This website requires JavaScript.

DSWD: Middle Class Also Eligible For Cash Relief

DSWD: Middle Class Also Eligible For Cash Relief
A transport network vehicle service driver receives P5,000 cash assistance from the Department of Social Welfare and Development during a special payout for unclaimed and remaining ride-hailing app partners at the Quezon Memorial Circle in Quezon City on Thursday, April 16, 2026, as part of the national government's support to the transport sector amid the high fuel prices. Photo by Miguel de Guzman, The Philippine STAR

While public utility drivers (PUV) are prioritized, other vulnerable sectors affected by the oil crisis – including those from the middle class and minimum wage earners – can avail themselves of the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD)’s cash relief under the Assistance to Individuals in Crisis Situations (AICS) program.

“The cash relief assistance being implemented by the DSWD are our emergency scheme to address those mostly affected when the conflict in Middle East started,” DSWD Undersecretary Adonis Sulit said during the Senate Proactive Response and Oversight for Timely and Effective Crisis Strategy committee hearing on Monday, April 13.

Asked whether the DSWD’s cash relief assistance is limited only to drivers and if the middle-class, service crews and other minimum wage earners can also avail themselves of the AICS, Sulit said: “The cash assistance being distributed by DSWD is a social protection intervention. Being part of the Assistance to Individuals in Crisis Situation, all individuals whether poor or middle income can access this program.”

Sulit said DSWD Secretary Rex Gatchalian has presented the agency’s proposal that there must be at least P6,000 top-up for a household and for an individual level, a top-up of P1,500.

DOLE expands TUPAD

The Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE)’s TUPAD Tuloy Pasada rollout is moving beyond assistance to jeepney drivers, expanding the beneficiaries to include paddlers, motorized banca operators and tricycle drivers.

During the Legislative Energy Action Development committee hearing in Congress on Wednesday, April 15, DOLE Undersecretary Ernesto Bitonio said the DOLE pulled its response from existing appropriations under its Integrated Livelihood and Emergency Employment Program and fixed an initial P1.2 billion for the crisis.

Meanwhile, farmers and fisherfolk will receive a pause in their loan repayments as rising fuel prices weigh on production and operation costs, according to the Department of Agriculture’s credit and financial arm.

Meanwhile, nine out of 10 rank-and-file teachers are earning far below the family living wage, forcing them to rely on loans just to survive, causing them to sink deeper into debt amid the current energy crisis, Alliance of Concerned Teachers chairperson Ruby Bernardo said on Thursday, April 16. – With Josiah Antonio, Bella Cariaso, Adrian Kenneth Halili