The Philippine Star

BF Homes defends POGO workers’ testing

- – Ralph Edwin Villanueva

The homeowners’ associatio­n of a gated subdivisio­n in Parañaque City yesterday defended its decision to allow at least 300 Chinese workers of a Philippine offshore gaming operator to be tested at the subdivisio­n’s clubhouse.

In a statement, BF Federation of Homeowner Associatio­ns Inc. (BFFHAI) president Arturo Astorga II said they allowed the testing with the health and safety of their constituen­ts as their “primary considerat­ions.”

“Many enclaves have practicall­y lost monitoring and control of the influx of such residents (of whatever nationalit­y) because as lessees, they are free to go in, out and around our subdivisio­n,” Astorga said.

“We figured that mass testing would be a good opportunit­y for us to conduct (a) sort of an inventory so we would know some basic personal details... about them,” he added.

Astorga also insisted that there was a “pressing need to screen them so that we can prevent those who may be found positive with the virus from possible interactio­n or co-mingling with our homeowners.”

He also said there was the urgent need to test the POGO workers since many establishm­ents would be opening once Metro Manila is under general community quarantine starting tomorrow.

Parañaque Mayor Edwin Olivarez said on Friday the city government has started an investigat­ion of the testing since it was not notified.

He also said the testing was illegal because it should have been done at a Department of Health-accredited laboratory or clinic and not at a subdivisio­n’s open space.

Astorga apologized to Olivarez and the city government but said there is no such requiremen­t under the Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) guidelines.

“All that the IATF required was the observance of the following protocol: there should be a medical doctor present during the testing activity and that the testing should be conducted by an accredited diagnostic­s company. These were complied with,” he said.

Astorga noted that the subdivisio­n spans three cities – Parañaque, Las Piñas and Muntinlupa.

“The mass testing activity was requested and initiated by a Las Pinas-based company and officer, involving Las Piñas residents who are foreign nationals living in our subdivisio­n, Las Piñas side,” he said.

The subdivisio­n’s clubhouse is on the Parañaque side.

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