Philippine Daily Inquirer

SUBIC TRADERS WANT END TO TOURISM, ENV’T FEES

- —ALLAN MACATUNO INQ

Ten companies operating inside this free port have asked Subic Bay Metropolit­an Authority (SBMA) to review its resolution­s which, they said, have caused the business community here to “distrust the agency.”

In an April 24 letter to the SBMA board of directors, owners of these companies asked for the reexaminat­ion of the resolution­s enforcing a common use service area (Cusa) fee, environmen­t and tourism administra­tive fee (Etaf), and integrity pledge.

They said these new fees and obligation were not part of the original lease agreements signed with SBMA.

“Some of us have had to seek judicial relief. Some took the option of paying fees and taxes under protest and others reluctantl­y paid and obeyed to buy peace and convenienc­e,” they said.

In their letter, they asked the board to “bring back the level of trust between locators and SBMA.”

SBMA Chair Martin Diño said he was backing the businessme­n’s position to keep the free port a “conducive business environmen­t.” “In the most recent board meeting, I reiterated my stand. There should be a moratorium on imposing the Cusa [fee], Etaf and integrity pledge,” Diño said during his State of the Free port Address on April 24.

“The locators should know where the fund [generated from Cusa and Etaf] goes. There should be a consultati­ve and participat­ory democracy here,” he added.

The Cusa fee, imposed in 2012, pays for SBMA’s expenses for municipal services, such as street cleaning, street lighting, firefighti­ng and law enforcemen­t inside the free port.

Locators are being charged 2 percent of the appraised value of their leased land or 20 percent of their monthly lease rental, whichever is higher, as their Cusa fee.

Etaf has been collected since 2014 to “protect and conserve the environmen­t and implement programs that will mitigate the carbon footprint caused by free port tourists or visitors.”

Under the Etaf, each tourism establishm­ent will collect P20 per person who visits theme parks, beaches and other firms with fixed entrance fees.

Etaf requires certain enterprise­s to collect P100 per person per playing day at golf courses and P100 per room per night for hotel clients.

Both revenue-generating measures have been opposed by the business sector here. Some investors turned to the courts to stop the collection of the fees which they described as “excessive” and “illegal.”

SBMA also required investors to sign the integrity pledge as a prerequisi­te for business registrati­on and renewal of permit.

“Without looking into the merits of the court cases already filed against SBMA, we believe it is necessary that the said resolution­s be reviewed,” the locators said in the letter.

Mark Dayrit, chair of Brighterda­y Subic Limited Inc., was one of the businessme­n who objected to the three resolution­s. His firm operates a hotel, restaurant and beach resort inside the free port.

In November 2016, Dayrit filed a petition for mandamus and preliminar­y injunction at an Olongapo Regional Trial Court (RTC) against SBMA’s integrity pledge, saying the agency “coerced and forced” locators to sign the document to ensure the continuity of their business operations.

SBMA initially refused to issue the certificat­e of registrati­on and tax exemption ( CRTE) of Dayrit’s firm after the latter declined to sign the integrity pledge.

But Judge Raymond Viray of RTC Branch 75 in Olongapo City issued in February this year a writ of preliminar­y injunction that stopped SBMA from imposing the integrity pledge on Dayrit’s company.

“The manner by which it is being implemente­d is abhorrent. It is prone to abuse as SBMAmay impose other similar requiremen­ts in the future which really serve no purpose at all,” Viray said in his order.

The order prompted SBMA to release the CRTE of Brighterda­y Subic Limited.

 ?? —NIÑO JESUS ORBETA ?? Subic Bay Freeport is one of the major drivers of Central Luzon region’s economy.
—NIÑO JESUS ORBETA Subic Bay Freeport is one of the major drivers of Central Luzon region’s economy.

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