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PDF Editor FAQ

As the Philippines sinks into a deep depression with millions unemployed with no money or work & bureaucratic red tape with little money for the masses, with the entire country collapsing whereby riots & robberies are ones only means of survival?

I believe that your premise is flawed. True, lots of businesses have stopped functioning and consequently, people cannot go to work, there is no flow of trade and we are under enhanced community quarantine but the government has been doing its best to help people. THIS IS HAPPENING EVERYWHERE IN THE WORLD. The entire country is not collapsing, there are no riots and there are no robberies anywhere. There was a disturbance in a certain barangay in Quezon City because people are plain stubborn, they wanted to buy food and some are out to get their spouse’s salary. Politicking in times of crisis happens, and that was why probably there was a delay in the government’s social amelioration package.For your information, Bayanihan to Heal as One ActBayanihan to Heal as One ActRepublic Act No. 11469PassedMarch 23, 2020SignedMarch 24, 2020Signed byRodrigo DuterteEffectiveMarch 25, 2020Bayanihan To Heal As One ActStatus: In forceThe Bayanihan to Heal as One Act, officially designated as Republic Act No. 11469, is a law in the Philippines that was enacted in March 2020 granting the President additional authority to combat the 2020 coronavirus pandemic in the Philippines.The word "bayanihan" is a Tagalog word for communal work. The act would allow President Duterte to "reallocate, realign, and reprogram" a budget of almost ₱275 billion ($5.37 billion) from the estimated ₱438 billion ($8.55 billion) national budget approved for 2020, in response to the pandemic; enable him to "temporarily take over or direct the operations" of public utilities and privately owned health facilities and other necessary facilities "when the public interest so requires" for quarantine, the accommodation of health professionals, and the distribution and storage of medical relief; and "facilitate and streamline" the accreditation of testing kits.The law provides the President of the Philippines the power to implement temporary emergency measures to respond to the crisis brought about by COVID-19, such as:adopting and implementing measures, which are based on World Health Organization guidelines and best practices, to prevent or suppress further transmission and spread of COVID-19 through education, detection, protection, and treatment;hastening the accreditation of testing kits;facilitating prompt testing of patients under investigation (PUIs) and persons under monitoring (PUMs) as well as the immediate mandatory isolation and treatment of patients, the cost of which shall be covered by the National Health Insurance Program of the Philippine Health Insurance Corporation;providing an emergency subsidy amounting to five thousand pesos (₱5,000.00) to eight thousand pesos (₱8,000.00) to low income households based on prevailing regional minimum wage rates;providing all public health workers with "COVID-19 special risk allowance";directing the Philippine Health Insurance Corporation to shoulder all medical expenses of public and private health workers related to exposure to COVID-19 or any work-related injury or disease during the pandemic emergency;providing a compensation of one hundred thousand pesos (₱100,000.00) to public and private health workers who contract severe COVID-19 infection while performing their duties and a compensation amounting to one million pesos (₱1,000,000.00) shall be given to public and private health workers who will die because of COVID-19;ensuring that all local government units adhere to all the rules, regulations and directives issued by the national government with respect to this law as well as implement community quarantine consistent with the standards the national government has laid down;directing the operation of any privately-owned hospitals, medical and health facilities, and other establishments to house health workers, serve as quarantine areas and centers, medical relief, aid distribution locations and temporary medical facilities provided that the management and operation of these establishments or facilities shall still be with the owners, however, unjustifiable refusal of the establishment or the facility to operate for this purpose may mean take over of the President of the Philippines on the operations of this establishment or facility with the limitations and safeguards stated in the Constitution;directing public transportation to ferry health, emergency and frontline personnel as well as other individuals provided that the management and operation of this enterprise shall still be with the owner, however, unjustifiable refusal of the enterprise to operate for this purpose may mean take over of the President of the Philippines on the operations of this enterprise with the limitations and safeguards stated in the Constitution;enforcing measures against hoarding, profiteering, injurious speculations, manipulation of prices, product deceptions, cartels, monopolies or other combinations to restraint trade or affect the supply, distribution and movement of food, clothing, hygiene and sanitation products, medicine and medical supplies, fuel, fertilizers, chemicals, building materials, implements, machinery equipment and spare parts for agriculture, industry and other essential services;ensuring that donation, acceptance, and distribution of health products for COVID-19 public health emergency are not unnecessarily delayed;procuring of medical goods, equipment and supplies to be allocated and distributed to public health facilities that are designated as COVID-19 referral hospitals, private hospitals that are capable of providing support care and treatment to COVID-19 patients and public and private laboratories that are capable of testing suspected COVID-19 patients, in the most expeditious manner through exemptions from Republic Act No. 9184 or the "Government Procurement Reform Act" and other relevant laws;procuring of goods and services for social amelioration measures, in the most expeditious manner through exemptions from Republic Act No. 9184 or the "Government Procurement Reform Act" and other relevant laws;leasing of real property or venue for use to house or serve as quarantine centers, medical relief and aid distribution locations or temporary medical facilities, in the most expeditious manner through exemptions from Republic Act No. 9184 or the "Government Procurement Reform Act" and other relevant laws;partnering with the Philippine Red Cross in giving aid to the people;hiring temporary Human Resources for Health (HRH), who shall receive appropriate compensation, allowances and hazard duty pay, to complement or supplement the current health workforce or to man the temporary medical facilities;ensuring the availability of credit especially in the countryside by lowering the effective lending rates of interest and reserve requirements of lending institutions;liberalizing the grant of incentives for the manufacture or importation of critical or needed equipment or supplies for carrying out of the policy of this law provided that importation shall be exempt from import duties, taxes and other fees;ensuring the availability of essential goods by adopting necessary measures to facilitate and/or minimize disruption to the supply chain;regulating