Business World

TIEZA highlights major role in Boracay rehabilita­tion

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THE Tourism Infrastruc­ture and Enterprise Zone Authority (TIEZA) is playing a major — and very important — role in the rehabilita­tion of the island paradise of Boracay. This is according to TIEZA Chief Operating Officer Pocholo Paragas when he disclosed that the Office of the President (OP) affirmed the Department of Justice’s (DoJ) decision mandating TIEZA as the sole regulator of water and sewerage systems in tourism zones such as Boracay.

“With the affirmatio­n of the OP that TIEZA has the regulatory authority over the water and sewerage services in Boracay, we want to make good to this mandate and ensure that rehabilita­tion efforts are for the long-term,” said

Mr. Paragas. “In fact, even before the pronouncem­ent of President Duterte to rehabilita­te Boracay, the TIEZA Board has already allotted more than P1 billion to improve its water and drainage systems and had already commenced the project last December.”

Part of TIEZA’s mandate is the developmen­t of tourism zones and tourism economic zones (TEZs) as well as tourism infrastruc­ture projects in the country.

“TIEZA works to rehabilita­te our tourism assets and create new ones with partner-investors. We want to implement sustainabi­lity practices not only in Boracay but also to replicate it in other tourism areas,” he said.

In Boracay, TIEZA’s deputized unit, the TIEZA Regulatory Office (RO) is working closely with the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) and the existing Water Service Providers (WSPs) in Boracay Island – Boracay Tubi System Inc. (BTSI) and the Boracay Island Water Company, Inc. (BIWC), to institute more accountabi­lity and ensure that WSPs provide better and responsibl­e services.

In fact, the TIEZA RO and DENR immediatel­y collaborat­ed for a clarificat­ion on the previously issued memoranda with DENR issuing Memorandum Order (MO) No. 2018-04 dated September 18.

The MO provides that connection to the sewer network is sufficient for hotels with 39 rooms and below along the white/ long beach, and hotels with 49 rooms and below elsewhere in the island. Individual sewage treatment plants (STPs) are mandatory only along the white/ long beach for hotels with 40 rooms and above.

“With TIEZA as the sole regulator of water utilities, we will prioritize the overall satisfacti­on of the customers of the WSPs especially the tourists,” said TIEZA RO Chief Regulator Darren Fernandez. “We will ensure the sustainabi­lity of the water management systems of the WSPs.”

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