RH Bill hearings to
push through in 2011
By Office of Sen. Pia Cayetano
January
3, 2011
PASAY CITY – Senator Pia S. Cayetano is determined to push through with more public
hearings this year on the controversial Reproductive Health (RH) Bill
even if the measure doesn’t figure in the priority legislative agenda
of the current Senate leadership.
Cayetano, a member of
the three-person minority bloc in the Upper Chamber, chairs the Senate
Committee on Health and Demography which is overseeing public
deliberations on Senate Bill No. 2378, the Senate version of the RH
Bill which is authored by Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago.
“There is a
legislative process that must be observed and as Chair of the primary
committee that is hearing the RH Bill, it is my duty to take the
proposed measure through said process, whether or not it falls under
the priorities of the current Senate majority,” she stressed.
“We have already
conducted our initial public hearing last year and we intend to set
the succeeding hearings early this year,” added Cayetano, referring to
the committee’s first public hearing held in October 2010 where
resource persons from the so-called ‘Pro-life’ and ‘Pro-choice’ groups
were invited, as well as experts from the medical community, women’s
groups and key government agencies.
“There are many
components of the RH Bill, including the urgency to address the
country’s high maternal death rate and the need to lay down a national
policy on family planning,” she added. “The inputs of all stakeholders
will be heard during said hearings.”
Cayetano says there is
a “good number” of senators who are either openly or discreetly
supporting the measure, although she maintains that it is still too
early to go into the “numbers game” at this stage.
“It is premature and
pointless to start counting how many senators are for or against the
bill when it hasn’t even reached the plenary yet.”
Aside from the RH
Bill, Cayetano said the health committee will continue its work on
other important measures, including on proposals to expand the
coverage and benefits of PhilHealth and monitoring government efforts
to meet its public health targets under the UN Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs).
It may be recalled
that the very first measure approved on third and final reading by the
Senate in the 15th Congress came from the health committee: the bill
seeking to expand the national immunization program to include
mandatory vaccination against Hepatitis-B for infants within 24 hours
from birth.