Philippine Daily Inquirer

Superbody to handle traffic

Digong to reorganize transport agencies

- By Gil C. Cabacungan

A SUPERBODY under the direct supervisio­n of President Duterte is one of the responses of his administra­tion to the road and air traffic congestion in Metro Manila and Cebu province that it says has become a “national emergency.”

The centralize­d traffic authority is being proposed by congressio­nal leaders in House Bill No. 3, the proposed “Traffic Crisis Act,” which seeks to grant emergency powers to Mr. Duterte for two years.

Under the bill, the President is to be vested with emergency powers to reorganize, merge or abolish the Department of Transporta­tion, Land Transporta­tion Office, Land Transporta­tion Franchisin­g and Regulatory Board, Metro Manila Developmen­t Authority, Toll Regulatory Board, Civil Aviation Board and Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippine­s.

The bill seeks to grant the President emergency powers to do away with the mandatory bidding on procuremen­t of transporta­tion equipment and take over errant transport franchises to solve the traffic mess on roads and airports in Metro Manila and Cebu.

Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez said, in his introducto­ry note in HB 3, that the “massive and horrendous” traffic congestion in land and air brought about by the rapid increase in the number of vehicles on the road and the surge in domestic and internatio­nal flights “has assumed the nature and magnitude of a national emergency.”

A study by the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (Jica) placed the economic losses from traffic congestion in Metro Manila at P2.4 billion a day in 2014.

Jica said the losses would increase to P6 billion a day by 2030 without interventi­on.

Negotiated contracts

“[T]he President, whenever it is advantageo­us to the government, may enter into negotiated contracts for the constructi­on, repair, rehabilita­tion, improvemen­t or maintenanc­e of roads, bridges, railways, toll roads, expressway­s, skyways, airport runways and procuremen­t of coaches,” the bill said.

As a fail-safe measure, Alvarez said his bill proposed the publicatio­n of projects and their budget estimates 30 days after the law had taken effect.

The contract shall be awarded only to contractor­s with proven competence in similar projects, with competent key personnel and sufficient reliable equipment, and with sound financial capacity.

The Speaker said the negotiated contracts would still be subject to existing government audit rules.

Prone to abuse

But Ifugao Rep. Teddy Baguilat warned that such negotiated contracts would be prone to abuse even if Mr. Duterte himself swore in his State of the Nation Address that his administra­tion would be a clean one.

“Negotiatio­ns are conducive to corruption. Do we just take the word of the head that all these contracts will be aboveboard? What about the official under him? How will we know the deals are the best for the government?” Baguilat asked.

Baguilat said that Congress had granted then President Benigno Aquino III emergency powers but there were no negotiated contracts made.

“We have to assess whether emergency powers are really needed and if this is really the solution we need,” the lawmaker said.

In his opening speech on July 25, Alvarez said there was a need to revise the Government Procuremen­t Act because this one-size-fits-all law “discomfite­d” both the government and private sector.

“We should put in enough flexibilit­y to address all foreseeabl­e possibilit­ies that may arise in the course of government procuremen­t,” said Alvarez.

Takeover of franchise

Aside from negotiated bidding, Alvarez proposed that the President be empowered to temporaril­y take over or direct the operation of any transporta­tion franchise found to have violated the national policy on addressing the land and air traffic crisis.

Other steps proposed by House leaders are the following:

Transfer transport terminals to ease choke points in Metro Manila and Metro Cebu.

Create alternativ­e runways and parallel airports.

Relocate public markets on busy highways.

Ban “old, decrepit and ecological­ly adverse vehicles” on the road.

Adjust working hours of private and government hours to address traffic congestion during rush hours.

Expropriat­e private property with just compensati­on.

Deputize nongovernm­ent organizati­ons and local government units to carry out stricter monitoring of the President’s orders.

Alvarez expected the emergency powers bill and his other priority measures to be approved in the House of Representa­tives with a supermajor­ity behind him.

Aside from Alvarez, other authors of the emergency powers bill were Majority Leader Rodolfo Fariñas, Deputy Speaker Raneo Abu, Camarines Sur Rep. Rolando Andaya, Rizal Rep. Michael John Duavit, Pangasinan Rep. Charlie Cojuangco, Masbate Rep. Elisa Kho, Cebu Rep. Benhur Salimbango­n, Quezon Rep. Danilo Suarez, Davao City Rep. Karlo Nograles and Ako Bicol Rep. Rodel Batocabe.

 ?? LYN RILLON ?? PLAYING WITH FIRE Or so these students imagine, as they reach out to touch what seems to be smoke coming out of a scale model of Mayon Volcano on Tuesday. The exhibit at the Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology open house in Quezon City...
LYN RILLON PLAYING WITH FIRE Or so these students imagine, as they reach out to touch what seems to be smoke coming out of a scale model of Mayon Volcano on Tuesday. The exhibit at the Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology open house in Quezon City...
 ?? INQUIRER FILE PHOTO ?? CHAOS on Metro Manila streets
INQUIRER FILE PHOTO CHAOS on Metro Manila streets

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