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Postpone CITIRA due to the coronavirus!

Days before the spike of local cases of infection with the SARS-COV-2 coronavirus which causes COVID-19, the Senate Ways and Means Committee was ready to approve its version of CITIRA (the Corporate Income Tax and Incentives Rationalization Act). The proposed law is the second phase of tax reform of the government, which reduces the corporate tax rate and reforms the investment incentives laws of the country.

The Department of Trade and Industry and the Department of Finance organized a consultation on it on March 3 at the Philippine International Convention Center, a prelude to its final push at the Senate. The proposed law was to be passed in the Senate this month or before Congress goes into recess until May of this year.

There is good basis to put off for now the enactment of CITIRA because of the coronavirus. While the WHO has yet to declare this outbreak as a pandemic, recent developments strongly indicate the world is in it already. As I finished this column, about 114,430 persons had been infected and 4,027 had died from the disease, according to Worldometer. While the fatality rate is low, it is however rising each day. When I started this article last week, Worldometer reported 85,721 infections and 2,933 fatalities.

COVID-19 has been regarded as a far more serious health crisis than the SARS outbreak in 2002 and 2003. The present coronavirus has, as of end of February, infected about 10 times more people in twice as many countries. While the final SARS fatality rate was 9.6% and current fatality rate of COVID-19 is estimated at 3.5 %, it is still too early to compare the two.

As more countries catch up with the COVID-19 testing, the health emergency may rapidly deteriorate to a situation that authorities have to take very drastic moves to save lives.

And these measures, like lockdowns and travel bans, would limit mobility of people, prohibit congregating, and disrupt economic activities world-wide, generating a global economic crisis and unemployment.

IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva had recently said that the coronavirus crisis now gripping the world threatens to derail global economic growth. Her dire projection may not be a threat anymore. We are witnessing the unfolding of another global economic crisis of a dimension far more concerning than the 2008 financial and economic crisis or the economic slump in the early 2000s due to the SARS virus.

The markets reflect this outlook with equity prices plunging by nearly 8% in just one day. Investors are already considering an economic recession worldwide as likely just months away. Oil prices likewise have precipitously declined due to sharp cuts in demand, which in turn mirrors the slowing down of productive activities in the major economies of the world.

Information gathered as of last week here in our country is that exporters of electronic products, which employed their workers in six days per week, had reduced work days by a day because raw materials from abroad are not coming in on time.

A large export company of electronic products, which employs thousands of workers, had to contend with the problem of rising freight rates. Cathay Pacific had to cancel flights going to China. Most of this company’s raw materials of come from China, and it exports to China. Its business is part of the global value chain in electronic products, which is now disrupted by the virus. Indeed, a quarter of the country’s imports come from China according to the Philippine Statistics Authority.

In February, this company had to honor its contractual obligations, and how costly that was. Last month, its freight cost increased by $171,188 because of the virus.

How many more of our country’s exporters are already in this situation? And titirahin pa sila ng CITIRA (And they will still be hit by CITIRA).

I am for reducing the corporate tax rate, and it can even be made better for the economy if the Congress considers cutting the rate in two or three steps.

I have, however, a strong reservation of the changes it is proposing on the investment incentives. These are not just fiscal measure. They are also trade promotion measures. Most of our exporters are locators in PEZA (Philippine Economic Zone Authority) zones. More than half of our exports come from the electronics and semi-conductor sector. The incentives the firms enjoy insulate them from the uncertainties that firms selling to the domestic market contend with.

Why should we give them special treatment? Because they are exporting. They compete with firms in other countries which have likewise treatments that make them competitive. By taking that treatment away from our exporters, we reduce our exports.

If authorities are concerned that some locators in these zones are no longer exporters, then PEZA should clean their ranks and exile the firms that do not deserve to be among the country’s exporters.

Others may disagree with me that exports are placed at risk with CITIRA. If their concern is that the government is getting a raw deal with the 5% special income tax in PEZA zones, then let us recompute the special income tax rate so that the locators pay their due income tax rates. But it is important for the economy to spare these exporters from having to lose that special treatment. Because if they did, these businesses can relocate elsewhere. Look, Honda has left us and Vietnam gains from our loss. Once electronic or manufacturing exporters are gone, they are difficult to attract back.

