Undated aerial photo of Alona Beach, from www.alonabeach.co. |
I was reminded of tourism planning, as an aspect of the
climate change debate, when I attended a conference on Climate Change and Development
Policy in Helsinki last 28-29 September 2012 at the invitation of the
United Nations University World Institute for Development Economics
Research. One of the sessions
highlighted the need to decongest spaces and make towns and cities compact for
purposes of energy efficiency, carbon footprint reduction, and climate change
mitigation, recognizing that cities than the rural places, are the largest
emitters of carbon dioxide. While the
argument was done in the context of cities, I believe it is also applicable to
the pseudo-cities, or those I call spaces where the characteristic of cities
(population density and intense requirements of sanitation, utilities, housing,
and transportation) are prevalent and where there is a need to ensure that
proper planning and development processes are pursued.
Take the case of Alona Beach, in Panglao, for example. Visiting Alona Beach, both during the night
and the day, you will be able to imagine the extent of human activity in the area,
experience the degree of congestion, and approximate energy intensity. If numbers are right, Alona Beach and its
surrounding area is home to at least 6,473 people during the peak seasons of
November to April, with population density of approximately 726 people per
square kilometre, a figure very close to Cebu City’s population density figure
in 2009. For the last five years,
construction activity in Alona Beach, and in the barangay of Tawala has
dramatically increased, with permanent structures built almost on one-to-one project
per month basis. While no serious study
has been conducted on the matter, the fear that Alona Beach will become the
next Boracay in terms of chaos, unplanned development, congested spaces, is
valid.
In 2004, UNESCAP
released one of its influential papers in tourism planning and argued that “there
is evidence that some tourism destinations have developed without conscious, strategic
and integrated planning” and that as a consequence “many of them have
experienced unforeseen consequences which have led to their deterioration.” The
same paper suggests, among others, that in order to ensure that we avoid these
consequences, there is a need to reform tourism policy that considers several
aspects impinging on human development, undertake a properly-conducted tourism
planning processes grounded on a comprehensive analysis of context and current
and potential problems, and ensure plan implementation, monitoring, and
evaluation.
The challenge of tourism planning remains a formidable task in
Panglao. I came across a paper that
elaborates the guidelines for Panglao Tourism planning but I still have to see
a spatial plan that comes with it. In
the Bohol Tourism Summit in November 2011, Mayor Alcala of Panglao admits that
one of the challenges of tourism planning in the municipality is the lack of a
Comprehensive Land Use Plan (CLUP), still unfinished during that time. The CLUP is mandated planning document, and
Panglao’s last CLUP has already expired in 2010.
Though the provincial government of Bohol has a tourism
master plan, it may not have an effect on the articulations of priorities
of local government units. The
provincial government, while governing a province, does not govern a geographic
territory. The one that has control over
how land resources are used are the cities and municipalities. This is one of the ironies of local
development planning in the country.
Provinces do not have land use plans, only municipalities do, and for
the many of us who believe that a good plan is grounded on geo-physical
characteristics of an area, with strong considerations of economic, social,
environmental, political contexts, any plan that provinces will make will only
go as far as being instructive, but not prescriptive. At the end of the day, it’s the cities and
towns that decide.
Physical plans of the province of Bohol, for example, will
serve most the intention of the province in defining its priorities and aligning
its development programs but may not necessarily connect to the sets of priorities
of municipalities. While congruence is likely, this is not automatic. In like manner, while the province can set
its priorities for tourism, and even drastically decide to reconfigure the use
of tourism resources, it can not impinge on the right of municipalities like
Panglao to do what it deems right.
Here lies the problem of capacity. I think, there is a little, if not nil
investment in building the capacity of local planners on the ground, especially
in the context of tourism planning. However, there is an abundance of
guidelines for how planning for tourism can be effectively and efficiently
conducted. For example, UNEP published a
book on Sustainable
Coastal Tourism in 2009, and years before that, a guide to assessing
tourism capacity. Several Panglao-specific
studies have already been conducted to serve as planning context documents. For example, in 2006, EcoGov published the Panglao
Island Assessment Report that focused on hydrogeological characterization
of the island and puts forward several recommendations.
This is to say that there is no drought of resources from which Panglao
can learn from, but there is the problem on how these resources can be translated
to capacities that Panglao planners and legislators can use in moving its
tourism planning forward.
Sadly, planning is not the only problem. Implementation is also very problematic. Three years back, I wrote about the efforts of the
municipal mayor in clearing the 20-meter salvage zone that later resulted
to a ridiculous temporary restraining order issued by the court. But then, you
have new players now, playing with the 20 meter salvage zone and making local leaders look like fools.
I am not anti-development.
But the recent opening of a prime tourism destination praised even by
provincial government officials baffled me. In the picture below, that I got
from the resort’s website, The
Bellevue Resort, it is very clear that the 20-meter salvage zone is again
violated. (Bellevue Resort, Panglao, taken from the hotel's official website) |
The tourism planning guidelines of Panglao specifically states that:
“The distance of 100
meters inland from the established easementof 20 meters shall be known as the
“Beach Zone.” The first 10 meters after the easement shall be reserved as “open
space” dedicated as “pathway” for public use. Beyond the beach zone will be the
“Inland Zone.”
“Resort establishments
within the beach zone shall observe height limits of 3 stories or 15 meters
from the original ground line for the first 50 meters from the easement, and
thereafter, may increase to 5 stories.”
“There shall be a
mandatory easement along all coastal areas defined according to the Water Code
of the Philippines as the 20- meter easement from the established high water
measured landward and perpendicular to it. The beachfront easement shall also
include the distance of 10 meters from the mandatory easement which shall be
reserved as open space to be dedicated as pathway for public use. No permanent
structure and sign of any nature shall be allowed within the beachfront
easement.”
The picture above, speaks well of itself. I need not say
more.
But in a situation like this, my argument on political
spaces and geographical boundaries does not seem to hold anymore. There seems to be an explicit agreement that
laws and institutions can be ignored. And
so while you have a weak capacity in planning, you also have a very weak
capacity in implementation.
I just hope that this is not an indication of a weakening
moral fibre of our leaders and our society in the province, a weak sense of
what is right or wrong, or the turning of a blind eye to what is illegal all for
the sake of development.
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