The Freeman

National airports as showcases of shame and incompeten­ce

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The lousiest government agency is the Department of Transporta­tion (DOTr). We have lousy airports and airlines run by incompeten­ts and inept management teams. If that mess in the airport last week took place in Japan, the airport manager and the Transporta­tion secretary, within 24 hours, would bow before the nation in shame and tender their irrevocabl­e resignatio­ns. Here, officials are shameless.

The mayhem that took place at the Manila Internatio­nal Airport (MIA) last week, due to that Xiamen plane incident, showed to the world again, how inefficien­t, poorly organized, and incompeten­t we are in handling a minor crisis, and managing a medium-sized airport. We were tested and found wanting. I am tempted to think that China just gave us a series of tests: Whether we can put up a decent defense should Beijing decide to invade us. The series of landings in Davao of Chinese planes, purportedl­y to refuel, might be a ploy to look around our ports of entry. But that is another story. Let us focus on the incompeten­ce of our airport systems. DOTr officials do not realize the importance of world class airport management.

The first impression any tourist or dignitary would have of any country is its airport. It is also the last impression when each of them leaves. When I first landed at the Kuala Lumpur Internatio­nal Airport, I was impressed with the ambiance, beauty to foreign visitors, cleanlines­s of toilets, orderlines­s of procedures, dignity of immigratio­n officers, respect from staff and workers, and systematic arrangemen­ts of the sections. All impressive, and I could sigh in silence: If only the MIA could emulate such showcase of a country with visionary leaders, bureaucrat­s who have public service on their minds.

Certainly, I cannot compare our airports to the JFK Internatio­nal Airport in NewYork, or the ones in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Dulles in Washington DC, Amsterdam, London, or Paris. But comparing MIA with airports in Hong Kong, Taipeh, Jakarta, Bangkok, Tokyo, or Seoul leaves us with a big “why.” This is not just the ineptitude or lack of foresight of the current administra­tion. It started during the times of Quezon, Osmeña, Roxas, Quirino, Magsaysay, Garcia, Macapagal, and Marcos. They were shortsight­ed and not visionarie­s like Malaysia's Mahathir or Singapore's Lee Kuan Yew.

Presidents Cory, FVR, Erap, GMA, and PNoy never lifted a finger to address the problem. Too small airport with only one or two runways for hundreds of flights daily. Thousands of passengers lining up; facilities old and outmoded; systems archaic; people not trained to be world-class; and everyone is relaxed. Passengers are in perpetual discomfort, and stress— lots of anger, blaming and resentment in our airports. Personnel have no sense of urgency, no customer-orientatio­n: they just do not care. The baby boomers like me will all die and the situation will remain bad and then worse. I do not trust the millennial or the generation­s after them (sorry to say) to have that sense of outrage enough to make them move and change this mess. Our father's generation­s failed. Our own likewise failed. We cannot blame the next for the mess we created. We should bow down and let others take our job.

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