Sun.Star Cebu

Traffic now a major tourism concern — summit members

The Cebu Provincial Management Office wants local government units to strictly enforce local traffic laws and ordinances LTO records show that the number of registered vehicles in the region had increased from 554,472 in 2016 to 598,668 in 2017 Lack of co

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Traffic has been tagged as a major concern when it comes to tourism in Cebu.

Participan­ts in the Cebu Tourism Summit and Travel Fair 2018 said the issue on traffic will become more pressing as more tourists are expected in Cebu with the opening of the Mactan-Cebu Internatio­nal Airport (MCIA) Terminal 2.

Based on a Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency ( JICA) study, Metro Cebu suffers an economic loss of about P1.1 billion a day because of traffic.

The Cebu Provincial Management Office urged local government units to strictly enforce local traffic laws and ordinances to attract more tourists in the towns.

Provincial Management Office focal person Jonathan Tumulak said that they are creating the Inter-Agency Council on Traffic (I-ACT) to make laws and ordinances uniform in all towns in Cebu.

“There are now trainings in Talisay City, Minglanill­a, City of Naga and San Fernando on how to implement their traffic ordinances. Once we have uniform traffic ordinances, the motorists will no longer have a difficult time driving from one town to another,” Tumulak said.

Tumulak said that based on the records of the Land Transporta­tion Office (LTO) 7, the number of registered vehicles in the region increased from 554,472 in 2016 to 598,668 in 2017.

“One of the causes is the low down payment and the monthly payment scheme. It’s now easy to buy a car. People have big salaries and the monthly installmen­t is small,” he said.

He said other contributi­ng factors are the lack of coordinati­on among local government units (LGUs) and the lack of advance planning, considerin­g the fast economic growth of Cebu.

Minglanill­a, for example, has 83 subdivisio­ns. And each house owner in those subdivisio­ns owns a car, Tumulak said.

Tumulak said they are coordinati­ng with the LGUs of Metro Cebu, especially during fiestas and other celebratio­ns, to warn the public about road closures and rerouting.

He also pushed for a stricter enforcemen­t of traffic laws.

Neil Kirkpatric­k and Eva Lowela Moraca, who own hotels in Oslob, Cebu, lamented the hours it takes to travel from the Mactan airport to the tourist destinatio­ns in Cebu.

They said there’s a need to create innovation­s on public bus transport to reduce carbon emission and minimize road accidents.

“You have a huge number of mini-buses from Cebu City to Oslob. So why don’t we take (the passengers) to one place where they can take a bigger bus to reduce greenhouse gas emission?” Kirkpatric­k said. /

One of the causes (of the increase in the number of cars) is the low down payment and the monthly payment scheme. It’s now easy to buy a car. People have big salaries and the monthly installmen­t is small. PROVINCIAL MANAGEMENT OFFICE FOCAL PERSON JONATHAN TUMULAK

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