BAGUIO
CITY -- “No businesses, no work; no work, no pay…”
Members of the Hotel and Restaurant
Association of Baguio, last week, came knocking at the doors of City Hall, practically
begging for a chance to revive what was before the Coronavirus Disease 2019
(Covid-19) a lucrative tourism economy.
In a position paper, HRAB detailed how Bureau
of Internal Revenue (BIR) data reflected how lodging businesses lost projected
income of more than P28-Million per month from April to June this year,
compared to the same period in 2019.
The numbers translate to a 75-percent income
loss for the period or a total of 84-Million in three-months.
In
a meeting with city managers, medical frontliners, and local businessmen, HRAB
manifested the closure of some businesses was felt heavily by employees in
lodging businesses, who lost some P80-Million in projected collective income
from April to June.
Wage earners from restaurant businesses
meantime suffered projected income of P40.9-Million for the same period. This,
as the establishments employing them collectively failed to realize
P107.5-Million in monthly income or a total P322.7M in three months.
Meantime in the transportation business,
employees in provincial bus operations suffered some P89-Million in lost income
as their companies failed to realize an aggregate income of more than
P1.2-Billion in the three months.
Resultantly,
the situation triggered “domino effect” on other businesses involving allied
micro, small, and medium enterprises, which were forced to fold up as the
pandemic dragged on. Retrenchment and business closures followed.
Data from the Permits and Licensing Office
(PLO) shows 53-businessmen surrendered their permits.
Humble
cab and jitney drivers were likewise badly hit their income losses projected at
nearly P300-million.
Meantime,
the City Environment and Parks Management Office (CEPMO) bared revenue loss for
bike concessionaires at P38.6-Million. Boat concessionaires, on the other hand,
peg losses at P3.2-Million due to the three-month lockdown.
At Wright Park and Camp John Hay, there are
270-pony boys with mouths to feed. They all failed to realize a collective
income of P7.5-Million.
During the meeting, overheard attendees quipped,
“We may die of Covid-19, but how that is not different from dying of hunger.”
Mayor Benjamin B. Magalong, for his part,
tasked a technical working group to study the petitions of HRAB and other
attendees to the meeting.
He said, while revival of the city’s economy
should be considered, the safety of Baguio residents should not also be
compromised.**Julie G. Fianza
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