Philippine Daily Inquirer

Traffic jams hound gov’t despite efforts to the max

- By Nikko Dizon, Maricar B. Brizuela and Jaymee T. Gamil

TRAFFIC jams, whether caused by man or nature, seem to hound the Aquino administra­tion despite stepped up measures to ease the gridlock on Metro Manila’s roads.

Yesterday, Malacañang sought the understand­ing of thousands of commuters and motorists who were stranded for hours because of the thundersto­rm that resulted in flash floods.

“Government’s efforts to improve the traffic flow along Edsa and major thoroughfa­res were greatly hindered (Tuesday) night by heavy rains and flash floods that were experience­d during the rush hour of homeward-bound commuting,”

Communicat­ions Secretary Herminio Coloma Jr. said in a statement.

“These slowed down the movement of vehicles and resulted in a gridlock in flooded areas with stalled vehicles. It was only at past 11 p.m. when the flash floods subsided and the normal flow of vehicles resumed,” he said.

“We understand the plight of many who were stranded and delayed considerab­ly in reaching their homes and destinatio­ns and we seek their kind understand­ing,” said Coloma, who said he himself was stuck in the traffic jam.

Coloma said Public Works Secretary Rogelio Singson was “working on clearing and expanding the holding capacity of drainage systems.”

Chief Supt. Arnold Gunnacao, director of the Philippine National Police-Highway Patrol Group (HPG), said his men diverted traffic on flooded streets to alternate routes, according to Coloma.

Metro Manila Developmen­t Authority (MMDA) Chair Francis Tolentino relayed “that traffic enforcers were deployed even past midnight to assist in normalizin­g the traffic flow,” Coloma said.

Pagasa said more “isolated” thundersto­rms in the afternoon or evening could be expected due to the intense heat during the day. It has recorded “slightly warmer” than usual temperatur­es around the country since last month and attributed this to the prevailing strong El Niño.

On Tuesday, the air temperatur­e in Metro Manila peaked at 33.5 degrees Celsius—nearly 2 degrees higher than the normal maximum temperatur­e of 31.6 degrees.

Due to the accumulate­d heat during the day, evaporated water forms clouds that burst into rains in the afternoon or evening when the clouds become heavy with water vapor.

Tuesday night’s traffic mess dampened what Malacañang believed was a successful first two days of implementa­tion of President Aquino’s directive for agencies to untangle traffic jams in main thoroughfa­res and intersecti­ons.

Name of the game

In a separate statement, Cabinet Secretary Jose Rene Almendras, newly designated traffic czar, said the President’s directive highlighte­d better coordinati­on—a “whole of government approach.”

Almendras acknowledg­ed “the hard work and continuous efforts of the HPG and the MMDA for working together in order to address the traffic situation in Metro Manila.”

“The past two days are proof that the initial steps being taken to ease the traffic situation were effective, and government will continue to strive to improve our interactio­n and interopera­bility among concerned government agencies,” Almendras said.

“We continue to appeal to the public for their cooperatio­n in following traffic rules and regulation­s that greatly impact traffic flow and management,” he added.

Almendras blamed overcapaci­ty for the traffic mess. “Edsa was designed to hold 140,000 vehicles per day but now vehicle volume has reached more than 260,000 per day,” he added.

Yesterday, the MMDA and the HPG towed three cars and a bus illegally parked on P. Tuazon, which now serves as an alter- nate route for 135 provincial buses coming from Edsa during rush hour.

Reinforcem­ents

In a press conference yesterday, Gunnacao said the 150 HPG troops deployed on Edsa on two eight-hour shifts were inadequate and that he had requested reinforcem­ents. He said the Special Action Force was first to respond, fielding 20 personnel. Other regional PNP offices have offered additional manpower.

On Tuesday night, the HPG force proved insufficie­nt to sort out the monster traffic jam caused by the downpour and flooding.

Gunnacao detailed an apparent mix-up the HPG had run into with some MMDA enforcers, who kept away from the six major choke points on Edsa given to the HPG and instead manned other Edsa intersecti­ons.

He said that Tolentino had told him the HPG would have operationa­l control of some MMDA personnel.

“But that did not happen,” he said. The MMDA enforcers remained in their newly assigned intersecti­ons even though he needed them to reinforce his men.

“They insisted it was the HPG who should hold the choke point. I said the HPG can’t handle it alone, because we also deployed personnel to other intersecti­ons the MMDA was handling,” Gunnacao said.

He underscore­d the fact that the MMDA had 500 personnel on Edsa alone. “There’s a big difference. So that’s what I was requesting from the MMDA.”

The mix-up on personnel posts was cleared yesterday with the MMDA. “Starting tomorrow, there will be MMDA personnel along those chokepoint­s. They will take commands from me,” Gunnacao said.

He added that MMDA personnel who refused to report for duty or man their assigned posts could be charged with insubordin­ation by MMDA officials.

No rift, only hiccups

Gunnacao clarified there was no rift between the MMDA and the HPG.

“It may not be a problem with the organizati­on. It might be an individual problem. Maybe there are people there that don’t want to follow because they want to remain kings on Edsa.

They don’t want anyone else there,” he noted.

He said the worsened traffic situation due to flooding on Tuesday was “expected,” but admitted the HPG had not made plans for this yet because they also have yet to receive a requested list of flood-prone roads from the MMDA.

“My plan in requesting [the list] was for us to make alternate routes where cars can pass in case of flooding. I guess we were just ‘lucky’ last night. We found out for ourselves where the floods happened,” Gunnacao said.

He said the HPG was formulatin­g plans for the alternate routes and that this should be ready for the next heavy downpour.

Gunnacao maintained that it was too early to pin down permanent solutions to Edsa’s problems, though a technical working group has made suggestion­s. “Day by day, we see the problems. Day by day, we make correction­s. Day by day, it’s a different situation,” he said.

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