The Philippine Star

DOTC launches traffic app challenge

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

A competitio­n is being pushed for the developmen­t of applicatio­ns to allow motorists and commuters to plan their trips efficientl­y and convenient­ly.

In a statement, Department of Transporta­tion and Communicat­ions (DOTC) spokesman Michael Arthur Sagcal said the three-month competitio­n called Philippine Transit App Challenge will target individual­s and groups mainly from the informatio­n technology (IT) industry to develop applicatio­ns using the database of the Philippine Transit Informatio­n Service (PTIS).

The competitio­n is being conducted with the Metropolit­an Manila Developmen­t Authority (MMDA) and the Cebu City government.

Started in 2011, PTIS is an exhaustive, two-year effort to gather and organize previously unavailabl­e data on buses, jeepneys, and trains in Metro Manila.

Sagcal said the initiative of building the PTIS at a time when the DOTC could not immediatel­y provide certain essential informatio­n to commuters like the best route to take at a particular time.

“The need to gather reliable data at that time in or- der to deliver convenient and efficient services to the public was immediatel­y recognized and pursued,” he said.

Using Global Positionin­g System (GPS) technology, the DOTC had gathered data on more than 900 bus, train, and jeepney routes.

It had also collected useful informatio­n like the fares and amounts of time required to take these various modes of transporta­tion.

The DOTC analyzed and organized the data, along with other concerned offices like the MMDA, the Land Transporta­tion Franchisin­g and Regulatory Board (LTFRB), the Light Rail Transit Authority (LRTA), and the Metro Rail Transit Corp. (MRTC).

It will now be possible to find out what a commuter’s options are to get from one point to another in Metro Manila, what types of transporta­tion and how many transfers will be involved, and how much money and time each option will require.

The two-year data gathering and analysis effort was made possible through a grant from the World Bank, which also funded a similar project of the Cebu City government to make traffic management efforts more advanced.

A paper by Dr. Jose Regin Regidor of the National Center for Transporta­tion Studies (NCTS) at the University of the Philippine­s showed that motorists and workers lost close to P1.513 trillion over the years due to traffic jams in Metro Manila.

Regidor’s paper factored-in fuel costs and potential man-hours lost while being stuck in traffic, especially during the rainy season.

The paper, based on a 2000 NCTS study on traffic congestion, said fuel costs while being stuck in traffic add up to P4.212 billion a year, while time wasted in road jams was computed at P137.519 billion.

The paper was presented during the UP College of Engineerin­g Professori­al Chair Colloquium last year.

The paper proposed that the government invest more on mass transporta­tion through private-public partnershi­ps to minimize the negative cost of traffic congestion.

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