Saturday, September 25, 2010

Consultation on Exclusive Breastfeeding conducted in Zamboanga City

The participants :  Barangay Health Workers,
Barangay Nutrition Scholars and Vendors

Sept. 23, 2010, Lantaka Hotel, Zamboanga City

     Thirty eight (38) workers from the informal sector and two (2) from the formal labor were consulted on "Developing Intervention on Exclusive Breasfeeding in the Informal Sector" in Zamboanga City. The informal sector were representatives of organizations of barangay health workers, barangay nutrition scholars, tri-wheels and vendors, all based in Zamboanga City. It was a very promising activity which proved that there is really the need to put up lactation stations in informal workplaces like transportation terminals, public markets and even in health centers . 
From the transport group mobilized by CM Bong Amarille
who is also the Vice-President for Mindanao of ALLWIE/S.
    
     This event is under the United Nations Country Team (UNCT) and the Government of the Philippines implementation of the Joint Program on "Ensuring Food Security and Nutrition for Children 0-24 months with support from the Spanish Government through the MDG Achievement Fund. Under this Programme, the International Labour Organization (ILO) a specialized UN agency aims to strengthen government mechanisms to promote exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) in the workplace, and develop models of EBF intervention in the informal workplaces in three cities :  Iloilo, Zamboanga and Naga.


Susanita "Babes" Tesiorna, President of ALLWIE/Sexplained the
magnitude of the informal sector,the mandate of NAPC, the national
situationer of the mothers breastfeeding including the myths, the advantages
of mother's milk,  and  emphasized the need to support the mothers
breastfeeding especially from 0-6 months of her baby. 


     The members of the Sub-Technical Working Group on EBF are : International Labour Organization, Department of Labor, National Anti-Poverty Commission-Workers in the Informal Sector, Alliance of Workers in the Informal Economy/Sector (ALLWIES), Employers Confederation of the Philippines (ECOP), Federation of Free Workers, Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP), and UNICEF.





Sunday, September 19, 2010

Flash back: ALLWIE/S participated in the Region 4-A "2nd Tripartite Industrial Peace Council Conference"


ALLWIE/S President, Susanita "Babes" G. Tesiorna

          The respective offices of  Regiona 4-NEDA and DOLE Region 4-A successfully facilitated the "2nd Regional Tripartite Industrial Peace Council Conference" participated by tripartite constitutents and other government agencies, stakeholders of creating more jobs in the country.

          While the focus was on green jobs, the conference also launched DOLE programs on livelihood for the informal sector such as the "Kabuhayan Starter Kit" and the "Nego-Kart".
    
      
          Although both programs for the infoprmal sector were launched in Region 4-A, it was clarified that the implementation covers the whole country. 

Susanita Tesiorna as advocate for the protection and development of Barangay Health Workers

         


          The Department of Health conducted the "National Barangay Health Workers Reinvention Summit " on Oct. 7-9, 2009, the days when typhoon Pepeng devastated nortern Luzon. It was hosted by the provincial government of Vigan, Ilocos Norte.  Although, the whole nation were worried of the plight of the affected areas of Pepeng, the summit was very promising in terms of national health reforms with the strong voice of the regional officers of BHW, members of National Confederation of Barangay Health Workers, the support of the employees of the Department of Health and the provincial government.

          Susanita Tesiorna, joined the summit as resource speaker on the labor rights of the barangay health workers under RA 7883, the "Barangay Health Workers' Benefits and Incentives Act of 1995".  She also presented other opportunities like enterprise development for income augmentation and Sec. 23 (p) of the RA 7875 or the National Health Insurance Act of 1995.  She also presented the issues that came out with her research in three cities like  Tagbilaran City, Surigao City and the National Capital Region. Proposals drafted by the Committee on Social Protection of the NAPC-Workers in the Informal Sector Council, chaired by Susanita Tesiorna, were presented as inputs to the discussions and resolutions adopted during This Summit.  

After the BHW Summit, Susanita Tesiorna joined a pose with Bohol BHW delegation at the Baluarte and NAPC-Council Member Salve Gaytano who is the Vice-President of the BHW Confederation

          She inspired the Barangay Health Workers by pronouncing that the NAPC-Workers in the Informal Sector Council salutes the dedication and heroic acts of the BHW inspite of the meager incentives received from the respective LGU's.  She further encouraged them to strengthen the Confederation and one of those action must prioritize paying membership dues.

            At the end of the Summit, a Resoultion was adopted addressed to the national government, legislators and local governments through DOH Secretary Francisco Duque.




A pose with the delegation from Region XII

Saturday, September 18, 2010

ALLWIES, Building on the Gains of the Informal Sector Coalition of the Phils (ISP_TUCP) on child labour elimination.....