and limiting the operation of private or public transportation whether land, sea or air;conserving, regulating the distribution and use as well as ensuring the adequate supply of power, fuel, energy, and water;moving statutory deadlines and timelines for filing and submission of any document, payment of taxes, fees and other charges required by law;directing all private and public banks, quasi-banks, financing companies, lending companies, and other financial institutions, including the Government Service Insurance System, Social Security System and Pag-ibig Fund to implement a grace period of 30 days, minimum, for the payment of all loans falling due within the enhanced community quarantine without interests, penalties, fees or other charges;providing for a minimum of 30 days grace period on residential rents falling due within the period of the enhanced community quarantine without interest, penalties, fees and other charges;implementing an expanded and enhanced Pantawid Pamilya Pilipino Program and providing an assistance program through the Department of Social Welfare and Development and the Department of Labor and Employment; andlifting the 30% cap on the amount for the quick respond fund as provided for in Republic Act No. 10121 or the "Philippine Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Act of 2010" during the state of national emergency due to COVID-19.The President of the Philippines shall submit a weekly report to Congress, every Monday, of all acts done for this law including the amount and corresponding utilization of funds. The Congress shall form a Joint Congressional Oversight Committee consisting of four members each from the Senate and the House of Representatives who are appointed by the Senate President and the House Speaker.Under this law, a penalty of two months imprisonment or a fine of not less than ten thousand pesos (₱10,000.00) but not more than one million pesos (₱1,000,000.00) or both shall be meted to offenses such as:disobeying national government policies or directives in imposing quarantines by officials of local government units;refusing unjustifiably to operate the privately-owned hospitals, medical and health facilities pursuant to the directive of the President by owners and possessors of these hospitals, medical and health facilities;engaging in profiteering, hoarding, injurious speculations, manipulation of prices, product deceptions, cartels, monopolies or other combinations to restraint trade, distribution and movement of food, clothing, hygiene and sanitation products, medicine and medical supplies, fuel, fertilizers, chemicals, building materials, implements, machinery equipment and spare parts for agriculture, industry and other essential services and other articles of prime necessity, whether locally manufactured or imported;refusal to prioritize and accept contracts for services and materials necessary to promote national policy provided in this law;refusal to give 30-day grace period as provided by this law;creating, perpetrating or spreading false information about COVID-19 crisis on social media and other platforms, with no valid or beneficial effect on the population which promote chaos, panic, anarchy, fear or confusion;participating in cyber incidents that take advantage of the COVID-19 crisis such as scams, phishing, fraudulent emails or other similar acts;failure to comply with reasonable limitations on the operation of certain transportation sectors, be it private or public, whether by land, air or sea; andputting-up of prohibited encroachments or obstacles, maintenance of illegal constructions in public places that have been ordered to be removed and impeding access to roads, streets, and bridges.Source: WikipediaViolators of curfew were either reprimanded and lately will be accorded punishment if the reason is not justified or believable.The government has started accepting applications from struggling micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) that wanted to receive small business wage subsidies for their workers kept from reporting for duty by COVID-19 community quarantine.In a statement on Friday (April 17), the Department of Finance (DOF) said that a total of P256 billion in subsidies—P205 billion for poor families and P51 billion for MSME workers—will benefit 85 of every 100 Filipino families while they are locked down to prevent coronavirus transmission.The data can easily be googled from Wikipedia if you only had taken the trouble to search for it.These subsidies covered 18 million poor households that gain a livelihood in the informal sector, on top of 3.4 million individuals formally employed by SMEs.Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said the subsidy programs would last for two months.President Rodrigo Duterte’s priorities during the lockdown, according to Dominguez, were to save lives and help “sectors most affected by the sudden stop of economic activity.”Applications for the P5,000 to P8,000 wage subsidy has been ongoing from April 16 until April 30 for prequalified MSMEs.Through the wage subsidy, the government hoped to help MSME workers, “mostly from the lower middle class, meet their basic needs like food and medicine,” Dominguez said.“Second, and just as important, we are helping these employees keep their jobs,” he added.“The small business wage subsidy is an integral part of a support package that we are rolling out for small businesses,” Dominguez told a television interview on Thursday (April 16) night.The DOF, he said, estimated that at least 393,095 small businesses stopped operating while at least 1 million others “are only able to operate with skeletal forces” because of the enhanced community quarantine in the entire Luzon and lockdowns in other places.He said at least 161,102 small businesses, many involved in food service, logistics and retail like drug stores and supermarkets, were allowed to operate during the lockdown.Those with the means have been sending meal packages to health frontliners, there are those who initiate to donate within their own communities for the low-income and those with no work no pay jobs, and in one way or another, everybody is doing what they can to look after those with lease in life.MERALCO or Manila Electric Company has staggered lockdown consumption into 4 monthly installments to ease the burden to consumersDifferent families under the same roof can be eligible for COVID19 cash aidPrivate firms to bring antibodies rapid tests to barangaysPLDT or the Philippine Long Distance Telephone Company, Smart and Sun (Internet providers) offered a 6-month installment program for bills paymentThe Philippines is made of 3 big islands, Luzon, Visayas & Mindanao. In Metro Manila alone, there are approximately 11 million people. My country’s economy will not collapse. I would suggest that you take a look at your own country’s economy. and how it is supposed to be a first world country but as of today, it has more than 600thousand cases and more than 30thousand deaths. Just read at how your country first ignored the virus and the way it is responding. Even your own president wants to be included in the stimulus aid package so that the IRS had to stop giving them out. initially.Ther are still so many people and businesses helping out but I will stop here.WITH THE FOREGOING, I TRUST THAT YOU HAVE BEEN ENLIGHTENED. Please watch the news to get accurate information.

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