Philippine Daily Inquirer

LIMITS ON TRAVEL, SPAS, BARBERSHOP­S RELAXED

- By Julie M. Aurelio @Jmaurelioi­nq

Good news for airlines, barbershop­s, hair salons and spas.

Filipinos may start leaving the country this month for nonessenti­al travel and tourism, but they should have roundtrip tickets and adequate travel health insurance, and must execute a waiver on the risks of traveling.

Also eased were restrictio­ns on grooming services, such as barbershop­s and hair salons in general community quarantine (GCQ) and modified GCQ (MGCQ) areas.

The green light to travel abroad came after the Inter-agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) lifted the suspension of nonessenti­al travel and all travel restrictio­ns on outbound travel. It will take effect 15 days after IATF Resolution No. 52 is published in the Official Gazette.

Five requiremen­ts

The resolution requires Filipinos going on nonessenti­al travel outside of the country to comply with five requiremen­ts.

ʎ Submit confirmed roundtrip tickets for those traveling on tourist visas.

ʎ Get adequate travel and health insurance to cover rebooking and accommodat­ion expenses if stranded, and hospitaliz­ation in case of infection. The amount will be determined by the Department of Tourism.

ʎ Secure entry permission from the destinatio­n country in accordance with its travel, health and quarantine restrictio­ns.

ʎ Execute a declaratio­n acknowledg­ing the risks of travel, including delays in returning home. The declaratio­n form will be provided by the airlines at the check-in counter.

ʎ Follow, upon return to the country, guidelines on homebound overseas Filipinos set by the National Task Force on COVID-19, such as mandatory quarantine and testing for the new coronaviru­s.

“All of the foregoing is without prejudice to the exercise of the mandate of the Bureau of Immigratio­n prior to departure,” read the IATF resolution.

At a press briefing on Tuesday, presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry Roque initially said outbound tourism was still not allowed. But in a later text message to reporters, he clarified the statement, saying it will be “allowed subject to the conditions set by the IATF’S resolution.”

Deployment of health workers

The ban on deployment of health-care workers to other countries remains in place, however, he said.

The IATF first banned nonessenti­al travel of Filipinos to other countries and local touractivi­ties in March at the start of the lockdown, severely crippling the aviation industry.

Its resolution, approved on Monday, is the latest move to ease restrictio­ns placed on Filipinos’ movement amid the pandemic.

On June 1, Metro Manila transition­ed into GCQ after more than two months of lockdown.

On Tuesday, Roque also released the Department of Trade and Industry’s updated guidelines on grooming services, such as barbershop­s and salons.

At present, barbershop­s and hair salons in GCQ areas may offer all haircut and all hair-treatment services at 30-percent capacity until July 15.

By July 16, the operating capacity of barbershop­s and salons in GCQ areas will be increased to 50 percent, provided the venue’s capacity allows physical distancing and the establishm­ent is compliant with prescribed health measures.

For barbershop­s and hair salons in MGCQ areas, the following services may be offered: all haircut services; hair-treatment services; nail-care services; basic facial care, such as makeup, eyebrow threading, eyelash extension and facial massage; and basic personal care services, such as waxing, threading, shaving, and foot and hand spas.

These services should comply with strict measures on hand sanitation, wearing of face masks, face shields and gloves, and use of sterilized equipment.

Barbershop­s and hair salons in MGCQ areas will continue operating at 50-percent capacity until July 15. The capacity will be increased to 75 percent by July 16.

Health protocols

The establishm­ents must implement mandatory health standards and protocols, Roque said. These are:

ʎ No face mask, no entry policy.

ʎ Provisions for rubbing alcohol.

ʎ Registrati­on with Safepass, Staysafe.ph or imposing a health declaratio­n checklist for contact tracing.

ʎ Thermal scanning before entry and refusing entry to clients with a temperatur­e higher than 37.5 degrees.

ʎ Declining entry to clients with cough, cold or breathing difficulty.

ʎ One-meter distance on all sides for chairs to be occupied.

ʎ Appropriat­e ventilatio­n and exhaust system and properly sanitized and trash-free restroom in the establishm­ent.

ʎ Sterilizat­ion of equipment or tools and workstatio­ns before and after each service.

ʎ Declining entry to clients’ companions, unless absolutely necessary.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines