once-a-month and not bi-monthly as is the regular practice that only makes them
all the more incapable of keeping up with their budgets.
As such, it no longer befuddles why Sison and
38 other co-teachers at the PNHS took out loans totaling more than P3 million
with Alipio.
There is a pending bill in the Senate,
sponsored by Senators Antonio “Sonny” F. Trillanes IV and Loren Legarda,
proposing salary increase for the more than 500,000 public school from the
current P18,549 to P35,567.
If the measure passes, the government will be
spending P219 billion annually on teachers’ salaries, an additional cost that
could go a long way in alleviating the plight of public school teachers and
ultimately save lives that shouldn’t have been lost – like Sison’s.
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