Philippine Daily Inquirer

Baguio can keep accepting tourists

National interagenc­y task force says visitors can enter city because of its ‘institutio­nalized protocols’ on registrati­on

- —STORY BY VINCENT CABREZA

Thanks to its proven capability to screen visitors, Baguio City has been allowed by the government’s COVID-19 task force to continue accepting tourists even while the entire Cordillera region is under the stricter general community quarantine (GCQ) status. Officials on Friday said Mayor Benjamin Magalong’s request to exempt his city’s tourism operations from GCQ restrictio­ns had been granted.

BAGUIO CITY—Tourists will be allowed to visit this city and book hotel accommodat­ions even if the entire Cordillera region is under general community quarantine (GCQ) this month, the Department of Tourism (DOT) said on Friday.

The request of Mayor Benjamin Magalong to exempt Baguio’s tourism operations from restrictio­ns under GCQ was granted by the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF).

But in a resolution released on Thursday, the IATF said its approval was still subject to the city’s compliance with health and safety protocols and contact-tracing measures.

Magalong was recently criticized for failing to prevent some quarantine violations during the Jan. 17 birthday party of celebrity events organizer Tim Yap.

3,000 applicants

The backlash forced Magalong to resign as the country’s contact-tracing czar, admitting that he should have immediatel­y corrected the errors he observed during the party, which he and his wife attended.

In anticipati­on of the GCQ status following a surge in COVID-19 infections in some Cordillera provinces, the city government has initially closed its borders to leisure travelers.

About 3,000 tourist applilocal

MASS TESTING Baguio City is continuous­ly carrying out mass testing for COVID-19 on Friday while it is placed on general community quarantine for the entire February.

cants who were cleared to visit the city in February were told to cancel or postpone their hotel reservatio­ns, according to the city tourism office.

These guests would have to go through another clearing process before they could proceed to the summer capital.

Magalong has sought for exemption as he was concerned that the more restrictiv­e GCQ status would be a new setback for the local tourism industry that “had just started to take off.”

The Luzon lockdown and the subsequent quarantine­s have shut all businesses here until July last year, with losses estimated to be as high as P1.6 billion for its tourism-oriented enterprise­s.

Tourists are currently not allowed in areas under GCQ but local government units could request the IATF for an exemption.

Screening process

In a statement, Tourism Secretary Bernadette Romulo Puyat said the IATF granted Magalong’s request to accommodat­e visitors because the city has “institutio­nalized protocols” on tourist registrati­on.

Prospectiv­e Baguio tourists must pass a screening process by registerin­g with a surveillan­ce platform called the Visitor Informatio­n and Travel Assistance program. It was first used in October under the “Ridge to Reef” travel bubble involving Baguio and the Ilocos Region.

More than 20,000 people have since visited the city, which was opened to tourists from Luzon, including Metro Manila.

To help prevent future outbreaks, the DOT suggested putting up a common database for tourists, out-of-town family members and business travelers who enter the Cordillera, said Sylvia Chinayog, DOT senior operations officer, during a Feb. 3 economic briefing here.

The centralize­d tourism data bank, which will contain the nationalit­ies, names, locations, gender, age of and other important informatio­n about the visitors, is also among the ideas being considered for adoption by local government­s, as would be useful not only during this pandemic but also in the event of a disaster or another health crisis that would strike their communitie­s.

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Robert Jaworski L. Abaño —EV ESPIRITU ?? STILL WAITING the city.
Business remains slow for some people in Baguio City due to its more restrictiv­e general community quarantine status. But hopes are now high after visitors are again allowed in
Editor Robert Jaworski L. Abaño —EV ESPIRITU STILL WAITING the city. Business remains slow for some people in Baguio City due to its more restrictiv­e general community quarantine status. But hopes are now high after visitors are again allowed in
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—EV ESPIRITU
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