The Freeman

Commuters back transport strike vs PUV phaseout

MANILA — Commuters are going to be the most affected during the week-long protests starting March 6 to 12 against the impending jeepney and UV Express phaseout.

- — James Relativo/Philstar.com

However, that will not stop some of the riding public from supporting the striking drivers and operators since modernizat­ion in its current form “might hike fares to P35.”

“PARA - Advocates for Inclusive Transport (PARA-AIT), an alliance of public transport commuters announced its support for the planned week-long transport strike against the public utility vehicle (PUV) phaseout starting March 6, adding their voice to the growing condemnati­on of the national government’s importdepe­ndent, debt-trap PUV Modernizat­ion Program (PUVMP),” said PARA-AIT, Friday.

“The high costs of the PUVMP will definitely become a burden to commuters. PARA-AIT estimates that the minimum fare in an imported ‘modernized’ minibus would need to be as high as P35 in order to pay for the exorbitant price tag of modernizat­ion — almost thrice the current traditiona­l jeepney minimum fare.”

Transport groups Manibela, PISTON and Laban TNVS earlier announced their plans to halt operations starting next week in opposition to the Land Transporta­tion Franchisin­g and Regulatory Board’s order to stop individual operators from plying their routes after June 30 should they not join a “consolidat­ed entity” in their transition to modernized jeeps or electric minibuses.

Transport groups earlier lamented this due to the expenses that come with surrenderi­ng individual franchses into a Fleet Management System, forcing them to purchase 15 vehicles that cost up to P2.8 million each.

LTFRB chairperso­n Teofilo Guadiz III announced last Wednesday that they’re willing to delay the consolidat­ion of PUVs until the end of December 2023 after groups announced the transport strike, effectivel­y allowing tens of thousands of jeepneys and UV Express units to continue operations until the end of the year.

PARA-AIT acknowledg­es that there’s a valid case to pursue cleaner, low-emission modes of public transport. However, imposing a deadline for thousands of EV Express and traditiona­l jeepneys without clarity of a “fair and just transition program” they say would mean less public transporta­tion for millions of students and workers whose producticv­ity and mobility rely on affordable means.

 ?? AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE ?? A passenger sits next to signage of “No Vaccine No Ride” inside a passenger jeepney in Quezon City, suburban Manila on January 17, 2022, as the Philippine government banned unvaccinat­ed people from using public transport amid a record surge in coronaviru­s cases.
AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE A passenger sits next to signage of “No Vaccine No Ride” inside a passenger jeepney in Quezon City, suburban Manila on January 17, 2022, as the Philippine government banned unvaccinat­ed people from using public transport amid a record surge in coronaviru­s cases.

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