MACTAN, Cebu – Mactan is my favorite local tourist destination. It has an international airport with a lot of flights in and out. It also has a number of world class resorts. With the early onset of summer, it was time to take an advanced holiday in Mactan’s Plantation Bay.
I am also happy to contribute to the bloated visitor numbers of Tourism Secretary Ace Durano. That’s plus two for me and my wife to Mr. Durano’s tourism statistics. I am sure I was not the only one surprised when Durano claimed his able leadership generated a total of 8.9 million tourists.
The truth is… foreign visitor arrival is just 2.5 million, even less than usual. But out of desperation to show a better than real report card, Durano included 6.4 million domestic tourists like me in his count. It is bad enough they include in their foreign visitor count the balikbayans who are really Pinoys or dual citizens and shouldn’t be part of an honest count. Many Koreans are also already local residents.
I suspect Durano included in his domestic tourist numbers our kababayans who travel thru the Ro-Ro on Ate Glue’s so called nautical highway to come up with 6.4 million domestic tourists. But they are likely just ordinary Pinoys going home or trading goods who just happened to be domestic travelers. Among us journalists, we have a term for conjured reports but it isn’t polite and it isn’t decent… something along the lines of self gratification which is exactly what Durano is doing when publicizing imagined achievements.
We are still eons away from the 12 million real foreign tourists who visit Thailand. Malaysia probably can boast of 8 million but that may include the Singaporeans who go to Johore on weekends on day trips to shop and load gas. Mr. Durano really has some nerve claiming a figure he knows is not a true measure of his tenure at the Tourism department.
But I have to give credit to Durano’s belated report to Ate Glue about the deleterious effect of DOTC’s failure to regain our Category 1 rating with the US Federal Aviation Authority. He should have spoken up two years ago. It will be recalled that Ate Glue assigned to DOTC Secretary Leandro Mendoza the task of delivering this rating after we lost it, well… more than two years ago.
Our being in a lower rating prevents Philippine Airlines from flying their new and fuel efficient planes to US cities as well as from adding new destinations there. It was also used, according to Durano, as an excuse of Korea and Japan in denying our applications for additional flights that would bring in the tourists Durano needs to deliver a fat but honest count.
But nothing’s going to happen any time soon if we take the track record of this administration to account. The problem with our FAA safety rating will be like the half utilized NAIA 3 — a sad monument of official incompetence in achieving results that are good for the people rather than for just some people.
Bloating figures is apparently a core competence of Mr. Durano. I have just been told that he is now also busy bloating the already humongous bureaucracy at the tourism department. He was said to have reorganized the department beyond the limits of the new tourism law and appointed some 300 favorites to permanent positions. That would tie the hands of the new administration, assuming we will be lucky enough to have a new administration after the May election.
Some elements in the tourism industry’s private sector have expressed apprehension at the way Durano is rushing the implementation of the IRR of R.A. 9593 otherwise known as the Tourism Act of 2009. In the new organizational structure for DOT proper and the three attached agencies the TPB, TIEZA and Duty Free, Durano was claimed to have doubled the number of positions.
The most serious apprehension expressed to me is the secrecy by which the private sector nominees to the TPB and the TIEZA and the Duty Free are being selected. The law envisions a close coordination between the tourism department and the legitimate industry stakeholders but this is supposedly not happening at all. The list of midnight appointments is supposedly already sent to Malacañang for signature of Ate Glue.
If Mr. Durano has any sense of decency and goodwill, he would refrain from these acts of midnight madness. In just a few more weeks, the people could be voting in a new team and this new team should be able to act and carry out their programs without the excess baggage of the past.
But that’s not the way people in this current administration think. They see the last few weeks as the last two minutes to make hay… only goes to show what kind of people they really are.
Plantation Bay
This is one of my favorite resorts not only because it is world class but is also fully Filipino owned and managed. This is one resort that we can proudly point to as embodying the best we can be in this highly competitive industry. It is also far away from the busy part of Cebu, perfect for spending a quiet weekend reading a book or soaking or both.
I have been told that for two years running now, Plantation Bay had been on the Conde Nast Traveler Gold List (top 500 hotels in the world), and their rating qualifies Plantation Bay as one of the top 100 resorts in the world. I am told that they are the only Philippine hotel of any kind on the Gold List, or on the resort top 100 list, which makes them the highest-rated hotel of any kind in the country.
I had seen this resort rise from the rocky shores of Mactan to what it is now. The transformation is unbelievable. It is pretty amazing that the massive investment was made by Pinoys and they have more than survived the tough times.
But one of its problems is the need to constantly train staff who are constantly being pirated by foreign resorts and cruise ships… testimony to their excellent training. Manny Gonzalez, the man behind the resort, told me that he no longer minds the turnover and just merrily proceeds to continually train new recruits. This, he said, is his contribution to the improvement of lives in Cebu and its nearby provinces.
Photo expeditions
Still on tourism, my good friend Mandy Navasero travels back this summer to Batanes and Coron via a photo safari. Navasero is a noted photographer with a degree in photography major in Illustration and Advertising at Brooks Institute in Santa Barbara, California.
Scheduled on March 19-22, April 1-5 and April 23-26, the Batanes photo safari will feature discussions on Batanes’ culture and heritage, photography lectures and demo on portraiture, fashion, architectural, abstract and naturescape. There is an orientation on how to operate digital cameras a week before departure.
Coron is on May 15-18, with accommodation at Mt. Tapyas Hotel. To be visited are Calauit Island, Banana Island, snorkeling at Siete Pecados, cleanest Kayangan Lake nestled amidst awe-inspiring cliffs. Climbing to the Mt. Tapyas ’ giant cross gives a breathtaking panoramic view of the town. Coron is a photographer’s delight, a dreamer’s dream and a perfect holiday destination this summer.
Interested parties may contact 8963208 (attention Mandy Navasero) or call 899 1767, email mandynavasero@yahoo.com <mailto:mandynavasero@yahoo.com> ; or drop by Suite 600 at the Gregorian Building at 2178 Taft Avenue, Malate, Manila or call 526 6363 or email nice_trvl@yahoo.com <mailto:nice_trvl@yahoo.com> .
Big deal!
This one’s from Norbert Goldie.
A little girl goes to the barber shop with her father. She stands next to the barber chair eating a snack cake, while her dad gets his hair cut.
The barber says to her, “Sweetheart, you’re gonna get hair on your muffin.”
She says, “Yes, I know, and I’m gonna get b00bs too.”
Boo Chanco’s e-mail address is bchanco@gmail.com <mailto:bchanco@gmail.com> . This and some past columns can also be viewed at www.boochanco.com <http://www.boochanco.com/>