Susanita "Babes" G.  Tesiorna is seated 7th from the right.
 ALLWIE/S BUILDING ON THE GAINS OF THE INFORMAL SECTOR COALITION OF THE PHILS (ISP - TUCP) ON THE ELIMINATION OF WORST FORMS OF CHILD LABOUR

          In behalf of the workers, Susanita "Babes" G.  Tesiorna, the President of the Informal Sector Coalition of the Philippines (ISP-TUCP)  welcomed the tripartite delegates to the Asia Region Tripartite Consultation on Guidelines for the Preparation of National Child Labour Policies and Action Plans and on Mainstreaming Child Labour Concerns in Broader Policy Frameworks on Nov. 23-25, 2010, Bangkok, Thailand.

          During the two-day workshop, Ms. Tesiorna insisted to go beyond the tripartite constituents to address MDG Goal of "no worst foms of child labour by 2016 by involving the community groups or associations. She pointed that no single institution, organization or indvidual can do it all alone, not even the tripatrite constituents alone.  She cited the example of the KALAHI convergence strategy of the Phil. Government where she has been effectively engaged since 1999 in addressing poverty. This idea was supported by fellow Philippine delegates such as Ms. Rhodora Buenaventura of the Employers' Confederation of the Phils. and Ms. Maribeth Casin of the Department of Labour.

         Upon return to the Philippines, with the workshop objective to mainstream issues of child labour in the national policies and plans, Ms. Tesiorna advocated to the NAPC-Workers in the Informal Sector Council of 2010-2013 for integration into the Sectoral Agenda. It was approved by the Council in June, 2010.

         The following is the text of welcome message in behalf of the workers:         

TUCP Statement to the Asia Region Tripartite Consultation on Draft Guides for the Preparation of National Child Labour Policies and Action Plans and on Mainstreaming Child Labour Concerns in Broader Policy Frameworks
23-25 November 2009, Bangkok, Thailand
Sis. Susanita Tesiorna
Informal Sector Coalition of the Philippines (ISP/TUCP)
On behalf of the Workers’ Delegates
On behalf of workers’ delegates from Cambodia, India, Indonesia, Mongolia, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and Thailand, and millions of children still suffered to work, we commend ILO for its continuing efforts to reach out and include trade unions and organizations of workers in this important work.
As we look at the issue of child labor worldwide and in the Region, it is a bad news/good news and numbers story.
The bad news is –
our journey for emancipation of child labor has been all too grueling.
Our good programs, our good/best practices, are stymied, partly thwarted, by crisis after crisis, by disasters after calamities.
The good news is –
Tripartite delegations in this consultation are from countries which have actual experience in the formulation, implementation and monitoring of child labor policies, projects and action plans.
It is particularly good news for other child labor-affected countries in the Region to know that the tripartite sectors, particularly the workers’ sector,
are again part of the process in developing, refining and rationalizing set of guidelines for mainstreaming national child labor policies and action plans.
This initiative would have been impossible five years ago. But countries in this Region have moved past embarrassment, past denial, of the existence of child labor to a consensus of determined action to stopping, eliminating and preventing child labor – particularly its worst forms.
We have come a long way.
In initiatives leading to our countries’ ratification of ILO Conventions 138 and 182, in the passage of national legislations, laws and regulations and the development of national policies and programs, trade unions, working families, coalition and networks have always been at the forefront of the movement
to eradicate worst forms of child labor.
Trade unions have fought the exploitation of children at all fronts — in plantations, factories, informal sector, domestic service, human trafficking.
We have taken this battle to collective bargaining, in tripartite/multipartite discussions.
Our engagement in this area has moved beyond mere advocacy for specific anti-child labor approaches and programs, beyond representation in anti-child labor bodies, beyond design and implementation of joint anti-child labor programs and services
to trade unions’ own programs including prevention, monitoring, alternative employment, livelihood, education and provision of other welfare services.
Despite these, yours and our successes put together, we are barely scratching the surface.
When the number of child laborers is equivalent to the entire population of one big country. And within it, the worst forms, roughly the population of two small countries combined,With more new and highly complicated forms of child exploitation developing everyday,And our gains barely meeting the 2016 targets Then you have 122 million and more reasons to be concerned about.
It is not a question of “who does it better” –the government, employers, workers, or other players –but what the tripartite sectors can do more together Who else needs to be involved? And how can we strengthen our resolve, deliver faster results With little time and shrinking resources.
With intervening global crisis and terrible calamities pushing back hard-fought gains – and decent work for all, for parents of child laborers more distant than ever.
We believe that in anti-child labor initiatives, doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results is intolerable.
We should stop dreaming or believing that dole-outs and unsustainable foreign- or donor-driven programs are the answer.
These are important, they mitigate hardships, even if mostly temporarily, they show the way to what can be done in child labor prevention and services, and are most welcome,but reducing poverty – of parents of child laborers and of their communities –will be the only lasting, sustainable solution.
Practical, more focused guidelines and activities that reflect, understand and consider local realities and environments of communities, and designed and carried out locally by parents and children themselves, with guidance and assistance from support groups and institutions – are the ones needed. We can’t tell you how important, timely and overdue this instrument is
We believe that eradicating child labor in our time is a daunting challenge.We have come here with the strong support of our members, our families,our partners, our communities. The challenge doesn’t look as daunting as before,when, together, with children and their parents,  the tripartite sectors explore how much more we could do and how much more we should be doing.
We – trade unions and people’s organizations – offer our expertise, actual experiences, accomplishments.
Our presence here today signifies our commitment –to guide, act, participate, contribute, and continue to take part, or even lead, in this movement. We will make our voices — and those of our child laborers – heard and heeded.
We promise an exciting meeting.


