Reelectionist Senator Sonny Angara urged the Commission on Elections (Comelec) to strengthen its efforts to fully implement a law providing accessible polling places for voters with disability and senior citizens to ensure that they will be able to conveniently exercise their right to vote in the May 13 midterm election.
Despite the enactment of Republic Act 10366 in 2013 and the regular issuances by the Comelec requiring polling precincts to be accessible to persons with disability (PWD) and the elderly, Angara noted that recent elections were marred by complaints on the lack of designated polling areas.
“Recent elections were still marred by complaints on the lack of designated polling areas.”
Some “vulnerable voters” even had to climb the stairs just so they could vote, the seasoned legislator said.
“I hope that this coming election, the Comelec will be more proactive in ensuring that not a single PWD or senior citizen is disenfranchised only because our polling centers cannot accommodate their needs,” said the veteran lawmaker, who is seeking another full six-year term in the Senate under the platform “Alagang Angara.”
“Nananawagan po tayo sa Comelec na sana ay paigtingin nila ang pagpapatupad ng batas para maiwasan natin ang sitwasyon kung saan tila kailangan pang dumaan sa butas ng karayom ang mga kababayan nating may kapansanan at nakatatanda makaboto lang. Tulungan natin silang maisakatuparan ang kanilang karapatang bumoto nang hindi nila kailangang mahirapan,” the senator said.
RA 10366 mandates the Comelec to set up polling precincts exclusively for PWDs and senior citizens that are located on the ground level – preferably near the entrance – and without physical barriers. This is to make sure that every registered voter has an equal chance of getting to the polling precinct, and filling out and submitting the ballots.
The law also provides for sensitivity training programs for people who perform electoral duties, including field officers, members of the Board of Election Inspectors, and accredited citizen’s arms to familiarize themselves with the needs of PWDs and senior citizens.
According to the National Council on Disability Affairs (NCDA), many PWD voters had been disenfranchised during the 2016 presidential elections because polling places lacked ramps or access, as well as volunteers to assist them.
“Many PWD voters had been disenfranchised during the 2016 presidential elections.”
Also in 2016, media organizations reported various incidents of senior citizens struggling to climb stairs to reach their polling precincts, some of them even suffered accidents. Similar incidents were reported during the barangay elections last year.
Angara is a known champion of the rights and welfare of PWDs and senior citizens. He was behind the landmark legislation exempting PWDs and seniors from the payment of 12 percent value-added tax so they can enjoy fully the 20 percent discount provided in the laws authored by his father, the late Senate President Edgardo Angara, who was dubbed as the “Father of the Senior Citizens Law.”
The older Angara was also the author of RA 9442 or the Magna Carta for Disabled Persons, which grants PWDs 20 percent discount on the purchase of medicines in all drugstores, medical and dental services including diagnostic and laboratory fees, and professional fees of attending doctors.
The 20 percent discount could also be availed of in establishments like hotels and restaurants, admission fees on theaters and movie houses, and on transportation fare for domestic land, air and sea travel.
While his father authored the original Senior Citizens Law, the younger Angara pushed for the value added tax exemption and social pension for the elderly in RA 9994 or the Expanded Senior Citizens Act of 2010 when he was still representative of the lone district of Aurora province in the House of Representatives.