17 Mar 2021 / 07:15 H.
KUALA LUMPUR: The Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture (MOTAC) has drawn up 13 standard operating procedure (SOP) guidelines aimed at ensuring that the tourism and culture sectors can thrive under the new normal.
Its Minister, Nancy Shukri
(pix) hoped that the guidelines would help industry players as well as enliven the sector during the Covid-19 pandemic.
“The SOP guidelines were drawn up after MOTAC’s engagement sessions with relevant industry players, such as hotels, theme parks and tourism agencies,” she said in a statement on the One-Year Malaysia Prihatin of the ministry here, today.
She also said that MOTAC had managed to achieve much success in the past year through its responsive and progressive approach, thus helping the livelihoods of workers involved in the tourism and culture sector.
KUALA LUMPUR (March 16): The Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture (MOTAC) has drawn up 13 standard operating procedure (SOP) guidelines aimed at ensuring that the tourism and culture sectors can thrive under the new normal. Its minister Nancy Shukri hopes that the guidelines would help industry players, as well as enliven the sector during the Covid-19 pandemic.
SPRINGFIELD â One day after President Joe Biden signed a $1.9 trillion economic stimulus package, Illinois House Republicans called for the General Assembly to oversee the appropriation of funds in order to support businesses and individuals most impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.
In a Friday news conference, state Reps. Tom Demmer, R-Dixon, Keith Wheeler, R-Oswego, and C.D. Davidsmeyer, R-Jacksonville, urged responsibility in the allocation of federal funding and warned against using the stimulus as a âmagic bailoutâ to fund new state programs.
âThese are dollars that are designated by the federal government to provide relief to the governments, businesses and individuals and families across the country who have been impacted by COVID-19 and the related closures and restrictions of everyday life that we ve all been through,â Demmer said Friday.
The White House began highlighting the $1.9 trillion COVID relief bill immediately after it gained final congressional approval on Wednesday, wasting no time in selling the.
President Biden is a day away from signing the landmark COVID-19 relief bill, which supporters say does more to tackle poverty and inequality since the days of FDR—and detractors.