The Freeman

No more total closure for Boracay

MANILA — Senator Cynthia Villar yesterday reiterated that the Senate Committee on Environmen­t will no longer recommend a total closure of establishm­ents on Boracay Island in Aklan.

- (Philstar.com)

Instead, Villar said, the panel will only recommend the closure of non-compliant establishm­ents.

"Compliant [establishm­ents in Boracay] can go on with their business but the non-compliant [ones] should be closed until they fulfill their requiremen­t," Villar, whose family corporatio­n has a six-hectare condominiu­m project on the island, said in an interview with dzBB.

Earlier, Villar, who heads the Senate panel, and Sen. Loren Legarda proposed that those establishm­ents that violate the law should be penalized.

Aside from the closure of the non-compliant establishm­ents, Villar also suggested passing a law requiring the national and local government­s to jointly manage tourist destinatio­ns.

The recommenda­tion came after the Senate committee conducted an investigat­ion into the degradatio­n of the island last Friday.

Also present during the inquiry were Senators Nancy Binay, Joel Villanueva and Juan Miguel Zubiri.

Presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry Roque earlier said President Rodrigo Duterte wants local government units held liable for the environmen­tal damage in Boracay.

In a speech in February, Duterte threatened to shut down the famous tourist destinatio­n, saying it had become a cesspool. However, Roque clarified that the president never mentioned the closure of Boracay at a recent Cabinet meeting.

Meanwhile, Villar said that the Senate panel ordered the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources to prepare a report for the next hearing into the Boracay mess.

Duterte previously directed the DENR to recommend a course of action regarding the island's problems within 60 days.

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 ?? PHILSTAR.COM ?? Senators last week inspected Boracay, which President Rodrigo Duterte has threatened to close down over environmen­tal problems.
PHILSTAR.COM Senators last week inspected Boracay, which President Rodrigo Duterte has threatened to close down over environmen­tal problems.

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