These points are debatable, of course. I focus instead on the wrong timing of CITIRA and l go back to the virus. There are still many things we don’t know about it. The little we do know so far is that this can be worse than the global financial crisis and global economic crisis we had 10 years ago.

COVID-19 is complicated because the productive and logistics capacities worldwide are adversely affected. We live now in a world where countries are interconnected to produce anything of value. China now counts for a fifth of the world’s GDP, and millions of its people, most of them workers, have been told not to leave their houses to prevent the further spread of the virus.

The PSA reported that in January, our exports grew by 9.7%, year-on-year. But imports grew by only 1%. The January growth was better than in 2019, where the country’s exports contracted by 6.7%. While electronic products continue to be the top commodity exports of the country, the January spike in exports largely came from minerals and mineral products.

Electronics are highly dependent on imports. If import growth slowed down in January, then we are likely to see a decline of exports in electronic products very soon. That would be 55% of our country’s exports. The delays of imported raw materials are traceable to the COVID-19 outbreak.

The world is likely now to be at the start of a more complicated global economic crisis, the duration of which cannot be cut short by some financing or economic stimulus, but by the knowledge gained by humanity, with the help of the world’s scientists and health experts, in containing the virus. CITIRA introduces another dimension of uncertainty to our exporters. Let us put this off for now and let the authorities like the PEZA and the other investment promotion agencies monitor the deteriorating situation and assist our country’s exporters save jobs.

 

Ramon L. Clarete is a professor at the University of the Philippines School of Economics.

Why America’s strategic presence will remain in the Philippines beyond the VFA

By Rasti Delizo

THE GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION of the Philippines on the world map permanently defines its inimitable strategic position and geopolitical role in relation to America’s overall foreign policy framework and agenda. This principally means that the recent abrogation of the 1998 RP-US Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) by the current Duterte Regime will inevitably give way to a potential VFA-2, or another similar bilateral defense arrangement, in the future. Such a scenario is a near certainty given two complementary conditions which continually press upon our country. One is internal, while the other remains external to the Philippines.

A major internal factor is that the 1951 RP-US Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT) still prevails after nearly 70 years. Fundamentally, the MDT persists as the principal bilateral instrument which continues to operationally bind Manila to Washington’s external policy thrusts aimed toward this area of the globe. In fact, even after the Philippine Senate voted to abrogate the much earlier 1947 RP-US Military Bases Agreement (MBA) in September 1991, US military forces were still able to conduct joint training exercises with the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) on Philippine soil. Indeed, this happened even prior to the VFA getting signed into existence!

Undeniably, the MDT is the chief pact which opened the door for the VFA’s entry into our diplomatic terrain less than a decade after the US military bases were shut down in the early 1990s. Yet, it is also critically important to remember that even without the VFA, Malacañang still continues to retain other dangerous spawn of the MDT — the 2002 RP-US Mutual Logistics Support Agreement (MLSA) and the 2014 RP-US Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA). Ominously, the latter allows for US military forces to assert relatively wide operational control over at least five Philippine military bases across the country today, and almost three decades after the MBA was terminated.

This perturbing arrangement is a part of both countries’ joint obligations to further deepen the scope of the MDT’s bilateral defense objectives which were set in motion since the last century’s Cold War phase. Indeed, the Philippine state’s tactical sacrifice of the VFA is merely a ploy to keep the MDT-MLSA-EDCA cornerstone in place to help secure America’s so-called “freedom of navigation operations” across the wider Asia-Pacific region. Thus, the Duterte Regime’s silence on the three war instruments truly exposes his real intention to protect his own political flanks from any American retaliation by ensuring such leverage with Washington through Manila’s retention of the age-old “Mother Defense Treaty” (MDT) itself.

On the other hand, the principal external pressure bearing upon the Philippines is the overall direction of American foreign policy as outlined by the 2017 US National Security Strategy paper. As the world’s leading superpower, America identifies both China and Russia as its foremost long-term challenger-competitors, together with Iran and North Korea. From this perspective, Washington believes that it must always be in a position to constantly assert its dominant hegemonic might to secure and advance its strategic interests worldwide by keeping a commanding edge over its main rivals for access and maneuver across the global commons.

