Almost half a million more seniors will start getting a
Php6,000 yearly pension from the government effective this year after Congress
increased by Php3 billion the budget for social pension for indigent 60-year-olds
and above, Senator Ralph Recto said on Sunday (March 17).
The Senate President Pro-Tempore has urged the Department of
Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) to cut the red tape and speed up all the
required paper work “so that qualified beneficiaries will start getting their
checks.”
Recto said the budget for the government’s social pension
program for indigent senior citizens jumped to Php8.7 billion this year from
Php5.7 billion last year, thereby increasing the number of recipients from
939,609 to 1,382,941.
Recto is now calling for the expeditious enrollment of the
443,332 new beneficiaries, saying that “such disbursement of funds must be
exempt from underspending.”
The distribution of a Php500 monthly pension – or Php6,000
yearly – to indigent seniors is made pursuant to Republic Act No. 9994 or the
Expanded Senior Citizens Act of 2010.
Recto chairs the Senate Subcommittee on Finance which has
oversight on the budget of the DSWD, which runs the program.
Malacañang originally sought Php7.5 billion for the program
for 2016 but after Recto’s review, and lobbying by seniors’ rights advocacy
groups, it emerged that at that funding level at least 200,000 seniors will not
be covered.
Upon Recto’s motion, the funding was increased by Php1.2 billion
to Php8.7 billion, the amount authorized in the General Appropriations Act for
2016.
It will be recalled that during the debates for the 2015
budget, Recto also succeeded in increasing the program’s budget by Php1
billion, to Php5.7 billion, which allowed DSWD to take in almost a million
beneficiaries.
Recto said the DSWD must expedite the identification of the
new beneficiaries in order to facilitate the release of checks to indigent
senior citizens at the soonest time possible.
The pension is distributed every quarter through cash
payment by DSWD Field Offices or city or municipal social welfare and
development offices.
While the law granting monthly pension to “economically
disadvantaged” seniors was passed six years ago, “it is only this year that it
will be fully complied with,” Recto said.
Due to limited financial resources, only 80-year-olds and
above were enlisted in previous years. The cut-off age was later lowered to 77,
until it was brought down to 65 last year.
"By increasing the budget for this program, we are
embracing the idea that all indigent seniors 60 years old and above must be
covered by the proposed allocation. The policy is No Senior Left Behind,"
Recto said.
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