The race to secure a share of the coronavirus vaccine seems to put smaller and poorer towns at a disadvantage.
Mayors in southern Luzon, whose municipalities occupy the lower rung in terms of population and internal revenue allotment, have yet to announce fund allocation for the vaccines. But four of them, in separate phone interviews, shared plans to pool resources by giving up infrastructure projects or realigning budgets from other programs.
A mayor of a fourth-class municipality (annual income: P3 million-P5 million) in Laguna said the local government might go as far as borrowing by securing a loan through the Department of Budget and Management.
鈥淥ur population is 20,000. If we go with AstraZeneca (vaccine), we鈥檙e told it鈥檚 about P500 for two doses. We can鈥檛 use up all our funds for health programs since we also have to take care of other [issues], like hypertension or diabetes,鈥 the mayor said.The British pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca seems to be the preferred brand of local governments, especially in Metro Manila, which recently signed a purchase deal through a tripartite arrangement with the national government.
鈥楥辞苍蹿耻蝉别诲鈥
Another mayor in Laguna said local officials were 鈥渃onfused鈥 by the policies on procurement laid out by the national government, prohibiting them to directly buy their vaccines from suppliers.
鈥淭here was one [local government] that was turned down [by a drug company] and was told that [purchases] should only be [made] government-to-government,鈥 the local chief executive said.The Laguna mayors declined to be identified in this report, fearing that speaking out might bungle negotiations for a bulk order through a nonprofit organization.
Order too small
Another mayor serving in an island town in southern Luzon said several officials were engaged in informal talks so they could 鈥減ool鈥 their purchase.鈥淲e were worried that since our populations are too small and, therefore, the orders will also be [in] small [quantities], the drug companies might not entertain us,鈥 the mayor said.Another concern is storing the vaccines in remote towns.
In a Jan. 6 briefing in Laguna, Secretary Carlito Galvez Jr., chief implementer of the National Task Force Against COVID-19 and the government鈥檚 vaccine czar, said a private cold storage facility was being considered in Sta. Rosa City to keep the vaccines arriving in the country.
鈥淸I鈥檓 hoping], which I believe is also the sentiment of the other mayors, for clear guidelines on [vaccine] sharing,鈥 said Mayor Vince Soriano of Pakil, a fifth-class municipality (annual income: P1 million-P3 million).
鈥淔or example, maybe the national government could shoulder the vaccination of 50 percent [of a town鈥檚 population], the provincial government 20 percent and the remaining 30 percent by the municipality or the city,鈥 he said.
Soriano said smaller towns were 鈥渕ore than willing鈥 to allocate part of their own funds to help the national government.