And to maintain a strategic advantage over its core competitors, America’s central task must be to “retain overmatch… to ensure that American military superiority endures” throughout the world. Accordingly, Washington’s latest military strategy to retain its global overmatch is now defined as the Joint Concept for Access and Maneuver in the Global Commons (JAM-GC) — the highly evolved version of the Pentagon’s earlier Air-Sea Battle Concept — aimed at overcoming the anti-access/area-denial (A2/AD) countermeasures of China and Russia.

Therefore, the critical role played by America’s EDCA bases will crucially shape US imperialism’s future interventions in the Philippines under the JAM-GC’s doctrinal guidance to ensure America’s global overmatch against China. Within this setting, it is vital for the Philippines to be held as a critical security link to guarantee Washington’s forward force projection posture within and beyond Southeast Asia. Hence, we should once again expect the US to protect its foreign policy imperatives by pressuring Malacañang into accepting a post-VFA arrangement in the coming period. And such a scenario is geopolitically inevitable as the Philippines is forcibly sucked into the intensifying vortex of the “Neo-US-Sino Cold War” that is already raging across the broader Asia-Pacific region at the present time.

 

Rasti Delizo is an international affairs analyst. He used to work with the Presidential Management Staff-Office of the President as the Lead International Affairs Analyst and as the Deputy Executive Director of The Center for Strategic Studies. Delizo was also a foreign policy consultant to the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, House Committee on Foreign Affairs, and the Department of Foreign Affairs. He is currently a Vice-President of the socialist labor center Bukluran ng Manggagawang Pilipino (BMP) and the National Coordinator of Laban ng Masa (LnM), a socialist political center.

Main index climbs further despite cautious trade

THE MAIN INDEX marked its second consecutive day of increase yesterday, but is yet to break into the 6,400 level as investors remained cautious of the coronavirus outbreak’s economic impact.

The 30-member Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) picked up 34.88 points or 0.55% yesterday to close at 6,353.26, while the broader all shares index gained 20.21 points or 0.53% to 3,808.73.

“While the market ended on a positive note gaining 34 points today, I don’t think we’re out of the woods just yet,” PNB Securities, Inc. President Manuel Antonio G. Lisbona said in a text message on Wednesday.

“The outbreak has not yet shown any signs of slowing and the economic effects of large scale lockdowns such as that of Italy’s is yet to be observed,” he added.

The months-long spread of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) had already led to the impairment of several business operations across the world. To others, the impact was as grave as a nationwide lockdown, like that in Italy since Monday.

While the PSEi saw some improvement yesterday, most of its regional peers still closed lower. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Topix indices fell 2.27% and 1.53%, respectively. China’s Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 index dropped 1.33%, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index declined 0.63% and South Korea’s Kospi index lost 2.78%.

Wall Street roared back to life on Tuesday, rebounding from the brink of bear market confirmation as bargain-hunting and hopes of government stimulus calmed investors’ fears surrounding the coronavirus and growing signs of imminent recession.

All three major indexes jumped nearly 5% the day after equities markets suffered their biggest one-day losses since the 2008 financial crisis. Still, the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq ended the session about 15% below the record closing highs reached on Feb. 19. Sinking beyond the 20% mark would confirm a bear market.

Trading at the local bourse was initially stronger, but its gains were tempered at the market’s close “as investors weighed the prospects of fiscal stimulus to curb slower economic growth,” Regina Capital Development Corp. Head of Sales Luis A. Limlingan said.

Four of six sub-sectors ended in green territory yesterday. Industrials rose 168.63 points or 2.27% to 7,598.56; holding firms added 66.24 points or 1.07% to 6,225.11; services climbed 3.59 points or 0.29% to 1,236.22; and property inched up 6.62 points or 0.19% to 3,433.39.

On the other hand, mining and oil gave up 87.89 points or 1.52% to 5,687.52, and financials slipped 15.19 points or 0.99% to 1,517.51 at the close of Wednesday’s session.

Value turnover stood at P6.62 billion with 687.59 million issues switching hands, lower from P7.36 billion with 774.46 million issues in the previous session.

