Philippine Daily Inquirer

LTFRB fines Grab P10M

TNC penalized for overchargi­ng, ordered to reimburse P2-per-minute travel charge to passengers

- By Krixia Subingsubi­ng @krixiasINQ

Stopping short of canceling Grab’s franchise for repeatedly oversteppi­ng its authority, the Land Transporta­tion Franchisin­g and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) imposed a P10-million fine on the ride-hailing company for overchargi­ng its passengers when it imposed a P2-perminute travel charge without prior approval.

The order signed on July 9 and released to the media on Tuesday afternoon resolved a three month-long debate on whether the transport network company (TNC) could unilateral­ly set its own rates under the now-rescinded Department Order (DO) No. 2015-011.

The LTFRB also directed Grab to reimburse riders who were charged the travel fee between June 5, 2017 and April 19 this year by offering them rebates for future rides.

Refund valid for 20 days

The refunds will be valid for 20 days from the date the agency’s decision becomes final pending an appeal from Grab or from the time the TNC starts the reimbursem­ent process.

The LTFRB also stressed that Grab alone should shoulder the penalties with its driver-partners to be spared of any liability since it was the TNC that made the decision to impose the additional rate.

The agency first started looking into Grab’s alleged illegal imposition of the additional fee in April after it was exposed by PBA partylist Rep. Jericho Nograles.

In its July 9 order, the LTFRB criticized Grab for invoking the DO which allowed TNCs to set their own fare matrices subject to LTFRB oversight, describing it as an “unauthoriz­ed delegation of legislativ­e authority.”

The LTFRB said it was the only one which could “determine, prescribe and fix fates” under Executive Order No. 202 and Commonweal­th Act No. 146 which both overrode the DO.

“It was clearly shown that such imposition (was) invalid and without authority from the board, for which (Grab) must suffer the consequenc­es,” it added.

It noted that Grab generated “hundreds of millions of pe- sos” from its riders when it began charging the fee in June 2017, making a case for overchargi­ng under Joint Administra­tive Order No. 2014-1.

Whopper of a fine

Computing the penalty (P5,000) for each count of overchargi­ng, however, would bring the penalty to trillions of pesos—a fine the LTFRB said it was not inclined to impose on the TNC to keep its driver-partners afloat and avoid inconvenie­ncing hundreds of thousands of commuters.

This was also the reason why Grab’s franchise was not canceled even though the violation merited it, it added.

This was not the first time Grab was fined for allegedly flouting LTFRB rules. On July 11, 2017, it paid P5 million for operating colorum transport network vehicle services.

LTFRB Board Member Aileen Lizada was the sole dissenter among the agency’s officials. The order was signed by LTFRB Chair Martin Delgra III and Board Member Ronaldo Corpus.

This marked the second time she did not sign a major LTFRB ruling upon release this month, the other being the P1 provisiona­l fare increase for jeepneys in Metro Manila, Calabarzon and Central Luzon.

Grab spokespers­on, Leo Gonzales, said they were “reserving comment for now until we have fully studied and analyzed the matter with our legal team.” It has 15 days to file a motion for reconsider­ation.

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