The Philippine Star

Secure facilities needed to restart hotel industry

- By CATHERINE TALAVERA

Hotels are urged to create a secure and COVID- proof accommodat­ion facilities to be able to tap the domestic tourism market in line with restarting the industry, according to a property consultanc­y firm.

“With foreign visitor arrivals remaining out of the picture, restarting the hotel sector through domestic tourism could start from creating secure and COVID- proof accommodat­ion facilities,” Cushman and Wakefield Philippine­s said in a property market news report.

“Restoring travel appetite among domestic travelers could take some time even if a number of accommodat­ion establishm­ents have been allowed to restart operations,” it said.

The Department of Tourism (DOT) reported earlier this month that over 7,000 accommodat­ion establishm­ents have been given the green light to operate under varying quarantine conditions.

This was through the issuance of Certificat­es of Authority to operate (CAO) and provisiona­l CAOs to 7,200 hotels, resorts and other accommodat­ion establishm­ents.

The DOT stressed earlier that accommodat­ion establishm­ents are required to secure a CAO or a provisiona­l CAO before commencing operations in various quarantine zones. This is to ensure that health and safety protocols are in place.

“Not only will a CAO a provisiona­l CAO from DOT indicate the allowable operation of accommodat­ion establishm­ents, it likewise adds to guests’ confidence, knowing that these establishm­ents have been inspected and are compliant with our protocols that follow globally-recognized health and safety standards, Tourism Secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat said earlier.

“We are happy to see the numbers go up as more tourism destinatio­ns reopen for domestic travelers,”she said.

Cushman and Wakefield earlier said cautious customers would continue to dampen the travel industry for both internatio­nal and domestic tourism.

“Domestic travel is deterred by the additional cost of having to secure mandatory medical/health certificat­es required for intraregio­nal movement and other associatio­n costs that could arise from domestic travel requiremen­ts issued by national and local government­s,” the property consultanc­y said.

“Nonetheles­s, the return to full operations of hotel establishm­ents signals the sectos readiness once travel appetite resumes,”it said.

In October, the DOT announced that hotels in general community quarantine areas (GCQ) and modified GCQ areas are allowed to operate at full capacity as the DOT was given the authority by the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID), to determine the allowable operationa­l capacity, up to 100 percent, for hotels, including staycation hotels, in areas classified under GCQ and MGCQ.

Puyat, however, stressed that the decision to open at 100 percent operationa­l capacity would be subject to the hotel management’s decision and compliance with the safety guidelines.

The DOT stressed that this was made through the IATFEID’s approval of Resolution No. 79 last October 15.

The said resolution replaces the provision that accommodat­ion establishm­ents in areas under GCQ may only operate with a skeleton work force, and now provides that such operations may be governed by the issuances of relevant national agencies such as the DOT.

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