Advancers beat decliners, 107 versus 84, while 48 names ended unchanged.

Foreign investors turned buyers yesterday, with net inflows of P350.50 million from a net selling of P835.86 million the previous day. — Denise A. Valdez with Reuters

Peso weakens slightly as oil prices correct following sharp decline

THE PESO depreciated slightly on Wednesday due to a correction with oil prices, even as it has remained relatively resilient, according to analysts.

The local unit ended at P50.55 per dollar on Wednesday, shedding five centavos from its P50.50 finish on Tuesday, according to data from the Bankers Association of the Philippines.

The peso opened the session flat at P50.50 per dollar. Its weakest showing for the day was at P50.56, while its intraday best was at P50.465 versus the greenback.

Dollars traded increased to $934 million from $878 million on Tuesday.

Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said the slight weakness in the peso was due to a correction in oil prices after declining sharply last Monday.

“The peso closed weaker but still among its strongest in two years after the healthy upward correction in global oil prices after the dramatic decline to a new four-year lows,” Mr. Ricafort said in a text message.

Meanwhile, UnionBank of the Philippines, Inc. Chief Economist Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion said the peso has nominally weakened, but remained “fundamentally trading strong.”

“It seems that the peso has been immune from the coronavirus lately. Even as the oil price war has ensured between Saudi Arabia and Russia, it has continued to be strong,” Mr. Asuncion said in a text message.

The price of Brent crude futures rose by $1.26, or 3.4%, to $38.48 a barrel while US West Texas Intermediate crude gained $0.91, or 2.7%, to $35.27 a barrel.

Oil prices have recovered nearly a half of the Monday’s 25% loss that was fueled by Saudi Arabia and Russia, the world’s two biggest oil producers.

For today, Mr. Ricafort sees the peso playing around the P50.40 to P50.70 levels, while Mr. Asuncion gave a thinner forecast range of P50.40 to P50.60.

Meanwhile, Indonesia’s rupiah fell on Wednesday after the country reported its first coronavirus-related death, while other Asian currencies traded in a thin range due to the uncertainty over proposed government measures to limit the economic impact of the virus.

The market has been hoping for concrete details of US President Donald Trump’s promise for “very major” stimulus moves, but the lack of an announcement has left investors hanging.

“This could set the direction of risk appetite, and thus Asian currencies, in the short-term. Markets are trading day by day, assessing the severity and spread of COVID-19 globally,” said Chang Wei Liang, an FX strategist at Mizuho Bank.

The dollar fell more than 1% against the safe-haven yen.

In Indonesia, the central bank governor said the outlook for economic growth this year could be lowered when it holds its policy meeting next week.

The rupiah dropped 0.3% after the country confirmed its first death due to the virus.

Elsewhere, the South Korean won was little changed against the dollar. The country reported a jump in cases on Wednesday, compared with a day earlier where it saw a decline in the rate of new infections. The Thai baht also fell.

The Indian rupee, emerging from a holiday on Tuesday, advanced 0.4% after losing close to 1% over the last three days. The Singapore dollar and Chinese yuan also gained. The ringgit gained 0.3%. — LWTN with Reuters

DoH confirms 16 new coronavirus infections

By Vann Marlo M. Villegas,
Gillian M. Cortez Reporters,
and Genshen L. Espedido

HEALTH authorities on Wednesday reported 16 new cases of novel coronavirus infections, bringing the total in the Philippines to 49.

“The Department of Health (DoH) and deployed surveillance teams are now conducting extensive information-gathering and contact-tracing activities on the new cases,” it said in a statement.

It also said doctors were continuously monitoring all patients to ensure there won’t be any health complications.

Cases Nos. 25 to 28 and Nos. 30 to 33 were in stable condition, DoH said. Patient No. 29, a known contact of patient No. 9, had been intubated and had underlying cardiovascular and endocrine conditions, it added.

The Health department was seeking to address the capacity of hospitals to respond to the contagion, Health Assistant Secretary Maria Rosario S. Vergeire said at a news briefing.

They were also reviewing their policy on how patients are admitted — who should be confined and who should be sent home, she said. DoH would probably issue the guidelines tomorrow, she added.

