Last year’s tourism receipts were PHP2.5 million higher than the
PHP16 million generated in 2016, Raoul Bacalla, head of the Palompon municipal
environment and natural resources office, said in an interview over the
weekend.
Kalanggaman Island is part of the municipality of Palompon, which
is about 115 kilometers east of the airport in Tacloban City, the regional
capital.
The number of tourists visiting the island rose to 101,312 in 2017
from 95,677 in 2016. The income earned last year was a big leap from the more
than PHP5-million income collected from entrance fees of 26,353 tourists in
2013 when the island was first opened to the public.
A foreign visitor pays PHP500 for day tour and PHP750 for
overnight stay in the island. A local tourist has to pay PHP20 to PHP150 for
day tour and PHP30 to PHP225 for overnight camping. The rate for domestic
tourists varies for local residents, students, non-students, and senior
citizens.
In 2014, the region’s top tourist destination only generated
PHP3.6 million from 17,693 tourists due to impacts of super typhoon Yolanda
that devastated many parts of Leyte province on Nov. 8, 2013.
Last year's increase in tourism receipts was attributed to the
strict implementation of an ordinance mandating all visitors to register at the
tourism center before entering the famous island in Leyte.
“In the past, we allowed tourists coming from Malapascua Island in
Cebu to immediately go to Kalanggaman, but starting last year, we required all
tourists to register in our tourism center for proper documentation,” Bacalla
said.
Coastal residents in Palompon town are also encouraged to report
tourist boats docking in coastal areas not identified as designated landing
sites.
This policy ensures compliance with the maximum carrying capacity
of 500 tourists daily on the island, according to Bacalla.
In 2014, the local government came up with a policy to help
preserve the natural beauty of the island through a one-week closure every year
devoted for cleaning of the entire island.
“People told us that we are not doing tourism, but discriminating
people. When President Rodrigo Duterte ordered the closure of Boracay, people
started to embrace the policy,” Bacalla said.
Aside from enforcing the maximum capacity, regular water sampling
is also conducted in collaboration with the Environmental Management Bureau to
ensure the health and safety of tourists and maintain the integrity of the
island.
Bacalla added that partying is not allowed in Kalanggaman to
maintain its identity as a place for relaxation, away from the busy life in the
metropolis.
Only soft infrastructure are seen on the island such as toilets,
shower area and a pavilion intended as shelter for their personnel who are
manning the island.
Kalanggaman Island, a one-hour boat ride from the mainland, is a
postcard-perfect virgin island endowed with powder-white sand and crystal clear
waters. It has a long sandbar that stretches toward both sides of the island.
The island that is ideal for relaxation, swimming, snorkeling and
scuba diving is one of the sites offered for cruise tourism destination in the
Eastern Visayas. (RTA/PNA)
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