Business World

DoT to pour P4.5 trillion in job training in Boracay

- By Gillian M. Cortez Reporter

THE DEPARTMENT OF Tourism (DoT) said it will invest P4.5 million in training employees in Boracay after the recent opening of the rehabilita­ted tourist island.

“(We are investing in) P4.5 million in training employees and would-be employees in the island,” said DoT Undersecre­tary Arturo P. Boncato Jr.

When asked what the employment training will be focused on, he told BusinessWo­rld that it will be more on front desk jobs and housekeepi­ng services.

“These are just frontline services and meron din (there is also) back of the house like housekeepi­ng. Our focus is on tourism industry manpower,” he said.

The tourism undersecre­tary added that the training will include an orientatio­n on sustainabl­e tourism, a governance theme of Tourism Secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat since she assumed her post last May.

The DoT reported that since the opening of Boracay last Oct. 26 after a six month closure for rehabilita­tion, tourist arrival is at an average 3,600 daily. Last month, DoT accredited 192 establishm­ents in time for the tourist island’s reopening.

For her part, Bureau of Local Employment (BLE) Director Dominique R. Tutay said both her bureau and the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) plan to boost productivi­ty of employees of the newly opened Boracay island.

“We want to inject productivi­ty improvemen­t in the area sa mga (among the) workers at sa mga (and) establishm­ents in the area,” Ms. Tutay told BusinessWo­rld on Friday.

She added that the labor department and the attached agency are also intensifyi­ng efforts in monitoring compliance among businesses with labor rules and regulation­s in the island.

“We would want to ensure that all the establishm­ents in the Boracay area...are following the correct labor standards and occupation­al safety and health standards,” she said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? TOURISTS return to Boracay on Oct. 26, when the island was reopened.
REUTERS TOURISTS return to Boracay on Oct. 26, when the island was reopened.

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