Sun.Star Cebu

An explainer needed

- ELIAS L. ESPINOZA atty.elliee@gmail.com

I thought there was a police checkpoint farther ahead. I was wrong. It turned out that plenty of motor vehicles were on the road, the first day of the general community quarantine in the city.

Conflict? On Monday, June 1, 2020, at about 5 p.m., on my way home from the office, the tail-end of the motor vehicles going to the direction of Talamban were at the area of a university in Kasambagan. I thought there was a police checkpoint farther ahead. I was wrong. It turned out that plenty of motor vehicles were on the road, the first day of the general community quarantine (GCQ) in the city.

More motor vehicles are now out as business owners, employees, and workers are back to work in offices and establishm­ents allowed to reopen under GCQ. Many workers were stranded because the public transport was not enough. Some have to walk to their work places.

That one might be infected with Covid-19 even if everyone complies and observes the health protocols issued by the Department of Health (DOH) and the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-MEID) is still a huge concern, especially when people start to congregate.

I suppose it is the concern of Cebu Gov. Gwen Garcia when she issued Executive Order (EO) 17-D that restricts travel to and from the towns and component cities of the Province and Cebu City when they are already under GCQ. EO 17-D had taken effect. Exempted under this EO 17-D are the health and emergency frontline personnel.

The requiremen­ts for those who would travel from the town or city to Cebu City and vice-versa is not quite easy, which in a way discourage­s people from traveling. Sections 8.9 and 8.10 of EO 17-D require persons who want to travel to Cebu City from their town or city to secure a travel authority from their mayor and those from Cebu City who want to travel to the towns or component cities are mandated to get a pass from Capitol.

The governor exercises the authority to issue EOs under the Local Government Code, or RA 7160, particular­ly Section 465, paragraph (b), sub-paragraphs (1) and (vii) in relation to this pandemic. After EO 17-D was posted on FB, several comments and questions popped up. Experience tells us that it’s not a walk in the park to get a travel pass, which is only good for one day.

I truly believe that the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) should come up with an “explainer” to prevent confusion. To recall, DILG Secretary. Eduardo Año on May 28, 2020 said that passes are no longer needed in GCQ areas. He was interviewe­d by CCN after IATF-MEID issued Resolution 40 that downgraded some provinces, including Cebu, towns and cities to GCQ.

It’s the noble intention of the untiring and sometimes feisty Governor Garcia in issuing the EO 17-D to protect her constituen­ts. Perhaps, she did this in preparatio­n for the accelerati­on of the Province to a modified GCQ on June 12 that coincides with the celebratio­n of Independen­ce Day.

But there is a need for a clarificat­ion from the DILG or the IATF to avoid confusion and misunderst­anding between the police manning the checkpoint­s and those who travel from GCQ area to another GCQ area on which order to follow. A travel pass is akin to quarantine pass because one can’t move out without it.

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