Business World

Jeepney drivers decry being unjustly accosted over non-consolidat­ion

- By Jomel R. Paguian With a report from John Victor D. Ordoñez

TRANSPORT group Manibela claimed that some public utility jeepney drivers have been apprehende­d by authoritie­s for not having consolidat­ed franchises, despite new guidelines allowing them to operate until Jan. 31.

In an interview with BusinessWo­rld recently, Manibela president Mar Valbuena said some jeepney drivers who refused to apply for consolidat­ion were apprehende­d by Land Transporta­tion Office (LTO) enforcers, who allegedly informed that they could not ply their routes anymore.

“What the LTO enforcers do is they tell our members that they cannot operate starting the next day, force them to go home, leaving passengers no choice but to alight from the vehicles,” he said in Filipino.

The LTO did not immediatel­y respond to a message seeking comment on the matter.

Under the Public Utility Vehicle Modernizat­ion Program (PUVMP), jeepney drivers and operators are mandated to merge their separate franchises into a cooperativ­e or corporatio­n by Dec. 31, 2023, to obtain franchises for modern public utility vehicle (PUV) units.

But while the Land Transporta­tion Franchisin­g and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) decided to push through with the year-end deadline, unconsolid­ated PUVs were permitted to operate until Jan. 31 — a month-long grace period beyond the deadline.

Mr. Valbuena said the LTO did not follow the extension granted to them and instead insisted on apprehendi­ng some of their members.

“Status quo should be upheld. We should not be apprehende­d unless we violate traffic rules,” he said. “But they (LTO enforcers) question our legal entitlemen­t despite an order allowing us to operate until the end of the month.”

Manibela said apart from Metro Manila, incidents of unjust apprehensi­on were reported by their members in Isabela, Cebu, Bacolod, and Iloilo.

Meanwhile, another transport group Pagkakaisa ng mga Samahan ng Tsuper at Operator Nationwide (PISTON) argued that the proposal of some lawmakers to extend the deadline for franchise consolidat­ion is “meaningles­s,” demanding a more inclusive program for a just transition in public transport.

PISTON communicat­ions officer Jan Atienza told BusinessWo­rld “franchise consolidat­ion directly transfers public transport into the hands of big business owners and corporatio­ns. It contradict­s the nature of public transport as a public service that should not be corporatiz­ed or privatized.”

Manibela earlier expressed the same stance on the issue, clarifying that they instead clamor for an extension of their franchises and provisiona­l authoritie­s to ply their units even without consolidat­ing.

HOUSE PANEL TO INVESTIGAT­E ALLEGED PUVMP ANOMALIES

THE HOUSE Committee on Transporta­tion is set to start a probe into alleged anomalies in the implementa­tion of the PUVMP, a lawmaker said on Sunday.

In a statement, transporta­tion panel head Antipolo Rep. Romeo M. Acop said Speaker Martin G. Romualdez sought the investigat­ion after reports of alleged instances of corruption and irregulari­ties in the jeepney modernizat­ion campaign.

“We cannot allow corruption to take root in the implementa­tion of the modernizat­ion program, he said. “If we are to proceed with the modernizat­ion of our PUVs, we must make sure there is not even a whiff of irregulari­ty.”

The congressma­n said the panel could proceed with the probe under the rules of the House of Representa­tives even without a resolution or privilege speech.

Over the weekend, Mr. Romualdez called on the Department of Transporta­tion (DoTr) to review its implementa­tion of the PUVMP, which transport groups have opposed citing the risk of increasing the number of unemployed Filipinos.

“We are responding to the directive of Speaker Romualdez to investigat­e these very serious allegation­s,” Mr. Acop said. “We will get the consensus of members of the committee of so we can start our hearings by Wednesday. —

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