Iloilo church, local gov’t build hand-washing stations as alcohol gets scarce | Inquirer News

Iloilo church, local gov’t build hand-washing stations as alcohol gets scarce

/ 05:10 AM March 20, 2020

CLEAN HANDS Administrators of the Shrine of St. Vincent Ferrer in Leganes town, Iloilo province, have built a hand-washing station, with running water and bars of soap, that pilgrims and residents can use whenever they visit the church. —RAYMOND NUEVA/CONTRIBUTOR

ILOILO CITY—Church leaders in Leganes town in Iloilo province have offered a solution to the shortage of disinfectants, like alcohol and hand sanitizers, in the wake of the new coronavirus disease (COVID-19) threat: a hand-washing station.

They built a four-faucet, concrete hand-washing station with strong running water close to the side entrance of the church where parishioners can wash their hands before entering and after leaving the church.

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The washing station was built on March 13, a day after local officials asked leaders of the 131-year-old Shrine of St. Vincent Ferrer to help look for a solution for the lack of rubbing alcohol and sanitizers, which health officials have recommended to the public to use to avoid infection.

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Pilgrimage site

Leganes officials were concerned about the spread of COVID-19 in the town because the church is a popular destination for pilgrims, especially devotees of St. Vincent Ferrer, the patron saint of the sick.

“It was the lack of isopropyl alcohol [in local stores] that got us worried so we talked to the parish office regarding preventive measures and they came up with this solution of constructing a hand-washing station,” said Leah Gonzaludo, executive assistant of Leganes Mayor Vicente Jaen II.

Tapping the help of neighborhood carpenters, Church officials were able to build the hand-washing station on March 13.

The move came barely a week before the Archdiocese of Jaro ordered on March 18 the cancellation of all Masses in the archdiocese, including those at the St. Vincent Ferrer Church, as a precaution against the spread of COVID-19.

But residents near the shrine continue to use the washing facility even if the church has been closed.

Rule

The success of the hand-washing station prompted the Leganes municipal government to install one at the town hall and another at the Leganes Commercial Complex. A “one exit, one entrance” rule has also been strictly implemented in these buildings as prevention against the spread of the virus.

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So far, everyone who had gone in and out of the municipal hall and the market had been washing their hands, Gonzaludo said.

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TAGS: Alcohol, COVID-19

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