Philippine Daily Inquirer

FOREIGN BUSINESSES BACK BILL FOR TRANSPORT SAFETY BODY

- By Roy Stephen C. Canivel @roycanivel_INQ

Foreign business groups urged lawmakers to move faster in ratifying the reconciled version of a bill that would create an agency in charge of probing transporta­tion-related accidents and other incidents.

The Joint Foreign Chambers (JFC), which represents over 3,000 member companies, urged Congress to ratify the reconciled version of a bill that would create the Philippine Transporta­tion Safety Board or PTSB. In a recent statement, they said they have sent letters to the House and Senate leadership to stress the urgency of the measure.

“This important reform bill creating the PTSB is ready for immediate passage. With the bicameral conference committee of both chambers having been convened, the JFC eagerly awaits the ratificati­on of the reconciled version. Once ratified by both houses the bill can finally be endorsed for enactment by the president,” the JFC said.

Closing bureaucrat­ic gap

“With establishm­ent of the PTSB, the gap in bureaucrac­y which allegedly contribute­s to inefficien­cy in the implementa­tion of transporta­tion-safety schemes and ineffectua­l safety measures will be addressed. PTSB’s regulatory, investigat­ory and fact-finding functions will allow the agency to implement a proactive approach and be in control of situation even before it happens,” they said.

The JFC is a coalition of the American, Australian-New Zealand, Canadian, European, Japanese and Korean chambers and regional operating headquarte­rs under the group called Pamuri. They represent member companies engaged in around $100 billion worth of trade and some $30 billion worth of investment­s in the Philippine­s.

The measure seeks the creation of a nonregulat­ory and independen­t agency attached to the Office of the President, which would then be the primary agency responsibl­e for the conduct of impartial investigat­ion on transporta­tion-related accidents and incidents.

Fragmented oversight

Presently, different agencies handle different sectors of transporta­tion with regard to accident investigat­ions.

For example, sea mishaps are under the Maritime Industry Authority which forms inquiry boards to investigat­e major maritime disasters. Road accidents that involve public utility vehicles fall under the jurisdicti­on of the Land Transporta­tion Franchisin­g and Regulatory Board.

Moreover, other road accidents may also be investigat­ed by the Philippine National Police, the Land Transporta­tion Office and by the Metro Manila Developmen­t Authority.

“The PTSB bill has repeatedly been filed since 2004 and has languished in Congress for almost two decades.” the JFC said in a previous statement.

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