Ms. Vergeire said 96 Filipino overseas had been infected with the novel coronavirus — 80 from the M/V Diamond Princess cruise ship, six from the M/V Grand Princess cruise ship docked in the US, five in Hong Kong, three in Singapore and two in the United Arab Emirates.

Meanwhile, the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA) sent off 442 of the 445 repatriates from Japan who had been quarantined at New Clark City (NCC) in Capas, Tarlac, DoH said in the same statement.

Of the 445 Filipinos from the M/V Diamond Princess cruise ship from Yokohama, two crew members had tested positive for the disease and were sent to the Jose B. Lingad Memorial Regional Hospital, DoH said.

Close contacts of the two confirmed cases will undergo additional 14-day home quarantine and will be monitored by health offices in their cities. The remaining repatriate was left in NCC awaiting lab results, it said.

Meanwhile, Senator Juan Miguel F. Zubiri said the Department of Health should coordinate with private hospitals in the admission of people suspected to have been infected with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).

“Under an emergency situation the government can order private hospitals to also prepare for COVID-19 patients,” he said at a separate briefing. This would allow private hospitals “to prepare isolation wards and to expect the worse.”

PHILHEALTH
Also yesterday, President Rodrigo R. Duterte ordered the Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth) to shoulder the cost of testing for COVID-19.

“The President recognizes that everyone in the country is concerned about COVID-19 and the threat this poses to the health and lives of our loved ones, especially vulnerable individuals like senior citizens,” Cabinet Secretary Karlo Alexei B. Nograles said in a statement.

“Given this, the last thing we want is for our citizens to worry about medical costs and expenses,” he added.

PhilHealth will also cover quarantine and isolation costs, he said.

All Filipinos are automatically enrolled under PhilHealth as mandated by the Universal Health Care Act.

Meanwhile, the House health committee approved a motion urging PhilHealth to waive the fee it charges for the treatment of COVID-19 patients.

Committee head and Quezon Rep. Angelina D.L. Tan said the government should cover all the expenses of the patient.

Ms. Tan also urged DoH to issue the rules that will enforce the law on mandatory reporting of some diseases.

Health Secretary Francisco T. Duque III should issue the rules within the week because it will guide the agency in responding to the virus outbreak, she told a news briefing.

Meanwhile, Iloilo Rep. Janette L. Garin questioned the exemption given by the Foo and Drug Administration to the University of the Philippines in making COVID-19 test kits.

“I fully support our Filipinos scientists, but we are very much afraid that in our desire to have a testing kit, we now forget the safeguards that should be installed,” she said at yesterday’s House hearing.

She noted that the FDA is the only Philippine agency that can ensure the safety and efficacy of medicines, vaccines and devices. Mr. Duque said he would ask the FDA to respond to Ms. Garin’s query.

UP faculty members from Japan being tested for infection

TWO faculty members of the University of the Philippines (UP) are under investigation for a possible novel coronavirus infection, the school said in a statement on Wednesday.

The two teachers had submitted themselves for testing after attending an academic conference in Japan, and were isolated, UP said.

“The UP Diliman Health Service declared the two as persons under investigation after showing fever and respiratory symptoms,” it said.

Protocols had been followed in isolating the patients and disinfecting the premises and the ambulance used to carry them to a referral hospital, it added.

The UP administration met with experts from the Health Service, while UP Manila-Philippine General Hospital released protocols for UP Diliman on March 10.

The guidelines prohibit official travels and require a 14-day self-quarantine for members returning from travel overseas. The university will also postpone all big campus events and conduct online classes.

The university also urged community members to practice social distancing, proper hygiene and behavioral etiquette to combat the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).

Members of the UP system who came in contact with a COVID-19 patient must see a doctor at UPHS or the nearest health facility.

Persons under investigation were being monitored in coordination with the university’s Health Service and Quezon City Epidemiology Surveillance Unit, it said.

Buildings visited by persons under investigation were being disinfected, it said.

Meanwhile, the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) said higher education institutions should deploy available distance learning, e-learning and other alternative modes.

They should also evaluate students based on available indicators and forego other curricular activities or the rest of the semester. They may also postpone graduation ceremonies if needed.

