Nestlé Philippines Honored With Special Citation, Partners Leadership Award For Advancing EPR Systems

Sustainability initiatives are encouraging both businesses and communities to participate in improving waste recovery systems.

Vivant Water Acquires Majority Stake In Puerto Princesa Wastewater Facility

Vivant Water strengthens its role in wastewater management with a larger stake in Puerto Princesa’s treatment facility, supporting long-term environmental solutions and sustainable urban development.

Unilever Philippines Boosts Local Production Capabilities Manufacturing In Cebu

Unilever Philippines strengthens local manufacturing with a new Home Care production facility in Cebu serving the Visayas and Mindanao markets.

She Means Business: Real Stories Of Tala Empowering Women Toward Financial Freedom

She Means Business highlights real stories of how Tala empowers women with financial tools and opportunities, helping bridge gaps in access and supporting their journey toward financial freedom.

Solon Confident Of New Dept For OFWs By December

Solon Confident Of New Dept For OFWs By December

105
105

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

The technical working group of the House committee tasked to create the Department of Overseas Filipino Workers (OFW) is buckling down for the end-of-the-year target set by President Rodrigo Duterte, an official said.

Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) party-list Rep. Raymond Democrito Mendoza said the discussions for the new agency are going smoothly.

“There is much work that needs to be done but it is going as planned, of course, we all want an agency that will look after our bagong bayani (modern heroes). Hopefully, it will be our Christmas gift to them and their families,” Mendoza said in an interview.

Mendoza, who also chairs the House Committee on Overseas Workers Affairs, also clarified that the creation of the department, which they also plan to change to the Department of Migration and Development, does not fully embrace labor export policy as a strategy for economic growth.

“This is, of course, a big setback. Overseas work should just be a freely chosen option and not because of the lack of decent jobs in the country. At my end, let me assure you that the TUCP vision is to create decent jobs at home as the social costs of overseas employment are simply staggering not only in monetary terms,” he added.

The committee head also sees the need for a sunset provision that envisions a goal that the Philippines shall also deploy skilled workers in the future.

“Maybe five to seven years from now, unskilled workers who are most vulnerable to abuses, especially domestic workers, should already be stopped except if they are going back to a former employer through a ‘Balik-Manggagawa Program’,” Mendoza said.

He also explained that the new department will not only look into issues of recruitment, deployment, repatriation, and the issue of illegal assistance to workers whose labor rights have been violated or who have been criminally violated in their receiving countries.

The bill, he said, shall seriously address the matter of ‘reintegration’.

“We want our balik-bahay OFWs to reintegrate with capital know-how and their personal experience as foundations to build a Philippine society to be more democratic and equitable. This is the vision that we wilt bring to the OFW conversation,” he added.

The House of Representatives started in September their deliberations on several bills proposing its creation, following President Rodrigo Duterte’s order stated during his State of the Nation Address.

There were thirty-two bills filed to create a new department. (PNA)