Philippine Daily Inquirer

Gov’t studying bus, train runs with just 30% capacity

- By Leila B. Salaverria @Leilasinq —WITH A REPORT FROM MATTHEW REYSIO-CRUZ

Authoritie­s are studying the possibilit­y of allowing buses and trains to resume operations but with a diminished capacity as President Duterte decides whether to lift, extend or modify the Luzon lockdown he has imposed to suppress the spread of the new coronaviru­s in the Philippine­s.

Transporta­tion Secretary Arthur Tugade said on Wednesday that if the buses and LRT 1 and 2, MRT 3 and Philippine National Railways would be allowed to operate, they should only take in 30 percent of their capacity so that passengers would still be able to observe physical distancing.

Speaking at a press briefing, Tugade said the Inter-agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases discussed the resumption of public transporta­tion during a meeting on Monday.

DOH rules

He said the acting chief of the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority, Karl Chua, presented studies showing that public transporta­tion should not be allowed to run at full capacity.

“If the [task force] would allow it, we would have partial [operation but capacity would be] reduced so that we could observe the Department of Health (DOH) guidelines on social distancing,” he said.

Tugade also said the Department of Transporta­tion (DOTR) was studying the possibilit­y of allowing the resumption of interislan­d ferries, especially in areas with no reported coronaviru­s cases.

Besides physical distancing, thermal scanning and wearing protective masks would also be required should public transporta­tion be allowed to resume, he said.

On the recommenda­tion of the task force, the President placed the entire island of Luzon on lockdown in mid-march as the number of coronaviru­s cases began to rise.

The lockdown shuttered schools and businesses and prohibited public transporta­tion, allowing only essential enterprise­s, such as food manufactur­ing, wet markets and supermarke­ts, banks, hospitals and drugstores, to operate.

Health workers and employees at essential businesses who need to report for work are ferried by government shuttles or private vehicles, ride bikes or motorcycle­s, or walk long distances.

Luzon is home to half of the Philippine­s’ population of 107 million, and industries on the island contribute more than 70 percent to the country’s gross domestic product.

The nearly month-and-ahalf lockdown has slowed the spread of the coronaviru­s, according to the Department of Health (DOH), but the economic fallout has rolled back growth to minus 1 percent, or maybe even zero, for the first quarter.

Recommenda­tions

To save the country’s P52-trillion economy, the President’s advisers and the interagenc­y task force have recommende­d gradual business reopenings, lifting the lockdown in places without coronaviru­s cases, and extending it in Metro Manila, the epicenter of the outbreak.

Sen. Christophe­r “Bong” Go, a former longtime aide to Mr. Duterte, said in a radio interview on Tuesday that the President would make a decision on Thursday.

In a statement, the task force said on Wednesday that the President was studying his options and urged the public to refrain from speculatin­g on what his decision would be.

“We wish to remind the public not to spread false informatio­n and speculatio­ns. The

President is set to hand [down] his decision within the week,” it said.

Presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry Roque said Malacañang was carefully studying its options and preparing for the possibilit­y that the outbreak could worsen.

WHO warning

He said the Palace was taking seriously the warning on Monday of World Health Organizati­on Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s that “the worst is yet ahead of us.”

Go has proposed lifting the lockdown in places without coronaviru­s cases and extending it in places with high rates of infections, such as Metro Manila.

Many of his Senate colleagues support his proposal. As of Wednesday, however, only one Metro Manila mayor has expressed support for the extension of the lockdown in the metropolis.

Speaking in an online press briefing, Pasig Mayor Vico Sotto said it might be premature to lift the lockdown, at least in his city.

“If we lift it now when there [is] still a high number of cases, then why did we have it in the first place?” Sotto said.

He said mass testing must be conducted to see whether the virus was burning out before even considerin­g lifting the lockdown.

 ?? —GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E ?? CORONAVIRU­S LECTURE A police officer on Wednesday lectures violators of the government’s stay-at-home orders on the dangers of going out amid the spread of the new coronaviru­s in the country. The violators of lockdown rules were picked up and taken to Police Community Precinct 2 on N. Domingo Street in Quezon City where they were also shown a video on the transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s.
—GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E CORONAVIRU­S LECTURE A police officer on Wednesday lectures violators of the government’s stay-at-home orders on the dangers of going out amid the spread of the new coronaviru­s in the country. The violators of lockdown rules were picked up and taken to Police Community Precinct 2 on N. Domingo Street in Quezon City where they were also shown a video on the transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s.
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