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Monday, October 14, 2024

Bill seeks retroactive pay hikes for LGU employees

Rep.  Brian Raymund Yamsuan of the Bicol Saro party-list group filed a bill allowing the retroactive application of salary increases for employees of local government units (LGUs), a privilege that they currently do not enjoy owing to restrictions set under the law.

Yamsuan said House 10865 will ensure that LGU employees are treated the same as their counterparts working in the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government.

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Republic Act 7160 or the Local Government Code (LGC)  bars the retroactivity of pay hikes provided to LGU employees, which places them at a disadvantage as what happened when President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. recently ordered the implementation of a four-step increase in the base pay of government workers through Executive Order (EO) 64, Yamsuan said.

Yamsuan, a former Assistant Secretary of the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG), said Budget Secretary Amenah Pangandaman has confirmed that funds are available to ensure that the salary increases will be retroactively implemented starting January 2024. Pangandaman has also pointed out that the LGC  needs to be amended for workers in LGUs to have the same benefit.

To ensure that LGUs would not be  unfairly treated, Yamsuan has filed House Bill (HB) 10865, which seeks to remove the restrictions under the LGC on retroactively applying salary increases or adjustments.

“This is not fair and just under our Constitution. The equal protection clause enshrined in our Constitution also applies within the sphere of public service.  Employees in the LGU sector deserve to enjoy the same benefit of receiving retroactive pay increases mandated by the government,” Yamsuan said.

Yamsuan said he hopes that his fellow lawmakers will swiftly act on his measure to ensure that the salary hikes mandated under EO 64 would also be retroactively applied for local government employees.

“From the local to the national level, civil service employees form the  foundation of efficient government operations.  Their positions and titles may vary, they may either be  working in  the local governments  or in national government agencies, yet they are all held to the same standards of professionalism, integrity, transparency and accountability. That’s why benefits should be equally granted to them,” he added.

HB 10865, which Yamsuan filed last week, aims to amend Section 325 (g) of the LGC, which states that “the creation of new positions  and salary increases and adjustments shall in no case be made retroactive.”

The bill  removes the phrase “and salary increases and adjustments” from this paragraph.

Yamsuan said the bill also mandates LGUs, in coordination with the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) to identify appropriate sources of funds required for the retroactive application of salary increases and adjustments.

Under the bill, the DBM “shall issue guidelines to ensure that LGUs are able to effectively allocate and manage the necessary financial resources to implement budgetary adjustments and/or realignment in accordance” with the measure.  

Yamsuan noted  that DBM Local Budget Circular 160 on the implementation by LGUs of the EO-mandated salary increases states that the pay hikes will only take effect upon the enactment of an ordinance and that this should be  “pursuant to Section 325(g) of Republic Act No. 7160 (Local Government Code), which states that salary increases or adjustments shall, in no case, be made retroactive.”

“With each day that passes, local government workers continue to be at the losing end compared to their fellow employees in the Executive, Legislative and Judicial branches. We need to correct this inequity,” Yamsuan said.

At least one LGU—the provincial government of Iloilo–has already asked the DBM to allow the retroactive application of the EO-mandated salary increases.

Editor’s Note: This is an updated article. Originally posted with the headline “Bill seeks to allow retroactive pay hikes for LGU employees.”

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