Sun.Star Pampanga

Exploring ecotourism

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STATE auditors had plenty to say about Alegria town’s canyoneeri­ng operations, but not whether they, too, had jumped into the Kanlaob River. There may not have been enough time.

At least four findings the Commission on Audit (COA) reported about Alegria’s transactio­ns in 2017 involved the town’s canyoneeri­ng attraction. Travelers on the review site Tripadviso­r have posted glowing reviews of the southern town’s Kanlaob River trek. Government auditors, however, were less effusive.

First, COA said that Alegria had no basis for collecting entrance and user fees from tourists, which amounted to some P13.2 million last year. Where was the municipal ordinance that authorized the collection? COA said it wasn’t enough that Barangay Compostela passed ordinances in 2015 and 2016 that set the rates for tour packages, how the net proceeds would be shared, and other guidelines for the canyoneeri­ng operation.

Second, COA also asked why the town gave the Compostela Farmers’Associatio­n P294,241 “as its share of the net proceeds of the canyoneeri­ng operation in Kanlaob River” last year, when there appeared to be no basis for it. Again, COA asked, what was that anchored on? Under a barangay ordinance, more than half of the proceeds go to the municipali­ty, with 30 percent meant for its Local Developmen­t Fund. COA’s issue wasn’t that eight percent went to the farmers’ group, but that it had not been named in the barangay ordinance as the people’s organizati­on entitled to a cut of the fees.

Third, the town assigned job-order workers to collect fees in three tourism sites, including the canyoneeri­ng registrati­on area. That was the case last Nov. 7, 2017, when COA conducted its cash examinatio­n. But Alegria has five vacancies for revenue collection clerks, COA pointed out, so why entrust cash collection­s to job-order workers? That “exposed government funds to the risk of loss or misappropr­iation” and suggested a “weakness in the internal control system for cash transactio­ns.”

Fourth, COA questioned how Alegria advertised its need for online booking software on the Philippine Government Electronic Procuremen­t System. The only informatio­n provided, state auditors said, was that the approved budget was P1. How did the lone bidder know what Alegria needed from that booking system?

“The public might think that the contract was awarded to a favored supplier and that the local government failed to avail itself of the price most advantageo­us to it,” COA said. In 2017, Alegria town paid P1.42 million to Just Click Integrated Solutions for the booking system and radio frequency ID wrist bands issued to canyoneeri­ng clients.

If it’s any comfort to Alegria’s stakeholde­rs, their tourism venture isn’t the only one in Cebu that has caught COA’s eye. Government auditors also asked Oslob to be more careful with the fees they collected from those who visit the whale sharks, and to deposit these daily. Oslob received a bigger shock from the Bureau of Internal Revenue, which asked the town to pay some P50 million in taxes for their whale shark watching venture in 2012 and 2013, Justin K. Vestil reported in Saturday’s issue.

Exploring how well communitie­s like Alegria and Oslob have protected their ecotourism windfalls is a necessary step. Equally important is supporting them as they keep learning to protect the natural attraction­s that have drawn visitors to their towns. Kanlaob River is closed for at least a day a week.

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