Private higher education institutions need not obtain CHED’s approval before undertaking such measures but should inform the commission about any changes, according to an e-mailed copy of the March 11 memo issued by CHED chairman J. Prospero E. de Vera III.

Mr. de Vera also said some hospitals with confirmed COVID-19 cases that are serving as training centers for medical and nursing students have been requiring students to continue their rotation duties or fail their internship program.

“The commission appeals to the officials of these hospitals to exercise leniency during this difficult time and explore alternative modes that will continue the medical training and education of their students without compromising their safety,” he said. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

Bill on lockdowns filed at Senate

A SENATOR has filed a bill allowing the Bureau of Quarantine to impose lockdowns in selected areas amid the threat of a novel coronavirus outbreak.

Senator Francis N. Tolentino filed Senate Bill 1408 or the proposed Health Emergency Lockdown Act, which will amend the Quarantine Act of 2004 by expanding the bureau’s powers.

The measure also allows the bureau, in coordination with the Interior and Local Government department to suspend classes, name dedicated hospitals and encourage telecommuting programs.

Some lawmakers have sought a lockdown in Metro Manila to contain the contagion, but Mr. Tolentino said it should only be implemented when the situation worsens.

“We haven’t reached that level of contamination yet to warrant the lockdown of the entire Metro Manila which I believe will be detrimental to the economy,” he told a news briefing on Wednesday. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Regulator says there’s enough water supply in Metro Manila

By Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

THE National Water Resources Board (NWRB) on Wednesday said there was enough water supply in Metro Manila in the face of increased demand in the summer and amid a novel coronavirus contagion.

The water allocation of 42 cubic meters per second (cms) to water concessionaires would be kept despite lower levels in Angat Dam, board Executive Director Sevillo D. David Jr. said by telephone.

As of Wednesday morning, the water level in Angat Dam stood at 200.72 meters, down by 0.23m from a day earlier, according to data from the local weather bureau.

The NWRB, together with the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System, Maynilad Water Services, Inc., and Manila Water Company Inc. is examining data to address the supply issue, Mr. David said.

“We have yet to confirm that there is indeed increased water usage due to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19),” he said.

Mr. David said that both Maynilad and Manila Water had requested to keep the present allocation.

Manila Water’s allocation remained at 42 cms, well below the normal allocation o 46 cms, Nestor Jeric T. Sevilla, a spokesman for the company, said in a mobile-phone message.

“We have been using our Cardona Water Treatment Plan, which now yields 100 million liters per day, and deepwells to augment the supply coming from Angat,” he said.

Mr. Sevilla added that increased water consumption was to be expected in the summer months.

Manila Water is still implementing water interruption during off-peak hours, particularly from midnight to 4 a.m.

Meanwhile, Maynilad has put in place measures to ease the effects of reduced allocation from Angat Dam, said Jennifer C. Rufo, a spokesperson for the company.

Maynilad had been getting additional raw water from Laguna Lake via their two water treatment plants that produce 300 million liters per day, reactivating deep wells and sending modular treatment plants to small rivers in Cavite, she said.

The company was also finishing pipe replacements and leak repairs, and was ready with cloud-seeding operations.

“We encourage our customers to use water responsibly, and to limit its use for activities that are critical to ensure their health and sanitation,” Ms. Rufo said.

COVID-19 Regional Updates (03/11/20)

Pangasinan brings ban on gatherings to barangay level

THE PANGASINAN provincial board has passed a resolution ordering village leaders along with the youth representatives to suspend “activities that could draw crowd in their respective localities” to avoid potential community transmission of the new coronavirus disease known as COVID-19. The ban includes barangay fiestas and Sangguniang Kabataan activities, which are mostly scheduled during the summer vacation months of March to May. “The Sangguniang Panlalawigan (provincial board) is calling on all local government units more particularly Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan officials to be united in helping the national and provincial governments to combat the acute respiratory diseases by suspending activities that could draw crowd in their respective localities,” reads the resolution authored by Board Member Jose G. Peralta, who heads the Liga ng mga Barangay Provincial Federation. Governor Amado I. Espino III has earlier ordered the cancellation of all provincial government-organized events and urged local government units to do the same. Meanwhile, Department of Health (DoH) Ilocos Region Director Valeriano Lopez said on Wednesday that none of the people who came into contact with the COVID-19-positive patient from Australia have so far shown symptoms of the disease. The Filipino-Australian visited the province for a school reunion and was confirmed with the virus upon her return to Australia.

