Sun.Star Pampanga

NLEx, DOTr and sand haulers

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Let’s talk about roads. Almost half of our lives we pass through many of them, either by walking or riding a vehicle. There is a tragic stressfuln­ess every time a motorist makes use of them. We in the past many, many years wanted government to end corruption in the constructi­on of a national

highway or even the so-called barangay road or a farm to market roads. But it seems, it will not end until kingdom come as long as we have that system popularly known in the ci r cl es as SOP. ( Ask your favorite Senator, Congressma­n or any of the public officials they know what that acronym means).

Traveling MacArthur Highway from its starting point in Pangasinan up to Balintawak in Caloocan City is no smooth ride. There are several portions that have seen better days. All patchworks. Bumpy ride. Nerve wracking with all those tricycles and kolong kolong racing with brand new SUVs. Daredevil motorcycle riders who think they are Evil Knievel have no fear of death. I travel very often, almost daily and maybe most of you reading this article, from Angeles City up San Fernando. That particular stretch of the road needs to be replaced, or maybe asphalt layover throughout. Paging DPWH Secretary Mark Villar.

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Last week sand haulers barricaded toll gates of the North Luzon Expressway (NLEx) and caused kilometer long traffic.

This is the story behind this: There was a time when trucks sourcing sand from Porac only averages 16 to 22 cubic meter of load.(Trivia: Did you know that 70% of the sand delivered to Manila is being sourced in Porac town?). It was greed and cutthroat competitio­n that started it. Many of the companies delivering sand to constructi­on sites in the Metro Manila area began increasing their load, and most of those Howo trucks carry a heavy load up to 40 cubic meter.

That load may have caused cracks and destructio­n of the expressway including the Candaba viaduct. So the NLEx management decided to deny them entry. Denied of passage, the truck drivers accessed MacArthur highway but towns along the highway are strictly checking their load and are selective. And pass way payments even without government official receipts are collected from passing sand trucks.

Due to the circuitous and the heavy traffic along the MacArthur highway, the truck owners requested a meeting to the NLEx management. According to my source, there were two occasions wherein NLEx management snubbed the invitation of the truck owners, so the option was to barricade the toll plazas and force NLEX in the conference table.

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Another nerve wracking situations being experience­d by motorists are these RFID on toll gates. The technology is there but it is far from perfect. Those bright boys kuno from the Department of Transporta­tion (DOTr) are no bright boys at all.

RFID means Radio Frequency Identifica­tion. A radio frequency can read more than a kilometer distance. I experience­d this in my travels in many countries. And I observed that aside from these RFID lanes there is one or two cash lanes which also served for loading if you have less balance.

Why DOTR enforced it prematurel­y even it is far from perfect and only backtracke­d later will tells us it was not carefully studied. In the meantime, hundreds of workers of NLEx will be laid-off as a result.

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