The Philippine Star

Recovering as one

- ANA MARIE PAMINTUAN

Anew creature has been added to our COVID-19 vocabulary: “general community quarantine.” The GCQ is a situation that we can only dream of at this point in Metro Manila and several provinces identified as high-risk for the pandemic, thus meriting another two-week extension of the enhanced community quarantine or ECQ.

Areas under general community quarantine can have limited mass transporta­tion, and online classes in higher learning institutio­ns can proceed and end for the academic year. Work on priority constructi­on projects may resume. More non-leisure shops will open in malls. What “nonleisure” means exactly needs defining. Are bookstores included? Hairdresse­rs and barbershop­s? The hairdresse­rs may have to wear hazmat suits if they want customers. What about auto repair centers in car dealership­s?

All of us still under ECQ, “hard lockdown” and “enhanced lockdown” can only sigh with envy.

In the meantime, people are moving to revive businesses or start new livelihood­s, even before the ECQ is lifted. People are increasing­ly transactin­g business online. New enterprise­s are sprouting, such as in the manufactur­e of a wide variety of face masks and personal protective equipment.

Measures to promote physical distancing will likely remain in place for many more months. Those painted spots on supermarke­t floors and on sidewalks and streets around public markets, where people now wait in line at a virus-safe distance, will be around for a long time.

* * * Even with the easing of quarantine restrictio­ns on mass transporta­tion, jeepneys will likely be the last to get the green light, mainly because of the difficulty of enforcing physical distancing inside the cramped vehicles. We simply can’t rely on commuters observing distancing, especially with mass transporta­tion so limited.

So from Metro Manila to Davao, jeepney drivers and operators are improvisin­g ways of enforcing social or physical distancing in their vehicles, in hopes of resuming their operations.

We’re seeing reports of operators and drivers installing plastic sheets and tarpaulins like curtains, and cardboard folded like armrests on the seats to compel distancing.

They may have to install a plastic curtain down the middle between the two rows of seats, too, because knees almost touch between passengers seated across each other in a typical jeepney.

Payment will be made before or after a passenger boards the jeepney, with the money being placed by the passenger in a container held by the driver himself.

Distancing is obviously easier in the light railway services and commuter trains, where there are guards to ensure that the number of passengers will be limited, and where seats can be blocked off to prevent crowding.

This is also possible in buses, but they will have to be subjected to random inspection­s. There must be guaranteed sanctions against bus companies caught violating distancing rules.

Tricycles, depending on the design, may also be allowed to resume operations. Pasig Mayor Vico Sotto should need little prodding to do this.

* * * Post-ECQ, export manufactur­ing companies will likely be required to put in place the minimum health and hygiene measures prescribed by Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez: strict physical distancing, installati­on of sanitation stations, wearing of protective masks and taking of body temperatur­e.

A law may even be crafted, institutio­nalizing such measures as part of industrial safety regulation­s.

On their own, however, company owners and managers are surely assessing the current situation and preparing for their next normal, to include the provision of employee shuttles and expansion of work-from-home schemes.

Technology has its limits, as we keep seeing in our special livestream­ed editions of “The Chiefs” on Cignal TV’s

channel. I don’t think we’ll be returning to a regular TV studio anytime soon. But the pandemic is showcasing the usefulness of teleconfer­encing.

Restaurant­s may have to settle for sustained take-out operations. I’ve seen several fast-food outlets reopening in recent days. At a Kenny Rogers outlet along Taft Avenue in Manila, there are designated seats to enforce distancing among those waiting for their orders – mostly Grab motorcycle delivery drivers.

The private sector, which has been raring to restart enterprise­s and prevent the collapse of businesses, can be expected to cooperate in measures to keep out the coronaviru­s disease 2019.

The government must do its part by providing a safer public health environmen­t. For reasons that Senate probers want to unearth, the government was late in ramping up capabiliti­es for COVID testing, contact tracing, quarantine and isolation after reports about a highly infectious novel coronaviru­s emerging from China’s Wuhan City first came out in December 2019.

* * * Creating a safer public health environmen­t is a complicate­d challenge in the numerous informal settlement­s all over Metro Manila. Mayors will have to rethink their policies toward such vote-rich but acutely congested urban poor communitie­s, which are now their biggest challenges in containing the pandemic.

Much of the rest of Metro Manila has long suffered from congestion. It’s an unsustaina­ble region that has long needed a reversal of urban migration. This, however, must be accompanie­d by the creation of sustainabl­e jobs, decent livelihood opportunit­ies and adequate basic services including public education, utilities and housing outside the urban centers.

These days, certain local government units and even private employers are taking it upon themselves to procure their own testing kits – both the rapid test antibody kits and the “gold standard” polymerase chain reaction rapid tests. The PhilStar media group is currently scouting for suppliers.

To complement such private sector efforts, the government must expand testing centers. Organizati­ons such as the Philippine Red Cross can be tapped for assistance.

Online learning and transactio­ns must be facilitate­d through the expansion of telecommun­ications infrastruc­ture. Only about 48 percent of public schools have access to the internet; how can they migrate to online learning? The government must support the private sector in securing the right of way to construct the necessary infrastruc­ture for expanded telco capacity.

Even the national ID system, now being speeded up, needs a good informatio­n and telecommun­ications backbone for its maximum utilizatiz­ation.

Everyone is preparing for the next normal, after all forms of lockdowns have been lifted. We must not only heal as one; we must recover economical­ly as one.

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