Some establishments have already closed, while others are just struggling to survive right now, according to business owners
LIFT THE BAN. Nightclubs and other businesses in Olongapo City and nearby Subic Bay Freeport are clamoring for the lifting of shore leave restrictions on US servicemen when their ships dock in the port of Subic.
Nightclubs and other businesses in
The leave policy
was implemented in late 2014 following the death of Filipino transgender Jennifer Laude allegedly at the
hands of US Marine Joseph Scott Pemberton.
Nearly 7,000
American soldiers participating in war games in the Philippines
this April will have to follow the restrictions involving a 10 pm curfew
and a ban on entering bars and nightclubs. It also means the
movement of US troops outside official activities will be strictly limited
within the vicinity of their respective hotels.
Owners and
managers of nightclubs and bars and other businesses say these restrictions on
shore leave has adversely affected their businesses.
No business
“No business!”
replied Jim Robertson, owner of Scuba Shack bar and restaurant at the
waterfront road of Subic Freeport when asked about the impact of the shore
leave restriction on his business.
“We’re losing
some P50,000 ($1,121.61) a night since this ban was imposed,” said Robertson,
whose place is a favorite hangout of US troops because of its proximity to the
pier where their ships are docked.
“There are two
ships anchored at the bay right now, but their servicemen cannot leave their
ships because they can’t dock. There are more ships coming because of the
Balikatan exercises scheduled this year, but businesses won’t make any money
from this because of the ban,” he added.
Subic Bay
Metropolitan Authority Chairman Roberto V. Garcia confirmed that 9 US warships are due to arrive in Subic this April.
Bayside Disco and
Karaoke manager Pura Orpida lamented the loss of some 80% of their customers
with the ban in place.
“If before an
average of 10 customers come to the club, with the absence of US troops, it’s
now down to two,” she said.
Orpida emphasized
that US troops are a lot more secure when they go to bars and pubs like Bayside
since the girls undergo a lot of documentation and tests before they are
allowed to work.
Struggling,
surviving
At the Naval
Station Bar and Restaurant, its manager Catherine Click acknowledged the huge
impact of the ban on their business operations.
“This business
was originally started with the US
troops visiting Subic as the target market,”
she said. “When the ban was imposed, it really hit us hard because we’re
relying on them to patronize our place,” the 28-year-old manager said.
“Where we used to
make P40,000 ($897.75) to P50,000 ($1,121.61) a night, we're now down to less
than P20,000 ($448.87) a night,” she said.
One popular
hangout along waterfront road reportedly lost as much as P1 million
($22,430.61) when they bought new refrigerators and chillers just before the Laude
tragedy happened last year.
At the HD1 Bar
and Restaurant in Olongapo
City , the news of the ban
came as a depressing one for its manager Erlieboy Esquivel. “We’re making
P50,000 ($$1,121.61) to P60,000 ($1,346.76) a night from these US servicemen as
they love to drink beers and mixed drinks and are really generous spenders but
that sudden imposition of the liberty ban really hit us hard,” said Esquivel.
Because of the
ban, some businesses have already closed shop while others are just struggling
to survive right now, he said.
Esquivel also
shared that club and bar owners and managers were invited recently by
authorities and the agenda was the restriction on liberty.
“It’s not very
encouraging as we have to wait for the Laude case to be resolved before the
Navy authorities will make a decision on allowing liberty for their
servicemen,” he said.
http://www.rappler.com/business/industries/89966-olongapo-subic-businesses-us-troops
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