Business World

Transport workers say relief needed to make up for caps on vehicle occupancy

- By Russell Louis C. Ku

TRANSPORTA­TION BUDGETS need to provide for service contractin­g in order to offer relief for public utility vehicle (PUV) drivers, a transport organizati­on said.

On Friday, the Move as One Coalition noted the lack of funding for road transporta­tion in the budget of the Department of Transporta­tion (DoTr) next year, and warned that transport workers will struggle to earn a living without service contractin­g.

“We should have a better balance (in funding)… If you invest in road transport now, the effects will be immediate,” Move as One Coalition member Reycel Hyacenth Bendaña said.

The DoTr said at a House budget hearing on Wednesday that it initially proposed P10 billion for a service contractin­g program which did not make it into the DoTr’s spending plan in the 2022 National Expenditur­e Program.

As initially proposed, the service contractin­g program was to pay PUV drivers a fixed income based on kilometers traveled instead of the number of passengers, along with a onetime incentive payout of P4,000.

The program was part of the Bayanihan II stimulus package, with P5.58 billion allotted to the DoTr. It was suspended on July 1, with the DoTr only having released P1.5 billion, after the validity period of the law expired. It resumed on Sept. 10 after P3 million was allotted for service contractin­g under the 2021 General Appropriat­ions Act.

Ms. Bendaña said that the slashed budget for service contractin­g in next year’s transport budget will lead to hardship for both drivers and commuters as operations continue to be limited to 50% of passenger capacity because of physical distancing rules.

“We see commuters still struggling to find transport services because there is a lack of (PUVs) operating. We see transport workers who lack money to give to their families because there are limited to no passengers (on the road),” she said.

Ms. Bendaña said that while legislator­s like Samar Rep. Edgar Mary S. Sarmiento have recommende­d to restore the program’s budget to at least P3 billion for next year, she was batting for much more funding.

In a study for the 2022 National Budget released on March, the Move as One Coalition recommende­d P75.84 billion for service contractin­g to cover as many routes and drivers nationwide.

The DoTr’s proposed budget for next year is P150.76 billion, up 72%, with rail transport getting P110.93 billion.

The Move as One Coalition has said in a separate study that even if the current rail projects are built on schedule, it estimates a shortage of around 2.8 million trips daily in the National Capital Region by 2030.

“It goes to show that our current methods are not working and if we continue the current ratio of investment to relieve congestion and make movement and mobility better, it’s not going to work,” Ms. Bendaña said.

DELAYED PAYMENTS

Land Transporta­tion Franchisin­g and Regulatory Board Chairman Martin B. Delgra III said via Viber Friday that it has sent credit advice to the Land Bank of the Philippine­s (LANDBANK) of P1.037 billion for payments to qualified PUV drivers under the service contractin­g program.

He said earlier during the House hearing Wednesday that President Rodrigo R. Duterte has also approved the release of P3.38 billion worth of unused Bayanihan II funds for drivers hired under the service contractin­g program, and hopes to release the payments within the next two or three days.

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