EDITORIAL
Government employees are gearing up for a
nationwide mass action to dramatize their protest against the Aquino
government’s failure to provide them decent wages.
Ferdinand Gaite,
Confederation for Unity Advancement and Recognition of Government Employees
(Courage) president, said thousands of public employees, including health
workers and teachers, would rally on Feb. 16, a day they marked as Black Hearts
Day, to denounce the fourth version of the Salary Standardization Law (SSL4).
But Palace
communications secretary Herminio Coloma Jr. said there is still chance the expected first tranche of salary
increases can be given this year as the Department of Budget and Management (DBM)
already prepared its recommendation to President Aquino.
The increase
was stalled after the Senate and the House bicameral committee remained
deadlocked until Congress adjourned Wednesday.
Alliance of
Concerned Teachers Rep. Antonio Tiniohad also lashed out at Sen. Antonio
Trillanes IV, blaming him for the failure of Congress to approve SSL4, which
contains the planned salary increase for government personnel.
He added
that Trillanes left for the US “in the midst of a deadlock between the chambers
of Congress on the final version of the pay hike bill.”
Trillanes
had insisted on including in the proposed increases a hike in the monthly
pension of retired military and police personnel even when the increased budget
is designed only for active personnel.
In Metro
Manila, Gaite said, government workers would march to Mendiola to tell
President Aquino that he is “heartless and insensitive to the plight of
government employees.”
Santi Dasmariñas
Jr., National Federation of Employees Associations in Agriculture
(NAFEDA) president, criticized SSL4 saying that “on close scrutiny” the
measure would actually have the effect of reducing the income of public
workers.
Various
government employee groups earlier warned that while SSL4 increases the salary
rates, it would also reduce the benefits they are currently receiving under
their respective magna carta.
“We had no
salary increase for more than five years under the Aquino administration but we
are not desperate and despondent to accept a pay hike scheme that looks
appealing… but on close scrutiny, takes away more from what we currently have,”
Dasmariñas said.
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