The Philippine Star

TELLING OUR stories

SUN, SAND AND SUSTAINABI­LITY

- BERNADETTE ROMULO-PUYAT

EVERYTIME I go abroad, there’s always someone who can’t wait to tell me about Boracay. This was even before I was appointed Secretary to the Department of Tourism. It usually happens after they find out I’m Filipino.

It’s then that they share a favorite memory of visiting the island. Their tales and anecdotes, some going as far back as the early 1980s, are always told with such warmth and nostalgia that you can already anticipate the inevitable conclusion of stories like these: that Boracay, as they knew it, is gone.

Such is the fate of most Edens. At least in the stories we’ve been told and that we tell.

Things have changed though since we closed Boracay last year to rehabilita­te the island. Since then, the stories have started to take on a different tone, one of hope and excitement to visit again. It is no longer a paradise lost.

In the span of one year, Boracay has gone from a toxic environmen­tal disasterin-the-making to the country’s shining example of sustainabl­e tourism. At every tourism event that I attend, the Philippine­s is applauded and recognized for how we’ve handled the rehabilita­tion. During the 22nd ASEAN Tourism Ministers Meeting in Vietnam last January, overtouris­m was the main issue. Popular destinatio­ns like Phuket and Bali are also coping with the effects of poor sewage management and unregulate­d constructi­on, much like it was in Boracay before the closure. We didn’t need to say we were already implementi­ng the necessary policies and measures, they knew we were already. While other countries are still focusing on cleanup, the Philippine­s has set the carrying capacity of the island and enforced the easement rule, which prevents any structures from being set up 30 meters from the highest tide measured inland.

If there was something I kept hearing, it was the hope that other countries would do the same.

I am always asked how we were able to do it and actually close an island paradise during its peak season.

My answer is always the same. You just have to do it.

After all, tourism isn’t just about marketing our spectacula­r landscapes and driving up the number of internatio­nal arrivals. It’s also about making difficult decisions that may be unpopular in the short term but with far-reaching benefits. That takes a lot of political will as well as cooperatio­n between agencies.

In the case of Boracay, we at the Department of Tourism worked closely with the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources headed by Secretary Roy Cimatu, the Department of the Interior and Local Government headed by Secretary Eduardo Año, and the Department of Public Works and Highways headed by Secretary Mark Villar. Our orders were clear and everyone worked together to follow them. That’s the only way you can do it. But tourism isn’t just about Boracay. It is an entire industry that has developed provinces, built cities, created businesses and provided jobs.

Tourism spurs developmen­t of rural areas and the countrysid­e. Tiny islands in our archipelag­o progress because of infrastruc­ture developmen­t. Imagine, many areas that were isolated from the rest of the country are now places worth traveling thousands of miles for. The residents of these far-flung areas no longer have to bear the hardship of having under-developed connectivi­ty, inadequate power, and the lack of health and safety facilities. More importantl­y, they now have ensured livelihood­s that can feed families and put children to school.

That said, tourism should also play a role in preserving local culture. Heritage sites like our Baroque churches in the Ilocos region or natural wonders like the Cordillera rice terraces have been spared from urbanizati­on through cultural tourism. In the Visayas, Silay City has distinctiv­e and well-preserved heritage houses that

are a link to our colonial past. Homeowners have converted these into museums or bed and breakfast accommodat­ions that showcase our history and prevent our important heritage structures from being destroyed. Even traditions such as the T’nalak weaving traditions of the T’boli people of Lake Sebu in South Cotabato continue to thrive because of government support and tourism.

Looking to the future, there are many more plans that I want to implement and programs I want to see take effect.

Farm tourism is one of them. R.A. 10816, also known as the Farm Tourism Developmen­t Act of 2016, institutio­nalizes the farm tourism programs of the government and opens new perspectiv­es for inclusive and sustainabl­e agricultur­al and rural developmen­t. It’s a program that’s very close to my heart. When I was working as an undersecre­tary for the Department of Agricultur­e, I spent years traveling around the country, talking to farmers and hearing about how their struggle to do one of the nation’s most important jobs. Spend a day with a farmer and you will begin to appreciate how much it takes to feed a nation. It makes you grateful for the food on your plate and the workers who till the land. Besides giving farmers much needed additional income streams, farm tourism will allow the rest of us to truly appreciate their work and how much it contribute­s to our entire nation.

If there’s anything that tourism can really do it’s to engender and evoke empathy and compassion. That’s something I learned early on, from my father. He traveled the world long before he left his hometown, Camiling, Tarlac. Going to the school library, he would read about other places and their people. My dad read so much that by the time he did get to fly to other countries he would know more about it than its citizens. But he always encouraged us to travel if we could.

Being there, wherever that is, completed the story.

He told me that visiting other countries and experienci­ng different cultures makes you truly appreciate how diverse and complex the world is, yet also makes you see how similar we all are. The same can be said of our own archipelag­o. We are a diverse culture. That’s something we don’t always know what to make of, but we should celebrate it. It’s that diversity that makes us different, it’s what sets us apart, and makes us more fun. Now that’s the story we can tell.

 ??  ?? Boracay after it reopened last year, following a six-month closure to rehabilita­te it.
Boracay after it reopened last year, following a six-month closure to rehabilita­te it.
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 ?? Photo by WALTER BOLLOZOS ?? Tourism is an entire industry that has developed provinces, built cities, created businesses and provided jobs.
Photo by WALTER BOLLOZOS Tourism is an entire industry that has developed provinces, built cities, created businesses and provided jobs.

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