The Community Behind The Community: How DIY Travel Philippines Built Trust At Scale

DIY Travel Philippines shows how a travel group can grow without losing the trust, respect, and purpose that brought members together.

St. Luke’s Medical Center Foundation Showcases Healthy Ageing Innovations At ASEAN Silver Economy Innovation Gallery

St. Luke’s Medical Center Foundation showcased healthy ageing innovations at the ASEAN Silver Economy Innovation Gallery.A

Balintawak To EDSA: How Your LRT-1 Commute Retraces The Story Of Philippine Freedom

An LRT-1 ride from Balintawak to EDSA becomes more than a commute when it traces echoes of Philippine freedom.

Tala Highlights Role Of Real-Time Data In Reshaping SME Lending At Money20/20 Asia

Tala’s Money20/20 Asia discussion highlights how real-time data can help reshape SME lending with faster and more informed decisions.

Trust Gov’t On Vaccination Program, NegOcc Guv Tells LGUs

NegOcc Governor Eugenio Lacson said that those LGUs without funds for Covid-19 vaccines can rely on the national government to provide vaccines for their constituents.

Trust Gov’t On Vaccination Program, NegOcc Guv Tells LGUs

30
30

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

Negros Occidental Governor Eugenio Lacson said on Monday that local government units (LGUs) without funds for coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) vaccines can rely on the national government to provide vaccines for their constituents.

“I think we should just trust our national government more,” the governor said in an interview, stressing that he believes that it will fulfill its commitment to vaccinate 70 percent of the Filipino population.

Lacson said the provincial government will prioritize its health workers, and the national government will take care of the vaccination for the remaining Negrenses.

“Don’t think of buying the vaccines because the national government will take care of it. The national government has assured us that it is their duty to vaccinate everyone,” he added.

Lacson said that from the start, President Rodrigo Duterte had said that every Filipino will get vaccines paid for by the national government.

“It became complicated when big cities said ‘we will buy our own’. The impression was every LGU should take care of itself, but that is not the case,” he added.

The provincial government itself committed to buying only 100,000 doses of vaccines, primarily intended for medical front-liners, through an agreement with AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals Philippines Inc.

“As for the balance, we have asked for three million doses from the national government,” Lacson said.

The three million doses will reach some 70 percent of the province’s total population, or some 1.5 million Negrenses needing two doses each.

Several small municipalities in Negros Occidental have raised concerns on how to implement their own vaccination program as they cannot afford to purchase vaccines for their constituents due to lack of funds.

Last week, Provincial Administrator Rayfrando Diaz II said the province is assisting the LGUs in enlisting the persons eligible for vaccination.

The Provincial Health Office is expected to submit soon a detailed list of persons identified and registered by every LGU. (PNA)