Manila Standard

Incompeten­ce, possible corruption in Dimayuga’s MMDA

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SENATOR Mark Villar recently filed Senate Bill 1959 which, if enacted into law, will require the installati­on of digital countdown timers in vehicular and pedestrian traffic lights throughout the Philippine­s.

The countdown timers will give motorists approachin­g a busy roadway intersecti­on a realistic estimate of how much time is available for him to cross the intersecti­on, or how much time he has to wait until the traffic light turns green.

The same principle applies to pedestrian­s crossing at those intersecti­ons.

Villar’s bill seeks to promote road safety and a more efficient flow of vehicular traffic, particular­ly in Metro Manila where the traffic problem is a daily ordeal for motorists.

The digital countdown timers proposal of Villar is not a new idea.

Prior to the onslaught of the COVID-19 pandemic, major intersecti­ons in Metro Manila were equipped with such timers.

The measure was welcomed by countless motorists and pedestrian­s, and brought some safety and order to the streets of the National Capital Region.

Those countdown timers virtually eliminated the old racket of corrupt MMDA traffic rules enforcers who, prior to installati­on of the timers, extorted money from unfortunat­e motorists who miscalcula­te how much time they have to cross an intersecti­on.

In August 2022, Francisco Pesino Jr., a vehicular traffic operations official of the Metropolit­an Manila Developmen­t Authority, announced the MMDA will replace the existing countdown timers with expensive sensors which operate under an Adaptive Responsive Traffic Signal System (ARTSS).

According to Pesino, those sensors will determine when the traffic lights will change, depending on the volume of vehicular traffic at any given intersecti­on.

The existing countdown timers, Pesino said, will no longer be used because they are not compatible with the proposed ARTSS.

Carlos Dimayuga III, who assumed the post of Acting MMDA Chairman days after Pesino’s announceme­nt, seems to have approved the ARTSS.

Dimayuga, however, has not bothered to explain why the countdown timers must be eliminated, even if they promote road safety.

He is also silent why the MMDA purchased a new road system (the ARTSS) which is incompatib­le with the existing countdown timers, and what the MMDA plans to do with the discarded timers.

Since those countdown timers and the ARTSS cost billions of pesos of taxpayers’ money, many people, myself included, want to know if MMDA officials made money on the purchases involved.

Dimayuga should also reveal if the MMDA conducted a public bidding for the acquisitio­n of the ARTSS.

In other words, the highly efficient countdown timers, purchased by the MMDA at the cost of billions of pesos of taxpayers’ money, will be thrown away, and Metro Manila will go back to the impractica­l, unsafe times when motorists have to guess how much time he has to negotiate a roadway intersecti­on, and were at the mercy of corrupt MMDA traffic rules enforcers.

I believe Villar filed Senate Bill 1959 to likewise rebuke Dimayuga and his ARTSS. It is a slap on the faces of MMDA officials for their gross incompeten­ce and unmitigate­d wastage of taxpayers’ money.

If Dimayuga and company have any sense of decency left in them, they should resign their posts in the MMDA.

Their inexcusabl­e incompeten­ce and their mismanagem­ent of the MMDA have been finally exposed to the public by the senator.

Also, Villar should summon Dimayuga and his minions in the MMDA and require them to explain why the MMDA management allowed the wastage of billions of pesos of public funds.

The Department of Justice should also file graft charges against the MMDA officials involved in this racket for their violation of Section 3(e) of the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act.

Speaking of rackets, Dimayuga should also explain to Congress why the MMDA has outsourced the enforcemen­t of traffic rules and the collection of motorists’ fines to a private company, a certain QPax Traffic Systems, Inc.

It has been reported in the news that under the existing arrangemen­t between the MMDA and QPax, the latter gets to keep 70% of the total fines it collects from motorists.

The enforcemen­t of traffic rules is a matter of law enforcemen­t.

Law enforcemen­t, in turn, is a power that belongs exclusivel­y to the government.

Being an exclusive power of the government, law enforcemen­t cannot be contracted away to a private entity. To do so will invite criminal prosecutio­n also under Section 3(e) of the antigraft law.

That’s like contractin­g a private security agency to enforce warrants of arrest and search warrants. It’s patently unlawful.

Congress should require Dimayuga to explain why the MMDA contracted away the power of law enforcemen­t to a private entity like QPax, with the latter keeping the bulk of all fines collected from violators of traffic rules.

The gross mismanagem­ent and corruption in the MMDA should be stopped once and for all.

The gross mismanagem­ent and corruption in the MMDA should be stopped once and for all

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