The Philippine Star

272,233 vehicle registrati­ons rushed; millions more remained delinquent

- JARIUS BONDOC

No vehicle plate, no travel,” the Land Transporta­tion Office warned starting Jan. 1st. Within four weeks, 272,233 delinquent registrati­ons were renewed. More are rushing to be processed this month.

What were the owners thinking? Did they purposely evade renewal or just forgot when idled by pandemic? Did they expect to get away with it like politicos do when plundering public funds?

Answers perhaps lie in the breakdown. The delinquent­s consisted of 12,123 sport utility vehicles, 20,427 sedans, 5,617 taxis, 168 buses, 34,436 jeepneys, 198,283 motorcycle­s and 1,098 tricycles.

Owners of pricey SUVs, cars, taxis or buses have wealth and status. LTO registrati­on fees are paltry for them.

Jeepneys, motorcycle­s, tricycles denote low incomes.

Whatever the answers are, the 272,233 show how unsafe roads are. Registrant­s must first undergo roadworthi­ness test. More so, public utility vehicles: taxis, buses, jeepneys, tricycles.

Vehicle registrati­on can gauge good citizenshi­p. Same with driving license. Both are requisites before motorists may traverse public roads. Unlicensed vehicles and drivers must not add to city traffic.

The figures are worse, LTO chief Vigor Mendoza said in November, his fourth month in office. From computer files, land vehicles totaled 38 million at year-end 2022. But only 14 million registrati­ons were renewed. Where are the 24 million others?

Mendoza studied the stats. Of the 24 million, 70 percent are motorcycle­s that don’t last long. Only six million, or one-fourth of the 24 million, are still running, Mendoza estimated. Assume the rest to be busted. If so, where are those 18 million junk units? Those can perk up the metals industry.

As for the six million, they’re the delinquent registrant­s that Mendoza targets for renewal. The 272,233 renewals in January were only 4.54 percent of target.

Mendoza again classified 70 percent of the six million, or 4.2 million, as motorcycle­s. The rest, 1.8 million, have four or more wheels.

Some of the motorcycle­s are for personal use. Owners ride at risk. Traffic authoritie­s can impound the units on sight. Penalties for release and late registrati­on are imposed. Bulk are public utilities: tricycles, habal-habal, rentals – all illegal and thus confiscabl­e. LTO field offices are partnering with local government­s to have them registered. One of four Bukidnon congressio­nal districts alone has 18,000 colorum tricycles, a mayor told Mendoza.

LTO is also coordinati­ng with motorcycle fleet owners like fast-food chains and delivery services. Multiple transactio­ns are made easy.

Ironically, some of the 1.8 million unregister­ed cars and vans are government­owned. Mendoza has reminded national agencies, provincial capitols and city and municipal halls to set good examples for constituen­ts.

LTO has a portal for online registrati­on, Mendoza said. Payment can be via bank transfer or e-wallet. The site has a page where registrant­s can choose the third-party liability insurance provider.

Every system has kinks. The LTO head office recently intercepte­d a gang of registrati­on plate thieves, including the warehouse security guard. Stolen plates are sold to smugglers and buyers of luxury vehicles.

Due to supplier mistake, LTO also ran out of plastic cards to print driving licenses. The agency had to procure from another government unit.

Meanwhile, the bitter fight between the old and new driving license system suppliers is shaking up LTO. Multi-billion pesos are at stake.

* * * Hours after government revealed San Miguel Corp.’s superior bid to rehab the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport, bashers posted accusation­s against it. Strange.

Journalist­ic research usually takes days or weeks. A writer can be working on several stories at a time. Official documents need to be obtained, and credible sources interviewe­d. Only then are reports filed, edited and published.

But SMC’s detractors appeared primed for instant attack.

The Department of Transporta­tion announced three bids on Thursday afternoon, Feb. 8, for the P170.6-billion contract. SMC offered to give government 82.16 percent of future gross revenues. Plus, P30 billion upfront and P2 billion annually.

GMR Airports Consortium proposed 33.3 percent, and Manila Internatio­nal Airport Consortium, 25.91 percent.

DOTr aims to rehab NAIA’s passenger terminals to accommodat­e 62.5 million by 2028 from the present 31 million.

Asian Airport Consortium of Lucio Co and Jefferson Cheng was to bid 75 percent. But DOTr’s pre-qualificat­ion committee debarred it because technicall­y ineligible.

Unnamed parties at once called for investigat­ion. SMC’s bid allegedly was economical­ly unviable. But isn’t that SMC’s, not government’s, lookout?

Accusation­s saw print against SMC’s 33-percent equity with Korea’s 10-percent Incheon Internatio­nal Airport Corp. and two others. Yet the 33 percent is DOTr’s very limit for any bidder that has any other airport concession, in this case SMC’s still unbuilt aerodrome in Bulacan.

Talk about killing the goose that’s to lay the 82.16-percent golden egg.

* * * Catch Sapol radio show, Saturdays, 8 to 10 a.m., dwIZ (882-AM).

Follow me on Facebook: https://tinyurl. com/Jarius-Bondoc

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines