The local government of Navotas City has set stricter quarantine measures on residents and issued heavier fines for those who will not comply as it races against time to contain the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19).

Through the passing of Ordinance No. 2020-33, a 24-hour curfew shall be imposed on residents below 18 years old while the city is under community quarantine or in any form of lockdown.
Navotas is currently under lockdown, which will end at midnight on July 30.
Only minors enrolling at schools who are accompanied by their guardians or those seeking medical attention are exempted from the restriction.
The parents of minors caught violating the ordinance will be fined P1,000 on their first offense, P2,000 on their second offense, P3,000 or imprisonment on their third offense, and P4,000 or imprisonment on the succeeding number of offenses, the local government said.
“Many of our constituents thought that because of eased restrictions during the general community quarantine, they can be lax about practicing safety measures. We need to remind them that the deadly virus is still here and it continues to endanger our lives and those of our loved ones,” Mayor Toby Tiangco said in a statement.
The penalties for business operators who will not ensure that quarantine measures are being followed by their customers have also already been raised through Ordinance No. 2020-32.
The local government said businesses that fail to conduct screening for employees, implement social distancing, and reduce the number of people allowed in their workplace, among others, "will be slapped with P2,000 to P5,000 fine with summary suspension of sanitary permit and summary closure of establishment for 7 to14 days."
Meanwhile, authorities will also slap a fine of between P1,000 to P3,000 on residents caught by law enforcers outside their homes without essential business to conduct.
“These ordinances form part of our defense strategy to keep our people safe from COVID-19," Tiangco said. "With the continued rise of cases, crowded facilities, depleting resources, and exhausted health care providers, we need to take drastic actions.”
The city's health department reported a record-high number of 93 new COVID-19 cases on Tuesday (July 14), bringing the city's total tally to 1,074.