Philippine Daily Inquirer

GOV’T TO REQUIRE FIRMS TO ADOPT ADDITIONAL HEALTH PROTOCOLS

- By Roy Stephen C. Canivel @roycanivel_inq

The government is drafting a set of health protocols that businesses must adhere to—or run the risk of being shuttered.

In a statement on Thursday, the Department of Trade and Industry said it was working with the Department of Health and the Department of Labor and Employment for the issuance of the guidelines, which include among others, workfromho­me arrangemen­ts and provisions for vitamins.

“The conduct of COVID19 tests, provision of nearby accommodat­ions and shuttle services, allowing more workfromho­me arrangemen­ts, health care preparedne­ss and insurance from enterprise­s should be the new normal as we ease into the new way of doing business,” Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez said.

Other health protocols that need to be embedded in businesses’ standards include “strict social distancing, wearing of face masks, presence of sanitation stations, taking of body temperatur­e and provision of vitamins must always be observed in work and public places,” according to Lopez.

Asked if these “guidelines” were mere guidance for businesses, Lopez said these “will include penalties for noncomplia­nce, which may include closure until they comply.”

The new virus, which was first reported in China in December, is redefining nearly all facets of life, including the way companies do business, as countries extend the lockdown of their borders and limit peoples’ movements.

To recall, in the early days of the enhanced community quarantine here in Luzon, Lopez had appealed to key businesses to provide free lodging and shuttle services to their workers, specifical­ly those affected by the halt in public transport.

Although battered by the pandemic, too, the private sector had extended help, with many firms donating large amounts of money to help those in need. Arthur Tan, CEO of

Ayala manufactur­ing company Integrated Microelect­ronics Inc., said, however, this could lead to overdepend­ence.

“Constantly just giving away everything, or asking private industry to support everything, is not going to be sustainabl­e,” Tan said during a previous online general membership meeting of the Management Associatio­n of the Philippine­s.

“I mean, we all want to help. But if the idea is that we’re going to help to the level that there will no longer be an economy to come back to, I think that’s false hope,” he said.

Lopez said precaution­ary measures should be exercised in order to minimize health risks among workers.

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