The Philippine Star

MMDA suspends full implementa­tion of HOV

- By ROBERTZON RAMIREZ

The Metropolit­an Manila Developmen­t Authority (MMDA) has suspended the full implementa­tion of its ban on driver-only vehicles on EDSA, a few days after it received the Senate resolution urging the recall of the scheme.

MMDA general manager Jose Arturo Garcia Jr. said the scheduled Aug. 23 implementa­tion of the high occupancy vehicle (HOV) lane policy on EDSA would be put on hold, as they needed to discuss whether to push through with the traffic reduction measure.

If it pushes through, violators will be fined P1,000 for each infraction.

Garcia said the MMDA would meet with Metro Manila mayors in a Metro Manila Council (MMC) meeting next week, following the Senate resolution calling for the lifting of the ban.

“The full implementa­tion will be suspended for the meantime until the MMC convenes,” Garcia told reporters in a press conference yesterday. The MMC, composed of 16 city

mayors and one municipal mayor, is the policymaki­ng body of the MMDA, which requires the latter to get approval of the former in implementi­ng any traffic scheme.

In an interview last Thursday, Special Assistant to the President Christophe­r Go said MMDA chairman Danilo Lim has confirmed to him that feedback from the public on the scheme would be reviewed by the MMC.

Go said he trusted that members of MMC would be able to arrive at an acceptable decision on the driver-only ban.

“If it will help solve the traffic problem in Metro Manila, then it is okay. That is why we’re having a dry run. We’ll see first if it will really help, if it would ease traffic. If not, then we can improve it,” Go said in Filipino.

Go added that that MMDA is seeking an audience with the President to present their plans on how to solve the traffic situation in Metro Manila. He reiterated that the government was taking the matter seriously and the convenienc­e and welfare of the public was of utmost importance.

Garcia confirmed Go’s statement on the dry run, which started last Aug. 15, saying it would continue until such time that the MMC will come up with its decision.

During the dry run, Garcia said the MMDA would not apprehend motorists. The dry run is effective on weekdays from 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.

“The fact (that there’s a) Senate resolution, we respect that,” he said.

Quezon City Mayor Herbert Bautista told The STAR that the traffic scheme was doomed.

“(For traffic schemes), there must be a scientific reason,” Bautista said.

Over the last three days, MMDA has monitored 6,745 violators of the ban since the dry run started.

Garcia claimed that the traffic in EDSA has eased during the first dry run.

The ban on solo riders in EDSA was first introduced during the time of former MMDA chairman Francis Tolentino and was also implemente­d by former MMDA officer-in-charge Thomas Orbos.

The measure was set aside after the MMDA had failed to address the problem on heavily tinted vehicles and for fear that it might promote the operation of colorum (unregister­ed) vehicles.

As this developed, Senate President Vicente Sotto III welcomed MMDA’s decision.

Sotto, who along with other leaders of the Senate introduced a resolution urging the MMDA to suspend the traffic scheme, said the MMDA should “solve the (problem of) illegally parked vehicles in Metro Manila and they will not need any other decongesta­nts.”

He noted that there are so many roads in Metro Manila that have longstandi­ng illegal parking issues that contribute to traffic problems.

Sen. Grace Poe, chairperso­n of the Senate committee on public services, said it is time for the MMDA to go back to the drawing board, “to think hard what can be done to solve our traffic woes.”

“Policies should always be practical, implementa­ble and in line with public interest. The MMDA should think hard, so there will be more ‘hits’ than ‘misses’ in its campaigns,” Poe said.

According to Poe, what is needed to address the traffic problems of Metro Manila is not new policies, but the strict implementa­tion of existing laws and regulation­s.

She also advised the MMDA to conduct public consultati­ons before implementi­ng any traffic scheme in order to get feedback from all stakeholde­rs.

For his part, Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon, who sponsored the resolution, said the suspension of the scheme was the “right and proper thing to do.”

“That policy needs further study and public consultati­ons must be made, which the MMDA and the Metro Manila authoritie­s had failed to do in the first place,” Drilon said.

“The traffic in Metro Manila is a major concern but we must avoid band aid solutions such as the (HOV) policy and the ‘driver-only’ car scheme that have zero chance of success and are very discrimina­tory against those who cannot afford to hire a driver,” he added.

He notes how in countries such as Indonesia, the US and Canada, where HOV lanes have been implemente­d, the scheme has been criticized as ineffectiv­e and counterpro­ductive in addressing traffic congestion.

“Hence, the MMDA and Metro Manila authoritie­s should look for real solutions to traffic congestion, but it should be done without violating due process of law enshrined and protected under the Constituti­on,” Drilon said.

The Senate transmitte­d to the MMDA a copy of Senate Resolution 123, which was unanimousl­y adopted by the senators last Wednesday.

Apart from calling for the suspension of the traffic scheme, the resolution also urged the MMC to conduct public consultati­ons, further study of the driver-only ban and provide real solutions to the traffic congestion.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines