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DOT funds RT-PCR tests for Boracay tourism workers

WITH the expected arrival of tourists in Boracay in the coming months, the Department of Tourism (DOT) will provide a total of Php 8 million to fund the reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) testing for 4,000 tourism workers in the island.

“By supporting RT-PCR testing among workers in Boracay, the Department reiterates that safety is the unparalleled priority in reopening domestic tourism. We want restore confidence amongst travelers and protect their health and well-being as our tourism workers get their livelihood back,” Tourism Secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat said.

The DOT, through the Tourism Promotions Board (TPB), has undertaken similar efforts to ensure safety in other tourism destinations around the country like Baguio City, which is open to tourists from the Ilocos Region provinces since October 1 through the Ridge and Reef Travel Corridor.

Alongside the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Department of Health (DOH), the DOT allocated a Php 1.8 million budget from the TPB’s Special Contingency Fund, to support the adoption of antigen testing among Baguio City visitors, in addition to the usual reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) test.

Results of both testing methods among visitors of the Summer Capital of the Philippines will help determine the efficacy of antigen tests as a quicker and cheaper means of detecting the COVID-19 virus.

Through the TPB, the DOT also funded Baguio’s first ever Visitor Information and Travel Assistance (VIS.I.T.A.) visitor management system that will allow for real-time tracking and contact tracing among tourists from Region 1.

Puyat said the remaining projects of the TPB for the year 2020 will focus on improving tourism destinations in terms of readiness with health and safety protocols, which in turn will increase confidence among local travelers.

“All of these efforts by the DOT, our attached agencies, together with our partners in the public and private sector, support the President’s directive to boost the country’s domestic tourism. We are hopeful that, by reviving tourism with health and safety measures in place, the tourism industry will make it through the pandemic and be a strong catalyst for economic growth in the new normal,” Puyat said.

Since October 1, the world-famous Boracay reopened its borders to tourists from General Community Quarantine (GCQ) areas, as approved by the IATF-EID in its Resolution No. 74.