No end
in sight for 'endo' contractualization
WHILE
Malacañang views the signing of an executive order to end contractualization on
May 1 as a “gift” to workers, some of the workers felt they were deceived.
One of
the main campaign promises of President Rodrigo Duterte was to put an end to
the normalized contractualization of workers, popularly known as “endo,” short
for a temporary employee’s “end of contract.”
Endo or
end of contract is the practice of giving an initial six-month contract before
making a new employee into a regular one with benefits.
On May
1 as the laborers gather in protest against perceived government inaction, the
chief executive signed Executive Order 51 that supposedly assures the workers’
security of tenure.
The
move, however, did not put to a halt grievances of labor groups who saw
“nothing new” with the EO. They said it only gives “false hope” to workers.
Some
Filipinos also echoed this sentiment on social media.
Others
recall the pending Senate Bill 1392 authored by Senator Joel
Villanueva seen as a definitive way to end the short-term contracting of
low-income Filipino workers. Villanueva was the former director-general of the
Technical Education and Skills Development Authority or TESDA.
The Senate
bill, once passed into law, will revise the National Apprenticeship Program to
be implemented by the TESDA.
More questions over Duterte’s EO
There
are those who took the time to explain that the president simply reiterated
what was written in the Labor Code.
“Illegal
contracting or labor only contracting has always been prohibited by law;
legitimate job contracting has always been allowed by law. No executive order
can overturn that,” one Twitter user posted.
According
to the Partidong Manggagawa, the President did not consult with the draft
they had sent to the Office of the President last April 13.
“If
President Digong wanted to fulfill his promise of ending ‘endo,’ he should have
signed the 5th draft of the workers’ EO that would make direct hiring of
workers to principal employers a norm,” PM chairperson Rene Magtubo said.
Improved apprenticeship: An alternative to
‘endo’?
The
proposed bill, known as the Apprenticeship Training System Act of 2017, will
“establish an apprenticeship program” of at least six months — the same period
of time a casual worker is hired under contract.
Based
on Section 3 of the act, the legislation will help a student meet the demands
or the criteria of employers to have the “best-fit, competitive and trained
human resource” in the future.
After
passing the six-month training period, the apprentice will “graduate” and will
be given a national certificate that is equivalent to the unit credits of
undergraduate studies.
This
will help employers see their value to the company, agree to hire them for a
regular position, and avoid resorting to “endo” schemes. It will also allow
employees to skip the six-month probationary period required for
regularization. (Catalina Ricci Madaran, InterAksyon)
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