PRESIDENT RODRIGO DUTERTE has instructed the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) to monitor all island resorts and beach tourism destinations in the country to avoid temporary closure.
To ensure the DILG’s compliance with Duterte’s order, DILG Officer-In-Charge Secretary Eduardo Año directed all regional offices to submit a report of the list and summary of provincial, city, or municipal ordinances relative to environmental conservation, building construction, and easement regulation.
“The DILG will evaluate the status of sewage treatment facilities, power and water supply service capacity, and Zoning Ordinance and Comprehensive Land Use Plan of local government units (LGUs) with beach tourism destinations,” Año said.
The regional reports shall be submitted to the DILG Beach Tourism Monitoring Team (BTMT) which was reconstituted from the former DILG Boracay Secretariat.
Knowing that closing a tourism site impacts on people’s livelihood and the local economy, Año urged all LGUs not to wait for sanctions or interventions by the national government. "We should all learn from the Boracay experience. Let's not wait until your beaches turn into another cesspool," he said.
“Complacency is tantamount to dereliction of duty. Local chief executives are accountable of regulating tourism businesses and enforcing critical environmental laws, rules and regulations, and local ordinances. Let us not wait for nature’s boiling point to fire back to the point that restoration efforts would be very tough. Let’s not procrastinate on this matter. Be proactive even if no one watches over your shoulders,” he added.
DILG Spokesperson and Assistant Secretary Jonathan Malaya said the BTMT is creating a monitoring framework and tools based on the Boracay experience for the monitoring of all other beach tourism destinations and island resorts.
DOT has already sent reminders to LGUs of some major destinations, including El Nido in Palawan, Panglao in Bohol, Oslob in Cebu, and La Union. “WhilE LGUs actively promote more businesses for investments and employment, they must also balance it with upholding the integrity of the environment. These are standards set in the DILG Seal of Good Local Governance (SGLG),” Malaya said.
For provincial governments, the 2018 SGLG assessment criteria require a province to at least have an organized provincial solid waste management board and an approved 10-year solid waste management plan.
City governments and municipal governments must, on the other hand, have solid waste management board organized, no operating open or controlled dumpsite, approved 10-year solid waste management plan, materials recovery facility, and access to a sanitary landfill or alternative technology as final disposal. (With a report from Mindanao Examiner.)
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