Survey reveals
94% of private school teachers, staff receive no government aid
By
ACT Private Schools
April 30, 2020
QUEZON CITY – As
COVID-19 is taking a heavy toll on public health, the Alliance of
Concerned Teachers (ACT) Private Schools strongly denounces
government’s neglect to equally pay attention to the plight of
academic and non-academic personnel of private basic and tertiary
education institutions. In an online survey conducted by ACT Private
Schools, 4,005 or 94% of the 4,268 respondents across 65 cities and
provinces in the country received no financial assistance to sustain
living amid prolonged lockdown.
“With the private school
teachers and staff being among the most vulnerable educational
sectors, the government should also pay utmost precedence to the
health and welfare of privately employed educational workers
nationwide, especially now that their employment is at stake more
than ever because of the economic impact brought by COVID-19,” said
Dr. Jonathan Geronimo, Secretary-General of ACT Private Schools.
ACT Private Schools
conducted mass online survey through its COVID-19 Hotline Assistance
for Teachers in Private Schools (CHAT) Project to gather concerns
and correctly assess the situation of the sector. Based on the data,
56.6% of the respondents said that their employers applied for the
Department of Labor and Employment’s (DOLE) financial aid but only
6% of these respondents were granted the said aid. On the other
hand, many of the respondents noted that they were either deemed
unfit to receive such assistance based on DOLE’s qualifications,
were rejected due to the exhaustion of funds for the COVID-19
Adjustment Measures Program, or their employers did not apply for
the aid.
Furthermore, 77.9% of the
respondents do not already receive any monthly compensation from
their schools, while the remaining percentage are in doubt if they
will be compensated during vacation until the next academic year
starts anew. Most of the reasons that drove to these statistics
include the perpetuation of ‘No Work, No Pay’ scheme, lack of
adequate monetary funding to sustain school operations, clearance
requirements, expiration of contracts during the period of lockdown,
among others. More so, 51.3% of them exposed that they did not
receive financial support from their employers.
ACT Private School
petitions the Duterte administration to heed the demands of all
academic and non-academic personnel from private basic and tertiary
education institutions, through an online signature campaign
expressing the sectors’ collective 8-point demand.
The initiative primarily
appeals for economic and social safety net to ensure the health,
welfare, and the protection of rights of all employees in different
private schools, colleges, and universities. The petition presses
concerning agencies such as DOLE, Commission on Higher Education (CHEd),
and Department of Education (DepEd) to create and impose relevant
policies and programs, not only to subsidize the medical and other
basic necessities but also to secure the promotion and employment
status of all probationary and tenured private school employees as
the government positions its greater effort to subside the swelling
number of transmission cases of COVID-19.
“The drafted 8-point
socio-economic demands were derived through consultations with
private school teachers and personnel, as it acknowledges the
crucial role of the masses to accurately depict the actual reality
and provide sensible recommendations to further better the existing
programs and systems of the government. We stress that this health
crisis may be termed novel but the solution it requires is never
different – collectivism in the midst of the struggle.” Geronimo
ended.