Mexico Will Have Long Weekends After Pandemic

Mexico Will Have Long Weekends After Pandemic

After they have been canceled, long weekends will return

Mexico will maintain long weekends as one of the measures to reactivate the tourism sector after the COVID-19 pandemic, the head of the Ministry of Tourism, Miguel Torruco, reported this Wednesday.

The official said that the measure was authorized by President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who at the beginning of February proposed to recover the holidays from the historical dates and eliminate four long weekends from the calendar, which had mandatory breaks on Monday in order to promote tourism.

"Today in the afternoon that I spoke with the president, he authorized me to announce that to detonate internal tourism they are going to stay on long weekends," said Torruco at a press conference together with the undersecretary of Prevention and Health Promotion of Mexico, Hugo López-Gatell.

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The official pointed out that these weekends, about four a year, generate an increase in hotel occupancy of 7 or 8 points and leave a profit for the sector of 38,000 million pesos (about 1,633 million dollars).

Torruco said that this day he met with López-Gatell as well as ten state governors and secretaries of Tourism to integrate a document of about 130 pages with the protocols of all areas of the tourism sector that must intensify and reinforce their hygiene measures for their reactivation .

On this point, the general director of Health Promotion of Mexico, Ricardo Cortés, explained the measures to be taken in each company in the tourism sector for the return to the new normal that will occur with the traffic light of activities proposed by the Government

He said that tourism is "a very big world" that includes transport, air and land, hotels and services in which measures of healthy distance must be reinforced, cleaning of common use areas and closed places, in addition to training staff on how to approach customers

Cortés explained that each tourism company must review the document to know which areas to clean and disinfect, for example airplanes, and how to provide new customer service so that they can queue in waiting rooms in hotels or airports.

Regarding these protocols, strategies and new behaviors, López-Gatell said that the need to return to a new normal is appreciated.

"But it is not going back to what is customary, but rather finding all the opportunities to change our behavior in public space not only as individuals, but as a community," he said.

Torruco explained that during the first quarter of 2020 the arrival of international tourists to the country decreased by 34.4% compared to the same period of the previous year, which resulted in a 45.6% drop in money inflows.

This Wednesday, the Mexican Health authorities reported 2,248 new infections and 424 deaths from COVID-19, with which the country reached 56,594 confirmed cases and 6,090 deaths from the disease.

The death toll on this day is the highest for a day since the start of the pandemic on February 28, and represents an increase of 7.48% compared to the 5,666 that were reported the previous day.

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