AN apparently pleased Environment Secretary Roy A. Cimatu on Tuesday said the dry run for the reopening of Boracay got off to a good start, even as he assured the public that the Boracay Interagency Task Force (BIATF) is ready for any problem that may arise during the dry run for the reopening of Boracay on October 26.
Government policies and interventions intended to protect Boracay from unsustainable tourism activities will be put to the test during the dry run, which started on Monday.
Boracay was ordered closed for six months by virtue of President Duterte’s order declaring all three barangays—Yapak, Balabag and Manoc-manoc—on Boracay Island under a state of calamity because of various problems ranging from poor solid waste management, water pollution, perennial flooding, biodiversity loss and traffic brought about by the influx of tourists all year round.
“The point of the dry run is to ensure that everything will run smoothly during the soft opening on October 26,” Cimatu, who chairs the BIATF, said in a news statement.
While the dry run got off to a good start, Cimatu said the BIATF would know on the third day whether the government interventions would really work.
“We will only see the effects and results of all these interventions on the third day after tourist arrivals,” he said.
Cimatu said the BIATF would “not allow the rehabilitation efforts done in the past six months go to waste.”
He particularly cited the “environmental interventions” that has made Boracay “no longer a cesspool,” which was how President Rodrigo Duterte described it before the island was ordered closed to tourists in April.
“As you may have observed, there has been not only a visible improvement in water quality. Tests done by the EMB (Environmental Management Bureau) revealed that the coliform level is now down to 18.1 MPN/100 mL from thousands or even millions in some areas of the island’s waters prior to closing,” Cimatu said. The standard coliform level is 100 most probable number per 100 milliliters of sample.
Cimatu said the EMB, a line bureau of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), will continue to check the quality of water discharged from sewage treatment plants (STPs) on the island.
He said that solid waste disposal will also be looked into in order to make sure Boracay’s garbage is “immediately moved out and not remain on the island for more than 24 hours.”
Cimatu insisted that only establishments compliant with the requirements of the DENR, the Department of the Interior and Local Government and the Department of Tourism are allowed to reopen and operate.
The DENR, he said, will only issue environmental compliance certificate (ECC) to businesses with their own STPs or connected to a provider, and those not within forestlands or wetlands.
Cimatu said that tourist arrival of 6,405 persons per day will be strictly followed.
Only a total of 1,000 rooms from accredited hotels will be available for booking at any time during the day, Cimatu said.
“The BIATF is firm on 100% compliance. If you do not comply, you do not operate,” Cimatu stressed.
He added: More than all these, a change in the behavior of the people—the locals and the tourists—will bring real change to Boracay.”