ISP (Informal Sector Project; 1996-2000)
concentrates on advocacy and practical measures for the protection of women
homeworkers and children against exploitation, discrimination and abuse, and
promotion of economic opportunities
- access to resources, credits, technology, training
- access to social security, medicare, insurance
- progressive elimination of child labor including monitoring compliance
with ILO core standards
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TUCP/ISP Anti-Child Labor Activities
The activities of the TUCP-led ISP
(Informal Sector Coalition of the Philippines) were meant to lead to:
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appreciation of child labor as a labor
issue in workplaces and communities
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passage of legislative measures and
other alternative structures
to curb child labor practices
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adoption/review of policies to improve
enforcement of anti-child labor laws.
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Progressive elimination of child labor
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The series of awareness campaigns,
complemented by the strategy of involving community players in
addressing child labor problems, resulted in:
(1) discovery and eventual rescue of
8 minors employed in a piggery firm in Tarlac;
(2) identification and rescue of
three minors and 28 other bonded workers in an Israeli-owned garment
factory in Victoria, Tarlac, held captive inside the factory, with
hazardous and very poor working conditions and not paid their
salaries;
(3) discovery of 20 children below
18 years old who were made to do dangerous work and are exposed in
hazardous conditions, in a handicraft factory in Rizal.
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ISP coalition partners initiated the
filing of cases with the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE)
national and regional offices and other appropriate government agencies.
The coalition facilitated the resolution of the case involving the
garment workers in Victoria, Tarlac. DOLE ordered the employer to pay
the victims their salaries plus transportation expenses to facilitate
the victims' return to their home province/s in the Visayas.
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The Coalition's experiences in
monitoring/handling cases of child labor law violations were used as the
basis in identifying gaps in DOLE's policy and procedures in handling
child labor-related cases.
The same information were used in formulating an ISP position paper/
policy recommendation to the Labor Secretary and other DOLE officials to
improve the agency's existing system and procedures.
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To sustain the gains in its campaign
against child labor, the coalition lobbied and succeeded in the
inclusion of Child Labor as one of the components in the National
Anti-Poverty Commission's (NAPC's) Review and Enhancement of its Minimum
Basic Needs Approach and its indicator system. With this, all government
agencies/instrumentalities, including LGUs, are compelled to adopt Child
Labor as one of their priority concerns. As such, government
institutions are required to allocate funds to support NAPC's anti-child
labor agenda.
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ISP's series of national and
area-level advocacy campaigns for the establishment of BCPCs generated
support from the local government officials, from the mayor down to the
barangay officials.
These initiatives facilitated the establishment of some 200 BCPCs in the
different pilot areas. BCPC is a village-level multi-sectoral body
designed to formulate policies and programs to promote child
welfare/child's rights, including anti-child labor laws.
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To sustain the operation of these
BCPCs, ISP made representations with the LGUs to pass local ordinances
to formalize the establishment of these BCPCs and to allocate funds to
support BCPC programs and activities.
These resulted in the passage of municipal ordinances in at least four
municipalities [one each, in Negros Occidental and Tarlac, and two in
Cebu], which formalized the establishment of the Municipal Council for
the Protection of Children at the municipal level and the BCPC
counterparts in the barangay level. The ordinances provided funding to
allow LGUs to set up the BCPCs, as well as provided for sanctions on
barangay officials for non-compliance.
To influence the programs and activities of the BCPCs and ensure that
anti-child labor activities are integrated in the BCPCs' program of
action, ISP developed a manual to encourage officials to adopt
the ISP-concept of a model BCPC.
ISP hosted a national conference in July 2000 to create a venue for
sharing of experiences and best practices among BCPC officials.
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The Philippine Senate ratified ILO
Convention 182 (Convention Concerning the Prohibition and Immediate
Action for the Elimination of the Worst Form of Child Labor). The
concurred ILO Convention 182 was signed by President Estrada on October
26, 2000.
The successful ratification campaign was spearheaded by the Workers'
Task Force 182, composed of the IS Coalition in partnership with the
Trade Union Coalition Against Child Labor (TUCACL), an anti-child labor
coalition whose members include the TUCP, other trade union groups,
including in the textile and garment industry or ITGWLF, and the PPSTA,
a national association of public school teachers.
Workers Task Force 182 was initiated by ISP through its support for the
very first sectoral consultations on ILO Convention 182 held in the
Philippines and through training to enable lead advocates of the Task
Force to undertake an effective ratification campaign. ISP also
supported a dialogue with legislators to obtain the support of majority
of Philippine Senators .
The intense advocacy work undertaken by the Workers' Task Force 182 and
other like-minded groups persuaded then President Joseph Estrada to sign
as urgent the instrument urging the Senate to initiate the ratification
process and facilitated the concurrence of 18 of the 22 Senators in the
Senate Bill ratifying ILO Convention 182.
