DOLE: P18 daily wage hike in effect since 2020

TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol, Jan. 29 (PIA) -- The order of Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) to implement the P18 pay differential for private sector workers who were deprived of the wage adjustment in 2020 would boil down to an additional P5,000 to the family’s coffers.

The order, which took effect on Jan. 5, 2020, has been held in abeyance in lieu of a motion for reconsideration filed by Bohol Chamber of Commerce and Industry (BCCI), whose leaders think that an P18 wage increase would force losing businesses to close shop, downsize or retrench, all of which would impact on the overall employment landscape here.

With the new order, daily wage earners who were deprived of the latest round of wage increase would get P18 (daily) to P28 wage increase which took effect in January 2020.

Employers in Central Visayas who have not yet complied with the existing Minimum Wage Order since its effectivity early last year are mandated to conform with it and pay their employees salary differentials, ordered the DOLE.

The labor department stressed the Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Board (RTWPB-7) resolution that said all employers should have abided by the provisions of said Wage Order, which became fully implementable effective on Jan. 5, 2020 in all provinces of Region 7. 

AGRI WORKERS. From the P313 daily wage in Wage Order No. 21, agricultural workers in the private sector in the towns of Bohol should have been receiving P38 more every working day. (rahc/PIA-7/Bohol)

This, too, as the pandemic has forced the Board to postpone another round of the mandated wage fixing assessments, wage review and determination. 

By law, within 60 days prior to the anniversary of the Wage Order, the Board may start the process of minimum wage determination.

This should have been in October of 2020.  

To recall, it was in October of 2018 when the RTWPB-7 conducted wage hearings across the Central Visayas to be able to weigh in on a win-win labor and management situation with the current increase in cost of living and other factors that would redound to industrial peace in the region.

That time, in the wage hearing held at the MetroCentre Hotel in Tagbilaran, BCCI proposed a wage increase moratorium, while an aggrupation of five labor groups calling themselves Bohol Alliance of Labor Organizations appealed for a P48 across-the-board increase.

Across the regions, RTWPB sources said majority prayed for wage hike, which the Board agreed to, but said it has to weigh in on an “everybody happy” formula.

By the beginning of the year and in compliance with the law asking the Board to review the regional wage classification a year after the last wage order, the Board through the DOLE released its wage order ROVII-22.

Covering all private sector workers is the wage order that simplified the workers classification according to regions from 4 categories to 3, and also with the sectoral classifications.

From P366 under Wage Order No. 21, the RTWPB-7 put an additional across-the-board increase of P18 for Class A cities in Central Visayas, to peg the new wage rate at P404.

Non-agricultural sector workers in Tagbilaran City in Bohol, however, which has a P338 daily wage rate as per RO VII-21, gets P28 daily increase to earn P356 starting Jan. 5, 2020.

Agricultural sector workers in Tagbilaran which used to get P313, gets P48 daily increase in wages to earn P361.

For the rest of the towns in Bohol, non-agricultural workers who used to get paid P338 will get an P18 across-the-board increase to have P356 while agricultural workers who used to earn P313 gets P18 daily wage increase to improve their take home pay at P351.

For establishments employing less than 10 workers, those who were paid P333 will now get P351. 

As this Wage Order came out, Bohol businessmen under BCCI, especially in the tourism sector, resorted to the local courts to appeal for a temporary restraining order for the immediate implementation of the wage hike.

According to DOLE, while Bohol kept a moratorium, the rest of the Visayas implemented the wage order.

Sources at the BCCI said they are still filing for an appeal, but DOLE has encouraged employers to start paying the back wages. 

“Workers in Central Visayas, whose employers did not conform to the prescribed minimum wage rates under Wage Order No. ROVII-22, are expected to get paid with their salary differential beginning 05 January 2020,” according to a press statement from the RTWPB.  

Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello, who chairs the National Wages and Productivity Commission (NWPC), underscored the fact that the Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Boards and the NWPC both do not have the authority to defer or postpone the implementation of a Wage Order. 

Based on the NWPC Guidelines No. 03, Series of 2020 or the Omnibus Rules on Minimum Wage Determination, the Wage Board may begin determining the applicable wage rates through (a) Motu Propio by the Board or when it initiates actions or inquiry to determine whether or not a Wage Order shall be issued, and (b) By virtue of a Petition. 

Before any review is done, DOLE-7 Regional Director Salome Siaton said it is important to determine whether or not establishments have abided by the rules of the existing Wage Order. 

She urged employers to check their compliance with the minimum wage law and make sure to pay workers with salary differential if they have not yet complied with the Wage Order. (rahc/PIA-7/Bohol)



Source: Philippines Information Agency (pia.gov.ph)

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