  

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Recollection on Informal Sector Advocacy To Address Invisibility

NSO Launched the Result of Informal Sector Survey 2008


      Susanita Tesiorna, seated at the center with Olive Parilla of PATAMABA, Rosalina Funtanares of Manila Area Sectoral Alliance, Roserel Virtudazo, all Council Members of the NAPC-Workers in the Informal Sector Council and Leopoldo Resmundo of the Development Bank of the Philippines posed souvenir picture during the NSO presentation of the result of the IS Survey.

         The advocacy for statistics for the Philippine Informal Sector started in 2002 under the stewardship of Susanita Tesiorna as the Sectoral Representative of NAPC-Workers in the Informal Sector and the Department of Labour.  It was funded by the UNDP.  The multisectoral consultation workshops in the preparation of the survey questionnaires was participated by the National Government Agencies (undersecretary to Secretary level), private sector, trade unions and of course, the representatives of various organizations in the informal sector.

       The survey questionnaires were pilot tested in Manila.  It waited longer time until the survey got funded.  It is hoped that better policies, government programs,  can best address the issues the sector is confronted like statistical invisibility, voice and representation in the government's decision-making bodies, lack of access to productive resources such as credit, training, capital and market and lack of access to social protection such as Phil Health, SSS, and other indigenous insurance schemes.

       It is expected also that the survey will bring in more responsive projects to be able to have the informal sector

Please visit the NSO website for details.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

PESHAI Members and KAKASAHA waste pickers, at UP SOLAIR


   The waste pickers organized by KAKASAHA in Imus joined the members of PESHAI and Las Pinas KAKASAHA in a conference held at UP School of Labor and Industrial Relations. 

   KAKASAHA (Kababaihan Kaagapay sa Hanapbuhay-SKA, Inc.) have been promoting protection and development of the informal sector including the waste pickers.
    Part of the advocacy in the local government is the efficient implementation of the Solid Waste Management Act (RA 9003) and networks with the Homeowners Associations to allow the wastepickers to be their official waste pickers.   

     Susanita "Babes" G.  Tesiorna assisted also the waste pickers of Brgy. Escopa III of Quezon City in partnership with Kag. Beth of the said barangay.  KAKASAHA provided a loan without interest a revolving fund of Twenty Thousand (P20,000.00) for the "KARITON BAWAT WASTEPICKER" OR "CART FOR EVERY WASTEPICKER" project.

     The Department of Labor presented this during a national activity held in SM Mandaluyong. The Quezon City government also assisted by providing them Identification Cards, uniform shirts and assigned them which roads can they be allowed by the MMDA.
  

Friday, September 10, 2010

NAPC Workers in the Informal Sector Council Reso. No. 2010-001




































       The Workers in the Informal Sector Council of the National Anti-Poverty Commission passed its first Resolution of 2010 during its first council meeting held at Eurotel Hotel on May 29, 2010  recognizing the Alliance of Workers in the Informal Sector Council (ALLWIES) as its institutional partner for the protection and development of the informal sector.

       The leaders of ALLWIE/S expressed committment to the new set of Council Members to continue working for the sectoral agenda.  The President, Susanita "Babes" G.  Tesiorna, collaborates with the current Sectoral Representative, Mary Ann Abad, for activities in the national and regional level regarding the informal sector.

       Currently, both the NAPC-WISC and ALLWIES are engaged with the joint program for the MDG-F 2030: Ensuring Food Security and Nutrition for Children (0-24 mos old in the Philippines).  This component is led by the International Labour Organization and this component targets Exclusive Breastfeeding  in the workplaces, formal or informal.  

