HAPPY WEEKEND
By Gina Dizon
SAGADA, MOUNTAIN
PROVINCE- Francesca manages a souvenir shop frequented by tourists
who came in droves during weekends. That was before the Covid pandemic hit this
tourist town March this year till now.
Now
that the Covid virus has reared its ugly head, Francesca sells whatever stuff
she can display at her once souvenir shop to feed a family.
She
sells vegetables- beans, cabbage, eggplant, green pepper and fruits- dragon
fruit, santol, watermelon, bananas, coconuts -both from local harvest and from
neighboring places as Isabela and Quirino.
She
also sells ornamentals as roses and hibiscus transported from Baguio and other
flowering plants she herself has propagated.
And
like the rest of the other souvenir shops, Francesca also goes into selling
wagwag popularly called ukay- ukay and existing dry goods in her store.
This
she does while hopeful that her loan application from Small Business
Corporation (SBC) facilitated by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI)
in its Covid 19 Assistance to Restart Enterprises (CARES) loan program for
entrepreneurs be approved.
Some
of Francesca’s goods on sale expired and not bought during the start of
the Covid pandemic with the non- arrival of tourists March this year.
If
her loan application gets approved, she said she will use the money as capital to produce her
own products.
Like other places dependent on tourism, Sagada’s many tourism stakeholders including tourist guides, souvenir shop owners, cafe and restaurant proprietors, and
homestay and inn keepers had been hardest hit when Covid-19 prevented tourists
from visiting the town.
And
among them are some 50 souvenir shops owners in town who were hardest hit by the pandemic.
Josephine who manages a
souvenir shop when asked the difference in sales when tourism was on the go and
when tourism dropped said she incurred a 100% drop in sales.
Another
souvenir shop owner, Belinda converted her souvenir shop to selling dry
goods- sugar, salt, noodles, cookies, pasta and all kinds of dry
goods.
With
need for big capital not many ventured into this.
Also
managing their respective homestay, Francesca and Belinda and the rest of some
150 inn keepers of the Sagada Inns and Homestay Association (SIHA) pooled money
to help the other.
With
a collected monthly amount one takes the pooled funds alternately until all
have taken their share.
Others
in the tourism business are making processed foods and still cooking and
packing their usual jams, jellies, pickles, bread, wine and these sold to
Manila.
A private- public partnership of a private person based in Manila and the LGU through the office of the
municipal agriculturist (OMAG) goes into a marketing venture. The OMAG coordinates the orders from a private person in
Manila and the products transported to the waiting buyers.
Another marketing venture which helps farmers in selling their vegetable products is the department of agrarian reform (DAR) through its Linksfarm program.
Other private initiatives are The Sagada Harvests Project in partnership with Nuwang Enterprises of Sagada and other individual efforts directly marketing the towns' products- both veggies and processed foods in Baguio and Manila..
Vegetables marketed
in Manila are produced by the usual farmer-residents of the town and a number of new gardeners who turned to farming.
While
individuals and groups have moved into making their own recovery initiatives,
the municipality’s tourism office is awaited what program it can do to help the
many households who are into tourism industry in town with the Department
of Tourism’s (DOT) P58 billion recovery program for tourism stakeholders.
Yet,
self reliant folks seemingly in this tourist town are not that optimistic for
government support as loans but would be thankful if such come true to ease the
effect of the pandemic.
With
stringent requirements, the SBC-DTI has only approved 30 applicants from the
many applicants in Mountain Province, it was learned.
The
SBC-DTI loan is specially offered to those whose business are into
manufacturing and whose sales have been mostly affected during this pandemic.
In
agriculture, only 200 farmers out of 500 identified farmers have been approved
to avail of the no-interest and non-collateral loan of P25,000 per farmer from
the Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural Credit Policy Council loan
program.
The
rest of many traditional farmers who utilize their harvest for home consumption
are not qualified to avail of the service as they did not lose ay harvest. Nor
those who are beginning to get into gardening as an alternative source of
income.
Many
turned into gardening as noted in the increase of sales of commercial
fertilizer in local stores.
Sagada is basically an
agricultural town populated by some 13,000 residents with some 3,300 households
with almost half of the households into tourism as homestay and inn keepers,
souvenir shops owners, café and resto proprietors, masseurs, and tourist
guides.
Just
a few hundreds of the 3,300 households are employed in government as teachers
and personnel in the LGU and government line agencies who receive regular pay.
The
rest of some estimated 90 % of the populace are private individuals who either
have their own business, employed in private cooperatives, and a number who
manage their own farms or work as seasonal construction workers and farm
laborers.
Meantime,
other residents do home cooked food to augment their income.
Minerva
sells home- cooked food- lumpia, turon, kutchinta, shanghai- which are pre
-ordered via Facebook and text messages.
Minerva
is one among some young women who sell home cooked food and these being bought
by friends, neighbors and relatives.
Weavers
continue to weave waiting for the right time when the pandemic shall end and
able to get back again to selling their stuff to tourists and the outside
market.
And
is it possible to sell their woven goods just like how the LGU is coordinating
the sale of veggies and processed foods in Manila.
Trade
specialist Yakima Cadiogan from the DTI in one recovery forum facilitated via
webinar said the product has to be inspected by and photographed by DTI to be
included in the DTI’s OTOP (one town one product) shop to ensure quality sale.
Money
is limited coming in except for the salaries of a few government personnel and
the innovations on Sagada veggies and home processed food marketed in Manila.
Some
families turn to family members who luckily are gainfully employed abroad apart from food produce from the land.
Still,
money is needed to pay outstanding loans and other financial obligations most
especially.
Community volunteer Gwen Gaongen who also works
with DOT noted there is a need to infuse money from outside.
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