DILG

DILG asks LGUs to assist DSWD after chaotic education ayuda rollout

Dwight de Leon

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DILG asks LGUs to assist DSWD after chaotic education ayuda rollout

EDUCATION ASSISTANCE. Thousands of people trooped to the DSWD head office in Quezon City to avail of the educational assistance, August 20, 2022.

Rappler

LGUs are instructed to provide manpower support and fixed venues for the distribution of financial assistance for education
DILG asks LGUs to assist DSWD after chaotic education ayuda rollout

MANILA, Philippines – The Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) tasked local government units (LGUs) to help the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) in distributing education financial assistance or “ayuda”, in the wake of the chaotic aid rollout nationwide on Saturday, August 20.

In a statement on Monday, August 22, DILG Secretary Benhur Abalos said a memorandum of agreement between his agency and the DSWD instructs the latter to coordinate with LGUs on disseminating information on the guidelines, mechanics, and schedule of aid disbursement.

He added that LGUs must provide manpower support and fixed venues, but clarified that DSWD personnel and social workers are still the ones in-charge of handing out the cash aid.

“In cases of cities and big municipalities, it is encouraged to have multiple distribution centers to avoid over-crowding of students and their parents,” the DILG’s press release quoted him as saying.

DILG’s response followed DSWD’s call for help, when thousands of Filipinos seeking financial education assistance trooped to the government’s central and regional social welfare offices.

Progressive groups criticized the DSWD for being ill-prepared, while DSWD Secretary Erwin Tulfo had already apologized.

“I apologize if you were not able to receive cash aid. But we did not say we will give everyone cash aid within today,” DSWD Secretary Erwin Tulfo had said.

DILG asks LGUs to assist DSWD after chaotic education ayuda rollout

Under the DSWD’s Assistance to Individuals in Crisis Situation (AICS) program, vulnerable families with children in elementary schools will receive financial assistance worth P1,000; high school, P2,000; senior high school, P3,000; and college, P4,000.

A maximum of three students per family can join the six-week program originally scheduled every Saturday, from August 20 to September 24.

A total of 24,175 schools returned to five days of face-to-face classes in the Philippines on August 22 after two years of pandemic-driven distance learning. – Rappler.com

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Dwight de Leon

Dwight de Leon is a multimedia reporter who covers President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., the Malacañang, and the Commission on Elections for Rappler.