By Bernardo B. Ver II (Contributor)
Senator ma. Imelda
Josefa “Imee” R. Marcos called on the government to prepare for a possible
spike in COVID-19 cases after Christmas, even as community quarantines remain
in place and a karaoke ban and the use of ‘yantok’ are being considered to
enforce health protocols.
Ms. Marcos said the public’s “quarantine fatigue” amid muted
festivity this Christmas could swell infection rates that remained
“significantly high” at the end of November, particularly in Metro Manila,
Batangas, Iloilo City, Bacolod City, Tacloban City, Iligan City, and Lanao del
Sur.
“Let’s already settle what contact-tracing system should be put
in place, contingency measures in hospitals if critical levels are reached,
coping mechanisms that can be devolved to local government units,” the senator
noted.
“We are likely to remain in a public health emergency until next
year, yet Bayanihan 2 is already due to expire when Congress adjourns next
week,” she pointed out.
The senator reiterated her call in Senate Bill 1921 to extend
until December 31, 2021 the President’s stand-by powers under the “Bayanihan To
Recover As One Act” to deal with the pandemic.
“Now that the bicam has agreed on a most difficult national
budget, we now need to extend Bayanihan 2,” she asserted.
Ms. Marcos said the PHP10 billion allotted for vaccine
procurement in Bayanihan 2 will augment the limited PHP2.5-billion outlay
programmed in the 2021 national budget.
“The bulk of the PHP72.5 billion in next year’s budget for
vaccine procurement, storage, and delivery are unprogrammed funds that may or
may not come, depending on what excess revenue the government can generate,” she
explained.
The senator added that a spike in the country’s infection rate
come the New Year may again lead to stricter quarantine restrictions, slow down
business, and make revenue generation a real challenge.
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