Committment of Support to National Human Rights Action Plan 2

    Susanita "Babes" G.  Tesiorna joined the NAPC-Basic Sectors as representative for the Workers in the Informal Sector Council in expressing committment of support for the effective implementation of the National Human Rights Action Plan 2 last Dec. 11, 2009.

    Executive Secretary, Eduardo Ermita, chaired the government body under the Office of the President and draw in all stakeholders  to help craft the NHRAP 2, to be implemented in 2010-2014.

    In the picture are Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita,  Commissioner of Human Rights, Leila M. De Lima, Susanita Tesiorna of ALLWIES (in black and white checkered blouse), Executive Director of the Council for the Welfare of the Children, Ma. Elena S.  Caraballo.

      The message support reflects as follows :




Office of the President of the Philippines
NATIONAL ANTI-POVERTY COMMISSION
WORKERS IN THE INFORMAL SECTOR
9th Flr. G. E. Antonino Bldg.
Cor. Jorge Bocobo & T. M. Kalaw Sts.,  Malate , Manila, Philippines
Telefax. Nos. (632) 527-5856  & Fax (632) 527-5858  Tel. (632)527-2804 /527-3116  
                                                                     


MESSAGE OF SUPPORT

Thru’ :  Susanita G.  Tesiorna
Council Member, NAPC-Workers in the Informal Sector
President, Alliance of  Workers in the Informal Economy/Sector  (ALLWIES)
                     
          The National Anti-Poverty Commission – Workers in the Informal Sector Council Extends its warmest salute to the Presidential Human Rights Committee, the Commission on Human Rights, other participating government agencies, the participating organizations, the vulnerable sectors and the United Nations Development Programme, for coming out, with the “Second National Human Rights Action Plan of the Philippines 2010-2014’

          We are touched by your strong sentiments, concerns and concerted efforts, to help the vulnerable sectors, mainstreamed in all policies and programs towards decent life.  Yet to be seen, in the implementation of such a plan, we are very hopeful, that the vulnerable sectors, like the workers in the informal economy, children, women, elderly, indigenous people, and the
persons with disabilities will be socially, economically and politically empowered.  We are also prayerful that the government will continue instituting timely reforms in meeting global challenges to be able to carry its functions of protecting and developing the vulnerable sectors.

          The Workers in the Informal Sector Council, and its General Assembly of 125 organizations, across the seventeen (17) administrative regions of the country,  are in one with you, in facing the  challenges, that call for a greater impact, sustainability, and significant reach among the vulnerable sectors, in the implementation of the “Second National Human Rights Action Plan of the Philippines 2004-2010”.   

          Let us, through a national solidarity, put an end to policies and practices that  provided windows,  for creating chaos to the lives of the poor and vulnerable people !

          Let us, through a national solidarity, provides decent work for every Filipino, may it be in formal employment or in entrepreneurial endeavors!
          Let us, through a national solidarity, eliminate child labour!
          Let us, through a national solidarity, put an end to violence against women and children!

          Let us, through a national solidarity,  eliminate  the bottlenecks to access  justice and  social  protection !

Let us, through a national solidarity, provides representation of the vulnerable sectors in various policy and decision-making bodies!

Ending human rights violations then, wouldn’t be far.
MARAMING SALAMAT AT MABUHAY!

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Major Accomplishments

With the National Anti-Poverty Commission and our respective base organizations, we are proud to note some major accomplishments:


  • NSCB Reso. No. 15, series of 2002 defining the informal sector
  • NEDA Board Reso. No. 3, series of 2002, crea-ting Sub-committee on the informal sector under the Social Development Council
  • NEDA Board Reso. No. 2: “Approving the Country Program for the Informal Sector”
  • Mapping/Profiling tool development
  • NSO survey for the Informal Sector
  • Helped government agencies in crafting anti-poverty monitoring and planning tools and anti-poverty projects and programs
  • Improved access to social security for the informal sector
  • PHIC indigent and independent paying programs
  • Representations in national, regional and local planning and development bodies, defining social protection
  • Improved access to productive resources of the poor such as credit training, technology, market and common production centers
  • Collaborated with trade unions and other civil society groups in the elimination of child labour, prevention from human trafficking and other acts of violence against women and children
  • Collaborated with local governments to provide vending places for the side walk and ambulant vendors
  • Drafted model ordinances for the local constituents for the localization agenda
  • Collaborated with relevant government agencies and international organizations for reform bills on PhilHealth, SSS, amendatory bills on RA 9178 or the Barangay Micro-Business Enterprise Act of 1998, implementation of the Magna Carta for the Barangay Health Workers, legislating NHTPS as the official poverty targeting system, etc…..
  • Initial draft of “Magna Carta for the Workers in the Informal Economy/Sector or MACWIE”