The Freeman

Resort owners urged: Follow the law

- Staff Member Lorraine Mitzi A. Ambrad

Cebu Vice Governor Agnes Magpale is urging resort owners in the southern town of Oslob to follow the law and not wait for authoritie­s to put its “strong arm” down.

“Di pa man pud tingali parehas ka grabe sama sa Boracay. If it can be done now nga not necessaril­y closing, phase by phase, puwede pa,” Magpale said.

At least 67 structures owned by various resorts in the town are at risk of being demolished for allegedly violating the standard 20-meter easement from the shoreline.

Oslob is considered the second top tourist destinatio­n in Central Visayas. Local and foreign tourists visit the place for its beaches and for the chance to swim with whale sharks. Ten of the town’s barangays are facing the sea.

The Community Environmen­t and Natural Resources Office (CENRO) of the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) continue to study which structures in Oslob are encroachin­g the shore.

CENRO will conduct the same assessment in Bantayan and Camotes islands.

Magpale hopes the violations are solely on easement. “I hope ang ilang violation kana rang sa easement. Wala pa ko kahibalo sa kadtong mga pipes sa ilalom,” she said yesterday.

The popular tourist island of Boracay has been closed down and will remain closed for the next six months for environmen­tal violations. One of the reasons why it was closed was the discharge of untreated water by establishm­ents directly to the sea.

Magpale said ongoing efforts to enforce laws strictly are intended to prevent tourist destinatio­ns in Cebu from facing a Boracay situation.

The Provincial Tourism Office has been visiting tourist sites and has assisted local government units in determinin­g the carrying capacity of their destinatio­ns.

The Department of Tourism said that of the 6.9 million foreign tourists who arrive in the Philippine­s every year, about 2.9 million visit attraction­s in Central Visayas.

In CV, Mactan remains the top drawer of foreign tourists, followed by Oslob.

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