WVMC seeks accreditation as COVID-19 test center

THE WESTERN Visayas Medical Center (WVMC), located in Iloilo City, has applied to be accredited as one of the test centers in the country for the coronavirus disease, formally named COVID-19. “We are still waiting for the results of their evaluation until now. We want to know if the WVMC is capable to serve as a testing center. We hope it will be approved,” said Roland Jay Fortuna, focal person of the Iloilo City COVID-19 Task Force. He noted that there is no diagnostic center yet for the new virus in the Western Visayas Region. The Research Institute for Tropical Medicine (RITM), with assistance from the World Health Organization, has so far been capacitating five subnational laboratories, namely: San Lazaro Hospital and Lung Center of the Philippines in Manila; Baguio General Hospital and Medical Center in northern Luzon; Vicente Sotto Memorial Medical Center in Cebu City; and the Southern Philippines Medical Center in Davao City. “Unlike dengue when we had an ample supply of test kits because these are just easy test kits, however for COVID-19, the testing facilities are being accredited by the RITM and now we only have five (in the country),” he said.

MONITORING

As of March 11, there is one patient within the region admitted in hospital for observation of the disease, based on the Department of Health (DoH) tracker. The Iloilo City government, meanwhile, is monitoring 82 persons, mostly overseas Filipino workers who have recent travel history from countries with confirmed COVID-19 cases. “They are considered PUMs (persons under monitoring). We are asking them to go on (home) quarantine and once they exhibit signs and symptoms, then they will be referred to the proper hospital,” Mayor Jerry P. Treñas told the media. Mr. Treñas also appealed to the DoH to send test kits to the region for faster diagnosis. “I am speaking for the rest of Western Visayas. We don’t have any test kits here. I am speaking to the DoH, and I think it is your responsibility to provide test kits to all the regions. We in the LGUs (local government units) are doing our job and the DoH should do the same, it is a matter of right,” said the mayor of Iloilo, which serves as the regional center. — Emme Rose S. Santiagudo

Cagayan de Oro gov’t to purchase thermal scanner, calls on private establishments to get non-contact thermometers

THE CAGAYAN de Oro City government is set to purchase a thermal scanner in addition to the 50 non-contact thermometers it has already acquired and being used in local offices, according to City Health Insurance Officer William Bernardo. The local government has also called for a city-wide adoption of the body temperature check policy as a preventive measure against the coronavirus disease. “We encourage other institutions, establishments and schools to do the same,” it said in a statement. City Health Office head Lorraine J. Nery said they are also expanding their training for infection control to include not just health workers but other agencies such as the police.

Duterte to meet with Boracay’s tourism sector, rehabilitation team

PRESIDENT RODRIGO R. Duterte will meet tourism stakeholders and the task force overseeing the rehabilitation of Boracay when he visits the island on March 12, according to the Department of Tourism (DoT). In a statement on Wednesday, DoT said the President’s trip remains part of the tourism caravan to promote domestic travel amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak. DoT Secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat said Mr. Duterte will meet with local tourism stakeholders, including representatives from airlines, hotels and resorts, and tour operators after the companies offered discounted rates to stimulate domestic travel. DoT earmarked P6 billion to help the domestic industry nationwide after tourist arrivals slumped by 42% in February amid the COVID-19 outbreak. “At least PHP 85 million will finance the training on COVID-19 orientation, preparedness, response and protocols for industry stakeholders,” the statement said. DoT data showed Philippine international tourism revenues in February dropped by 41% to P26.73 billion from P45.6 billion in the same month last year.