Monitoring of the Anti-Child Labor Provision of the RAPP MOA/
Corporate Codes of Conduct in ISP
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ISP pioneered efforts to monitor
compliance with RAPP or Codes of Conduct by Philippine-Garment Exporters
to the US
ISP support enabled selected code verifiers to participate effectively
in ISP's RAPP/Codes verification activities:
(1) awareness raising on Core Labor
Standards/Codes of Conduct;
(2) capacity building for identified code verifiers
(mostly youth leaders of the coalition);
(3) awareness-raising and gender-sensitivity training for members of
the five pillars of justice/government enforcers;
(4) setting up of mechanisms tapping institutions and community-based
groups in monitoring implementation of/compliance with child labor
laws and the commitments under the RAPP MOA or Codes of Conduct among
garment exporting firms to US;
(5) direct representations with government institutions/agencies for
policies that would support the ISP campaign;
(6) networking with employers' group and the designated RAPP/Code of
Conduct monitors.
The results:
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ISP-trained YES verifiers found
evidence of child labor in four of the six factories covered by the
monitoring and surveillance activities. These four produced garments
for Polo, Nike, GAP, Tommy Hilfiger.
ISP code verifiers gathered testimonies and other evidence (i.e., pay
slips of identified child laborers), reported cases to BCPC officials
or the workers' union organization.
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Women and youth advocates monitored
and master listed an additional 121 cases of child labor in the
following categories: street children; agriculture and farm workers;
ambulant vendors; construction workers; factory workers.
These documented cases were referred for action to the various Local
Councils for the Protection of Children and community partners
operating in the ISP pilot areas.
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ISP established nine barangay-based
Homeworkers' Task Force: five in Cebu City ; one in Taytay, Rizal; and
three in NCR.
These Task Forces composed of coalition members are ISP's watch groups
that monitor compliance with the provision of DOLE Department Order
No. 5 on homeworkers, advocate time-and-motion studies for work
segments, and assist in surveys of homeworkers and their contractors.
These complement ISP's campaign to monitor compliance among
contractors/sub-contractors with the anti-child labor provision of the
RAPP/ Codes of Conduct.
Towards elimination of child
labor/improved conditions of work and life
of children employed in non-hazardous occupation:
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ISP consolidated some 205 youth
organizations into a national coalition known as the Youth for
Empowerment and Solidarity or YES, with chapters in NCR, Rizal, Tarlac,
Cebu and Negros Occidental. YES is the youth arm of the Informal Sector
Coalition of the Philippines, and serves as the lead partner in ISP's
anti-child labor advocacy.
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Building on the linkages with LGUs,
ISP chapters pushed for local ordinances that would strengthen local
policies against child labor. Cebu City passed an ordinance which
required business establishments to submit verified certification that
they do not employ minors before business permits could be issued or
renewed. The Cebu City government also passed an ordinance that created
the Commission for Children;
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ISP initiated the process that is
unifying the GOs and NGOs in provincial, municipal and barangay
(village) levels toward efforts to address child labor in their
communities.
For example: IS coalition activities served as the catalyst for the
Tarlac Provincial Government to set up the Provincial Council for the
Welfare of Children (PCWC) and to allocate funds to fully operationalize
the Council. PCWC is the provincial government's
policy-making/implementing arm, tasked to formulate policies and
programs to carry out the intent of Presidential Decree No. 603. PCWC
assisted 18 municipalities in Tarlac in integrating child labor and
BCPCs in their respective municipal action plans;
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To further consolidate community
action against child labor, ISP promoted its Community Partnering Scheme
(CPS).
The CPS concept aims to bring together and mobilize various key players
in the community and government agencies/ institutions -- to work
together with women and youth organizations and other support groups -
to jointly address the problem of child labor.
ISP facilitated a one-year plan of action patterned after the CPS
concept which was funded by the municipality of Anao, Tarlac. Two
additional CPS were set up in Rizal and Cebu.
This joint work also took place at the national level
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ISP obtained support from Court of
Appeals Justices, Family Court judges and other justice officials to
sign ISP-developed resolutions for transmittal to the Supreme Court: (a)
urging full implementation of the Family Courts Act and for the speedy
disposition of child labor cases; and (b) urging the Department of
Social Welfare & Development) (DSWD) and the Department of Budget and
Management (DBM) to recommend to Congress the allocation of budget for
shelters for child laborers.
PEZA
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Representation with the PEZA
(Philippine Economic Zones Authority) resulted in the adoption of a
policy supporting the coalition's anti-child labor campaign. The
newly-adopted PEZA policy requires as one of the conditions for
registration of locators/investors in the economic zones (whether in
privately-operated zones or government-owned zones) to submit a
memorandum of undertaking committing not to use child labor in their
enterprise, contractors, sub-contractors and suppliers, to the extent
possible.
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