Sun.Star Cebu

Modernizin­g marine transporta­tion

- BOBBY NALZARO bobby@sunstar.com.ph

There are several factors Marina has to consider before going ahead with the implementa­tion of the marine transporta­tion modernizat­ion program

Igot several feedback from here and abroad regarding my appearance as a news source in the Netflix documentar­y “Happy Jail” that featured the world-famous Cebu Provincial Detention Rehabilita­tion Center (CPDRC) dancing inmates. The documentar­y was directed by Emmy-winning, Fil-Am filmmaker Michele Josue, who personally interviewe­d me last year. Included in the documentar­y series is actual footage from GMA regional TV’s “Balitang Bisdak.” If you have time, please watch the documentar­y. I think you can search the film on YouTube. Nice daw kaayo.

Like its counterpar­ts in land transporta­tion, the Land Transporta­tion Office (LTO) and the Land Transporta­tion Franchisin­g and Regulatory Board (LTFRB), the Maritime Industry Authority (Marina), which regulates marine transporta­tion, is also very inutile when it comes to its functions. We have heard about and seen those “floating coffins,” dilapidate­d vessels that are still allowed to sail which sometimes end up causing major sea disasters.

Maybe as an aftermath of the recent tragedies in the Iloilo-Guimaras Strait where several passengers died, including those nine from Cebu City, after three motorized bancas capsized, Marina announced that it is going to phase out wooden-hulled boats, or motorbanca­s, that operate in the waters of Lapu-Lapu City to ensure the safety of passengers. This is also in line with the modernizat­ion program of the maritime industry.

Marina 7 legal officer Daniel Martin Oral said Marina Circular 2016-02, or the Revised Rules on the Phase out of Wooden-hulled Ships carrying passengers in Domestic Shipping, should be implemente­d in the remaining months of 2019. He, however, said that there was a possibilit­y that it would not push through. Well, this is easier said than done.

Do you think this will materializ­e soon? I doubt it. There are several factors the agency has to consider before going ahead with the implementa­tion of the marine transporta­tion modernizat­ion program. Why do you think the LTO and LTFRB have stalled in the implementa­tion of the modernizat­ion program for public utility vehicles? The Public Utility Vehicle Modernizat­ion Program (PUVMP) was launched by the Department of Transporta­tion (DOTr) in 2017 yet, with the goal of making the country’s transporta­tion system efficient and environmen­tally friendly by 2020.

But have the two agencies succeeded? No. We can still see those dilapidate­d public utility jeepneys (PUJs), even colorum units, plying the streets. We can still see those PUJs emitting black smoke running on the streets. Yes, there are new units operating, but only a few. According to the figure, barely a year left until the full-blown implementa­tion of the PUVMP, transport regulators said only more than two percent of the 170,000 jeepneys nationwide are new and modernized units. You see that.

Why? Because there is no political will on the part of our political leadership because of political accommodat­ion. There are many groups like small-time operators, possible displaced drivers and the riding public that will lobby. Ordinary passengers will still patronize the PUJs as these are affordable. They cannot even control the proliferat­ion of habal-habal (motorcycle­s for hire), how much more the PUJs?

Going back to marine transporta­tion, motorized bancas are like PUJs. They ply minor sea routes from mainland to islands and islets to islets. They are used by tourists for island hopping. The fare is affordable. Now, what mode of transporta­tion will Marina introduce to serve these routes in lieu of these motorized bancas? Fastcraft? Do you think the people in the islands will patronize these vessels if their fares are high? I doubt it.

I would like to suggest to Marina that before it goes after those small seacraft, it should run after those regional and domestic vessels that are considered “floating coffins.” Naa pay daghan diha nga naglawig nga mapawong ang makina tali-wala sa lawod (There are still many vessels whose engines suddenly conk out in the middle of the voyage).

With that rate of interest, that’s a huge amount of money. Unless they have secured enough. There are promises, but are they really fulfilling those? Is there someone already who has actually received his promised payout? When?

OLIVER LEONARDO OF THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION, DOUBTING THAT ORGANICO AGRIBUSINE­SS VENTURES CORP. COULD DELIVER ITS PROMISED PAYOUTS

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