The Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority (SBMA) has further suspended the collection of penalties and other fees from Subic Bay Freeport (SBF) business locators and residents to help ease economic difficulties during the Covid-19 pandemic.
In a memorandum issued last Friday, SBMA Chairman and Administrator Wilma T. Eisma said the Subic agency has extended the suspension of penalty payments until the end of June to further assist companies and other stakeholders in recovering from the lockdown.
“Following the imposition of the Luzon-wide enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) beginning March 16, we have ordered the majority of Subic locators to stop their day-to-day operations and the residents to stay at home,” Eisma noted.
“Given the status that we are right now where some companies are still closed or operating on scaled-down capacity, we find it necessary to further assist our locators and residents by suspending the collection of these fees until June 30,” she added.
Prior to this, the SBMA board of directors approved the suspension of penalties and other fees as economic relief assistance to companies and other payers in support of RA 11469, or the Bayanihan to Heal as One Act.
The measures ratified by the SBMA board by way of referendum were the following: Certification No. 20-087, which suspended the imposition of penalty on late payment of billings from March to May 2020; Certification No. 20-088, which suspended fees on deferment of deposit of the maturing post-dated checks of locators and residents with written request for deferment from March to May 2020; and Certification No. 20-089, which extended March to May 2020 due dates covering payment scheme agreements with deed of undertaking.
Eisma said the same resolutions authorized the SBMA chairman and administrator to extend the said measures for another 30 days, as needed.
“Taking note that the SBF further complied with the extension of the ECQ from April 16 to May 15, the modified ECQ from May 16 to 31, and the general community quarantine (GCQ) from June 1 to 15, local businesses really deserve some boost for them to recover,” she added.
Eisma also pointed out that the SBMA had extended the validity of expired IDs and access passes for SBF workers until June 30 and allowed the renewal until July 31 of vehicle decals with one-year validity issued last 2019.
The SBMA announced earlier that close to 900 companies are now operating in the Subic Bay Freeport under GCQ rules, which is about half of all the registered enterprises in the Freeport.
Under the IATF guidelines, some companies were allowed to reopen at either 100% operational capacity; 50% up to full operational capacity; or 50% work-on-site arrangements, work-from-home, and other alternative work arrangement. Still, others, mostly from the leisure sector, were not yet allowed to operate.
Eisma said the SBMA is expecting more reopening in the coming weeks, as more qualified companies comply with minimum safety protocols specified under government guidelines. (MPD-SBMA)
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