BEHIND
THE SCENES
Alfred
P. Dizon
BAGUIO CITY -- I had a night of spirits
Tuesday when the drinking ban was lifted with some old-timers at Luisas Café, the
undisputed media hangout here along Session Road.
Discussion turned
spirited when someone remarked Baguio and Ilocos Region top officials agreed to
open their borders to tourists. Roland “Chongloy” Wong, proprietor of Luisas
didn’t indulge in the spirits but said it was high time places start opening up
their economies.
He noted the economy
has gone down due to the Covid-19 pandemic and local government may need to
balance the dilemma of boosting the economy while addressing rising cases of
Covid-19.
Most agreed but were
of the opinion that the public must take precaution and accept the fact that we
may have to live with the virus for years -- like HIV, dengue or other
contagious diseases.
Others noted some
government Covid regulations have become “comical and overacting.”
***
One said if you are
below the PNB near Luisas and you want to go in, you cannot go up the sidewalk
which is only around 10 steps away. You have to go up Session Road at the other
side of the road then go down just to go to the place, one said.
Another noted the
resourceful ones walk on the road pretending to wait for a ride and when they
are beside the resto, they go in.
***
I related my share of
– I’ll just call it stupidity. I was driving the car one Saturday afternoon and
stopped beside Luisas to give copies of the Northern Philippine Times to be
sold in the resto.
A cop suddenly
accosted me saying I had to leave. I told the lawman I’ll just give the copies
to the cashier. He told me I couldn’t do that. Even for a few seconds? I asked
him. He told me the law is the law and I had to leave since the area is a
loading and unloading zone.
I was unloading
newspapers and it would only take a few seconds, I told him. He just shook his
head and motioned me to drive down, saying I could park down the road or
elsewhere before returning to the resto.
I had to go down the
road, go up General Luna then to Upper Mabini and park at the Joem parking
building then back to Luisas to give the copies. Oh well.
Time and gasoline
wasted. You don’t argue with a cop nowadays. If it happens again, well … maybe,
I’ll just have to shake my head considering having mananita even if it is
banned is a privilege of the few high up there with positions of power.
***
So back to the session
of spirits. One said visitors to Baguio should be forewarned that one can only
go up Session road passing the right sidewalk. To go down, one has to use the
left side. You make a mistake going down the wrong side of the road if you
alight from a taxi, he said, you could be subjected to forced exercise.
There are a lot of
Covid stories up here in this once City of Pines now turning into a concrete
jungle. But for now, we will leave it at that and talk about other matters.
***
Former Pampanga
lawmaker and pulmonologist Anna York Bondoc has warned two Covid rapid antibody
test kits banned in some countries are now being used in the country.
Bondoc said SD
Biosensor and RapiGen Inc. from South Korea had been banned in the US, United
Arab Emirates and India because of inaccuracies in detecting the virus.
She said several
hospitals and clinics have purchased the test kit brands.
Bondoc said rapid
antibody testing is “highly inaccurate.”
The Dept. of Health
had earlier said only test kits approved by the Food and Drug Administration
and validated by the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine should be
used.
***
Sen. Imee Marcos has
castigated the Civil Service Commission for allegedly abetting high
unemployment amid the Covid-19 pandemic by failing to certify applicants
eligible for thousands of government jobs that have been left vacant for years.
Marcos, who will
sponsor the CSC budget for 2021, said more than 269,000 permanent government
positions were left unfilled in 2019, with almost 178,000 still vacant at the
end of August this year.
“When government
positions are left unfilled, the unused budget for hiring personnel are later
declared as yearend savings. These suspicious savings become bonuses divvied up
among agency officials,” she said in a press statement.
Marcos cited that some
P7.6 billion from the miscellaneous personnel benefits fund (MPBF) in the 2020
budget remains unused to hire new personnel in various government agencies.
Internal wrangling
among CSC board members and a passive attitude in taking government agencies to
task were complicating the delay in filling up vacant government posts, Marcos
added.
“We are only as strong
as we are united, as weak as we are divided. Ceasefire and work, serbisyo muna
(service first),” Marcos said.
“The CSC will have
difficulty justifying its proposed budget for next year if no initiatives are
made for better housekeeping,” Marcos warned.
Marcos recommended
that the CSC fast-track a policy that makes contractual employees eligible for
government jobs that they have performed for years but from which they could
not claim commission-certified salaries and benefits.
“The government must
stop being the biggest promoter of end-of-contract employment. Let’s stop
treating contractuals as mere supplies whose salaries are taken from funds for
miscellaneous and other operating expenses,” Marcos said.
Marcos added that idle
funds for government posts that continue to remain vacant should be removed
from proposed agency budgets and instead be used to increase funding for the
government’s pandemic response measures.
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