Palawan is eyeing the resumption of tourism activities in the towns of El Nido, Coron, and San Vicente once safety and health protocols have been set in place in the province.
There is no specific date yet as to when the three municipalities will start accepting tourists, but Tourism Secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat said a “dry run” will start in El Nido resorts “as soon as possible.”
“Sa Coron, pag-uusapan pa with the constituents kung kailan, sa San Vicente ganoon din pag-uusapan pa (In Coron, we are still discussing with the constituents regarding the dry run, the same goes for San Vicente),” Romulo-Puyat said in a virtual presser following a consultative meeting with the provincial government of Palawan recently.
The tourism chief explained that during a dry run, tourists coming from modified general community quarantine (MGCQ) areas will need to take a reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) test at their own expense.
If a tourist is departing from Clark International Airport, a negative test result for the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) from any Department of Health approved hospital is needed to be presented “before they travel.”
“We want to restart leisure activities in the province but we want the process to be slow and sure.”
Romulo-Puyat said the Department of Tourism (DOT) wants to restart leisure activities in Palawan but wants the process to be “slow and sure.”
She also assured that the DOT will be closely working with the provincial government to ensure health and safety regulations will be implemented.
“We want to have a dry run first just to make sure.”
“Gusto muna nating mag-dry run muna to make sure (We want to have a dry run first just to make sure). I’m very proud to say that El Nido is COVID-free, in Coron there are three asymptomatics who all recovered, and in San Vicente there is one who already recovered also– we can say that the three are COVID-19-free and they are ready,” Romulo-Puyat said.
Since March, the pandemic has cost the three tourist destinations around P3.1 billion in tourism receipts and had displaced some 14,000 tourism workers.
Palawan Governor Jose Alvarez echoed the DOT chief’s sentiments, adding there would be “selective, targeted, and prioritized” tourism in the three municipalities.
“I hope that we have clarified our stand that there is no more such thing as mass tourism, so in the coming months, somehow we will have to open slowly and safely,” Alvarez said.
Also in the meeting were El Nido Mayor Edna Lim, Coron Mayor Mario Reyes, San Vicente Mayor Amy Alvarez, 1st District Representative Franz Alvarez, and 3rd District Rep. Gil Acosta.