Bacolod earns P1.5M from traffic violations
BACOLOD City – Traffic policy violators are making the city government “rich.”
City hall collected around P1.5 million in fines from December 2016 to March 2017, according to Councilor Dindo Ramos.
Ramos, chairman of the Sangguniang Panlungsod transportation committee, considers putting up a trust fund out of the collected fines.
The city government is able to collect this much because of the ordinance
granting Bacolod Traffic Authority Office (BTAO) enforcers the authority to confiscate the driver’s licenses of erring motorists, he said.
City Ordinance No. 09- 16-790 allows local traffic enforcers to seize driver’s licenses and issue citation tickets.
Before this local law was passed, traffic policy violators the BTAO would catch will be sent to the Land Transportation Office (LTO) where they will be issued a temporary operator’s permit (TOP).
“If ever they (BTAO enforcers) had TOPs (with them), the fine that the violators they catch will pay will go to the LTO, not the city government,” said Ramos.
The citation tickets indicate that the erring driver must surrender their license to the BTAO enforcer who caught them, the traffic office head Superintendent Luisito Acebuche said in a previous interview.
An erring driver who refuses to turn over their license faces a fine of P500 or a five- to 10-day imprisonment, or both, the ordinance stated.
The citation ticket shall serve as the erring driver’s temporary license. They may claim their original license from the BTAO upon paying the fine within three days from the issuance of the citation ticket.
The ordinance was deemed controversial, what with Republic Act 4136, or the Land Transportation and Traffic Code, authorizing only law enforcers deputized by the LTO to confiscate driver’s licenses.
But City Legal Office head Joselito Bayatan said an ordinance “always enjoys the presumption of validity unless
PN