The Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) Field Office VII delisted persistent non-compliant Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps) beneficiaries.

As of July 2022, the program already delisted ten (10) households whose monitored children are not attending school or have not shown any commitment to returning back to school and the grantee did not attend the monthly Family Development Session (FDS).

4Ps Municipal Links conduct a home visit to a 4Ps household beneficiary in Bohol.

For 2022, the program also monitored a total of 767 households who are not compliant to the program conditions and are subject to case management and further evaluations.

Based on Section 12 of Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps) Act or Republic Act  “should the qualified household-beneficiary so notified persists in not complying with the conditions within a period of one (1) year since the day of receipt of the written notification, the household-beneficiary shall be removed from the program.”

“Those non-compliant beneficiaries will be case managed by our case worker and will take appropriate steps to resolve those issues on why they cannot comply with the conditions set by the program,” said DSWD-7 OIC-Regional Director Shalaine Marie Lucero.

Through the case management process, the beneficiaries will undergo a transformative process, as they will be guided with new information and ways to evaluate past ideas, beliefs, and understandings through critical reflection that will lead to a change of perception. The case management process outcome would subsequently keep them on track and allow them to remain in the program after the appropriate case management intervention.

“Our 4Ps beneficiaries must value the program membership and understand the conditions to be complied with, including health and education. Their difficulty in compliance can be resolved by addressing the root cause of the problem,” said Director Lucero.

“We have cases of twenty (20) households who were retained in the program after one (1) year of the evaluation period and intensive case management that showed improved compliance in all program conditionalities, like their children, are already attending school and the grantee is attending the monthly FDS,” underscored Lucero.

 4Ps cash card

Meanwhile, the DSWD-7 welcomes the request of the Central Visayas Regional Development Council (RDC) to seek remedial legislation or executive measures providing penalties for individuals and corporate entities who accept 4Ps cash cards as loan collateral.

The request to the National Advisory Committee through the 4Ps Oversight Committee was made through a resolution passed by the RDC during its second quarter full council meeting on June 23, 2022.

“Adequate sanctions are in place for certain 4Ps households that abused their 4Ps cash cards. However, there are still no laws or policies that provide sanctions to individuals or organizations that accept cash cards as loan collateral,” said Director Lucero.

The proposal to impose penalties on individuals and corporate entities was initiated during the second quarter of the RDC’s Social Development Committee (SDC) meeting, which was headed by the DSWD.

RA 11310 became law in April 2019. It is the government’s major poverty alleviation program that invests in the health, nutrition, and education of poor eligible households. These, along with the psychosocial and educational components provided through the Family Development Session (FDS), lead the beneficiaries to have improved and sustained well-being.

The beneficiaries who complied with the program conditions during a particular period will receive their full grants. These conditions include sending and keeping school-aged children in school; pre and post-natal care of mothers; regular and preventive check-ups of children aged five and below; deworming of children aged six to 14, and attendance at the monthly FDS.

Based on the law, households may receive Php 750.00 for compliance with health and FDS; children monitored by the program in elementary will receive Php 300.00; those in junior high will receive Php 500.00; and Php 700.00 for children in senior high school. The education grants benefit a maximum of three children in a household and cover only 10 months per school year. ###

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