COVID-19 'survival' kit: What's inside the 'Bayanihan 2' bill? | Inquirer News

COVID-19 ‘survival’ kit: What’s inside the ‘Bayanihan 2’ bill?

/ 11:56 PM August 20, 2020

MANILA, Philippines — After a total of five bicameral panel meetings, 40 hours of deliberations and “hundreds of messages in group chats, dozens of phone calls and Zoom video conference discussions,” Congress finally came out with the final version of the proposed Bayanihan to Recover as One Act.

Dubbed as the “Bayanihan 2,” the proposed law lays out the country’s COVID-19 response and recovery plan and allocates funds to help struggling sectors cope with the impacts of the coronavirus pandemic.

Aside from programs intended to boost the government’s health response to the pandemic, the Bayanihan 2 also seeks to save jobs, according to Senator Sonny Angara.

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“It’s job-saving,” Angara, chair of the Senate finance committee, told reporters in an online interview on Thursday.

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“Living to survive…I think 99 percent of businesses will be down. It’s more of saving jobs. [This is for the] survival and recovery,” he added.

The Bayanihan 2 bill has a total allocation of P165.5 billion but only P140 billion will be ready for use.

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The P25.5 billion will serve as a standby funding and will be released once more funds generated from savings and unused appropriations become available.

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The Senate already ratified Congress’ reconciled version of the measure. It only needs the ratification of the House of Representatives before it can be submitted to President Rodrigo Duterte’s office for his signature.

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READ: House eyes to ratify ‘Bayanihan 2’ on Aug 24

And once enacted into law, the Bayanihan 2 will be effective until December 19, 2020.

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Below is the breakdown of the P140-billion funding under the Bayanihan 2:

P3 billion

Procurement of face masks, personal protective equipment (PPE) sets, shoe covers, and face shields

P4.5 billion

Construction of temporary medical isolation and quarantine facilities, field hospitals, dormitories, and for the expansion of gov’t hospital capacity

P4.5 billion

For setting up of isolation facilities and other requirements including billing of hotels, food and transportation used by COVID-19 patients

P13.5 billion

Hiring of emergency Human Resources for Health (HRH)

P820 million

Assistance to overseas Filipinos under the Department of Foreign Affairs

P13 billion

For the government’s cash-for-work program and other support programs for impacted sectors

P600 million

For subsidies and allowances for students severely impacted by the pandemic

P300 million

As subsidies and allowances to teaching and non-teaching personnel, and part-time faculty in state universities and colleges

P180 million

Allowance for national athletes and coaches

P39.472 billion

Capital infusion to government banks

P24 billion

Assistance to the Agricultural Sector and the Plant, Plant, Plant initiative under the Department of Agriculture

P9.5 billion

Assistance to the transportation sector

P4.1 billion

Assistance to the tourism industry (P4 billion) and subsidies and training for tourist guides (P100 million)

P3 billion

Development of smart campuses across the country

P1 billion

Technical Education and Skills Development Authority scholarships

P6 billion

Department of Social Welfare and Development assistance to individuals in crisis situations

P4 billion

Department of Education’s implementation of digital education

P1.5 billion

Assistance to local government units (LGUs)

P2 billion

Subsidy for the payment of interest on loans secured by LGUs from government banks

P5 billion

Hiring of more contact tracers by the Department of Interior and Local Government

P2.5 million

For the computer-based licensure of the Philippine Red Cross

P10 million

Research fund of the Health Technology Assessment Council, which was created under the Universal Health Care law.

P15 million

For UP Diliman’s computational research laboratory

Under the reconciled version, the President is also authorized to grant P15,000 in cash aid to healthcare workers who contract a mild infection of COVID-19 in the line of duty.

A special risk allowance of P10,000 to public and private health workers catering to COVID-19 patients is also mandated under the bill.

Moreover, the bill provides that healthcare workers who will become severely-ill from COVID-19 in the line of duty are entitled to P100,000 while cash assistance of P1 million should be given to the family of medical workers who died of COVID-19.

Standby fund

Meanwhile, the P25.5 billion standby fund under the Bayanihan 2 will be used for COVID-19 testing and the procurement of medication and vaccines (P10 billion) and additional capital infusion to government banks (P15.5 billion).

“As much as we wanted to accommodate all requests and provide support to every distressed Filipino, the economic stimulus in this measure is bounded by our fiscal limitations,”  Angara said in his sponsorship speech before the bill was ratified.

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“Therefore, we tried our best to cover as much ground as we could, and be as strategic as possible, with the fiscal space that was open to us—with the hope that in the coming months, we may be able to legislate an even greater economic stimulus,” he added.

KGA

TAGS: Bayanihan 2, Congress, coronavirus Philippines, House, Nation, News, Rodrigo Duterte, Senate

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