Tourism May 27, 2020 - 3:38 pm

Dominican highland town readies return of tourists

Training

Jarabacoa, Dominican Republic.- The Ecotourism Cluster of Jarabacoa on Wednesday said that together with the National Institute of Professional Technical Training (INFOTEP), it has started training for companies related to tourism in that municipality, with a view to an eventual opening of that sector.

The training covers the handling of Safety Standards and Sanitary Protocol before COVID-19. It requires 15 hours of professional training.

The institutions plan to extend the training to the other companies since in the economic field it intersects or has a relationship with the tourists who visit them.

“Jarabacoa occupies one of the first places as a choice of economic rank for internal tourism and we are preparing for the economic opening and to be declared as a safe area, this ecological municipality being the first in mountain tourism,” said Jarabacoa Ecotourism Cluster President Alba Yris Rodríguez de Blair.

COVID-19

September 6, 2024 - 4:38 pm

Ministry of Health enhances plans for pandemic and respiratory epidemic response

September 6, 2024 - 2:36 pm

Abinader: Haiti crisis straining Dominican Republic’s migration, health, and education systems

September 1, 2024 - 8:00 am

Public Health assures there are no cases of monkeypox in the country

September 1, 2024 - 7:00 am

The country registers low incidence of respiratory viruses

MOST READ

Economy

Housing costs soar in the Dominican Republic

Local

Dominican government takes over traffic light network after three-day disruption in National District

Tourism

Brazilian tourist arrivals soar in Dominican Republic after visa elimination

Economy

Puerto Plata’s tourism rebounds

MORE NEWS

Local

Dominican Today journalist wins Pasaporte Abierto 2024 award, Dominican Republic receives multiple honors

Tourism

Project for sustainable sargassum management launched in the Dominican Republic

North Coast

Aerodom aims to bring the giant A380 to Puerto Plata

Local

What is now the Dominican Republic was home to the Samanese, the first humans to populate the Antilles nearly 5,500 years ago