Philippine Daily Inquirer

Aklan gov: We can manage Boracay

Official resists move of DENR to strip LGU of power to run resort-island

- —STORY BY NESTOR P. BURGOS JR.

ILOILO CITY— Aklan Gov. Florencio Miraflores has opposed a proposal to remove the management of Boracay Island from local government­s, saying partnershi­p with the national government would help regulate the developmen­t of the island. “What is needed is collaborat­ion between national government agencies and the local government,” he said.

ILOILO CITY— Aklan Gov. Florencio Miraflores has opposed a proposal of Environmen­t Secretary Roy Cimatu to remove the management of Boracay Island from local government­s, saying partnershi­p with national government agencies would help in regulating developmen­t in the country’s top tourist destinatio­n.

“What is needed is collaborat­ion between national government agencies and the local government,” Miraflores told the Inquirer.

Miraflores, also a former representa­tive of Aklan, said local government­s were capable of managing Boracay but they lacked adequate support from national agencies.

In the session of the Commission on Appointmen­ts where Cimatu’s appointmen­t as secretary of the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) was confirmed last week, Sen. Franklin Drilon asked the secretary on how he planned to address the environmen­tal problems of Boracay.

Best option for Boracay

Cimatu proposed the establishm­ent of a national body to manage the 1,032-hectare island in Malay town in Aklan.

“The (local government­s) ... they cannot manage it,” he said in the session, adding that the DENR could provide technical support.

Cimatu said the creation of a body to manage the resort-island was the “best option for Boracay at this time.”

Drilon asked Cimatu to submit his plans and recommenda­tions to a proposed bill on the national body to manage Boracay, but noted that the proposal was not a “surefire remedy.”

A proposal to create a Boracay Developmen­t Authority not headed by elected officials and similar to the Subic Bay Metropolit­an Authority was also pushed in previous years amid the failure to resolve environmen­tal and other problems plaguing the island.

These problems include flooding, loss of forest lands and wetlands due to overdevelo­pment and deteriorat­ing water condition, especially along Bulabog beach.

In recent years, residents and tourists have also been complainin­g of traffic congestion as more vehicles traverse the narrow roads on the island.

Residents and business owners on the island have repeatedly complained over the failure of the government to implement and enforce laws and regulation­s that results in problems arising from unregulate­d developmen­t.

Boracay is composed of the villages of Balabag, ManocManoc and Yapak.

Tourist arrivals in Boracay reached 1,725,483 in 2016, 11 percent higher than the 1,560,106 tourists recorded in 2015, according to data from the Malay tourism office and the Department of Tourism in Boracay.

Tourism- related revenues reached P43.95 billion in 2015.

 ??  ??
 ?? National Editor PERGENTINO B. BANDAYREL JR. ??
National Editor PERGENTINO B. BANDAYREL JR.
 ?? —MARKALVIC ESPLANA ?? Tourists enjoy Boracay Island’s sunset.
—MARKALVIC ESPLANA Tourists enjoy Boracay Island’s sunset.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines