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.
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.