REHABILITATION
Mr. Duterte will also discuss with the tourism sector the action plan on sustaining the rehabilitation efforts. Boracay was closed, upon Mr. Duterte’s order, for six months in 2018 for an initial phase of redevelopment. DoT said this is the first time Mr. Duterte is visiting the island since its reopening in October 2018. Mr. Duterte in July 2019 approved a medium-term action plan to continue rehabilitating Boracay, which includes the enforcement of laws to regulate visitors, rehabilitation of ecosystems, and the improvement of roads and public health infrastructure. Malacañang also announced earlier that the President will be distributing certificates of land ownership to farmer beneficiaries during his visit. — Jenina P. Ibañez

Davao Oriental combines greening and livelihood program with falcata project

THE DAVAO Oriental provincial government recently signed a memorandum of agreement with falcata tree farmers to strengthen its program that combines reforestation with sustainable livelihood. Under the Nagkakaisang Lingkod-Bayan ng Davao Oriental Forest Landscape Restoration for Sustainable Development (NLD-FLRSD), farmers in six villages in Mati City and the towns of Lupon and San Isidro will get falcata seedlings as well as financial and technical assistance. The NLD-FLRSD, initiated in 2018, is “the provincial approach to ensure inclusive and sustainable development of the province’s forest resources and of the local communities in harmony with the national greening program and with global forest targets anchored on the united nation’s sustainable development goals.” Governor Nelson L. Dayanghirang, speaking to the farmers during the March 4 agreement signing, said, “It is not the job of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources alone to preserve nature. Protecting the nature is our shared responsibility.” Falcata is a fast-growing tree that is known to have nitrogen-fixing qualities that help improve soil condition. Mature trees can be used as lumber. “The government has supported this program but it is in your hands to make it prosper,” Mr. Dayanghirang said. — Carmelito Q. Francisco

Nationwide round-up

House committee approves proposed parking regulations

congress House of Representative
PHILSTAR

A MEASURE establishing parking fee regulations and standards for parking facilities was approved Monday by the House of Representatives’ committee on trade and industry. “I am glad that this bill is one step closer to becoming a law despite some misgivings of the owners of retail and commercial establishments and independent parking operators,” Valenzuela Rep. Weslie T. Gatchalian, who chairs the committee, said in a statement on Wednesday. Under the unnumbered substitute bill, confined patients and out-patients in health service establishments may use parking facilities for free while non-patients can be charged P20 per hour. Customers of accommodation facilities, including hotels, motels, hostels, and resorts, shall not be charged parking fees provided there is proof of transaction with the establishment. Non-customers can be charged P20 per hour. Meanwhile, parking fees in educational institutions shall be waived for the first two hours for officials, employees, faculty, and students, after which P20 can be charged per hour. Non-customers can also be charged P20 per hour.

RETAIL SHOPS
In retail establishments — including malls, shops, supermarkets, and stand-alone stores — customers get free parking for the first two hours, provided there is proof of transaction for an amount not less than P500. Non-customers can be charged P10 per hour but not more than P50 per day. Commercial establishments may charge P40 for the first four hours and P20 per succeeding hour for a maximum of P140 per day. Open parking enterprises may charge P30 for the first three hours and P20 per succeeding hour, while multilevel parking enterprises may charge P40 for the first three hours and P20 per succeeding hour. Street parking, which is usually managed by the local government, can have a rate of P50 per hour while the maximum overnight parking fee shall be P150 per vehicle. Lost parking tickets may also be charged a maximum of P150 per vehicle. The bill also sets the minimum standards that must be observed by all parking establishments including the provision of CCTV cameras, security guards, the number of entrance and exit booths to prevent traffic congestion, and other safety standards. The bill is up for second reading. — Genshen L. Espedido

DoJ preliminary probes to continue amid coronavirus threat

THE DEPARTMENT of Justice (DoJ) is not cancelling just yet its scheduled preliminary probes amid the coronavirus disease threat, an official said. “No cancellation of preliminary investigations at the NPS (National Prosecution Service),” Undersecretary Markk L. Perete told reporters in a mobile-phone message. “Until such time that further restrictions imposed by health authorities require cancellation of hearings, preliminary investigation of complaints will continue,” he added. He said the department, headquartered in Manila, will comply with the protocols that the inter-agency task force on the disease will issue. President Rodrigo R. Duterte declared on March 8 a state of public health emergency. As of March 11, the Department of Health said the country has 49 confirmed cases of the disease, formally named COVID-19, mostly within Metro Manila. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

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