The Philippine Star

Criminal intent mars Abaya management

- By FEDERICO D. PASCUAL Jr.

TRANSPORTA­TION Secretary Joseph Emilio Abaya looks sane enough to be able to discern what is right or wrong and then act in favor of the riding public in his management of the Metro Rail Transit Line 3 (MRT-3).

The proper management options to take are obvious enough even to a junior on-the-job trainee, but why does this highly educated and supposedly experience­d hand continue to bungle the MRT-3 like it were an alien system that has dropped on his lap?

Pardon our saying so, but it seems that although Abaya knows what is right and legal under the circumstan­ces, his judgment may have been compromise­d by criminal intent.

The parade of questionab­le contracts passing the Department of Transporta­tion and Communicat­ion since Abaya took over in 2012 from fake Wharton graduate Mar Roxas keeps marching on.

Watch this: After the dismal performanc­e of APT Global, the current MRT-3 maintenanc­e provider, the DOTC thought of inviting four companies for another negotiated contract reminiscen­t of the smelly deal with APT Global.

Under APT Global, the running condition and the ridership quality of the MRT-3 system have deteriorat­ed. For instance, to make quick dirty millions, no purchases of stock rails are being made even if its maintenanc­e contract is for services and spare parts. With some critical parts not readily available, safety is being compromise­d.

Under the pretext of an emergency, which is actually self-inflicted or contrived, some substitute companies have been invited Abaya-style to make an offer to take over the maintenanc­e of MRT-3 without bidding.

The no-bidding scheme looks like an under-the-table invitation for disaster marked by inefficien­cy, stoppages, accidents and losses similar to what had started to happen under former MRT-3 general manager Al Vitangcol III who is now facing graft charges with his cohorts.

The four companies that responded to the invitation are: Busan Metro, KORAIL (Korean Rail), SMRT (Singapore Metro Rail Transit) and DMCI (DM Consunji Inc.). Additional­ly, CommBuilde­rs Technology requested that it be allowed to submit a proposal for the project.

Of the four firms, only three groups submitted proposals: (1) Busan, in joint venture with Edison Developmen­t and Constructi­on, Tramat Mercantile Inc., TMI Corp. and Castan Corp.; (2) DMCI in joint venture with Hamburg Metro; and (3) CommBuilde­rs Technology, in joint venture with Schunk Bahn-und Industriet­echnik.

Creativity used to corner MRT contract

BUT ONLY the Busan joint venture qualified with a bid of P3.8 billion. How the group qualified is in itself an interestin­g study in business creativity under the aegis of “Daang Matuwid.”

Originally, when the DOTC opened invitation­s for a negotiated contract, the terms of reference required that a bidder has a net financing capability of 50 percent or half of the contract cost.

The contract worth is P4.2 billion, divided roughly into: P2.25 billion for three-year maintenanc­e of the MRT-3 system, P1.1 billion for the general overhaulin­g of 43 train cars, P900 million for the replacemen­t of the signaling system, and P67 million for additional works.

Based on these figures, the terms of reference originally required invited companies to have net financial capacity of least P2.1 billion or 50 percent of the contract cost.

Yet when Busan entered the picture, the 50-percent requiremen­t miraculous­ly disappeare­d. Instead, the requiremen­t was dropped down from 50 percent to just 25 percent of contract cost (or P1.025 billion, given the P4.2 billion contract).

The requiremen­t now is that each member company of the joint venture must have a net financial capability of 25 percent of contract cost IF it owns 25 percent or more of the joint venture.

This is how Busan became qualified even if its partners each had a net worth way below P1 billion. Available records show that the net worth of EDC is only P383 million; Tramat Mercantile, P502 million; TMI, P150 million; and Castan, P4.5 million.

How did Busan’s partners get around the P1-billion requiremen­t? The shareholdi­ngs of the Busan-EDC joint venture were structured as follows:

Busan owns 4 percent, while EDC, Tramat Mercantile and TMI have 24.5 percent each, and Castan 22.5 percent. Therefore, none of the smaller corporatio­ns, by owning less than 25 percent, need to meet the requiremen­t of P1-billion net worth.

It is interestin­g that while Busan is the corporatio­n that has the contractua­l capacity experience, it only owns 4 percent of the corporatio­n. An examinatio­n of the other member corporatio­ns also reveals that their expertise lies elsewhere. For example, Tramat Mercantile is a farming or agricultur­al corporatio­n.

With companies like this taking over maintenanc­e, we can expect Abaya and Co. to transform MRT-3 into a legacy of the incompeten­ce and corruption under President Noynoy Aquino and a reminder of Liberal Party presidenti­al candidate Mar Roxas’ promise of “more of the same.”

Sometimes skeptics ask “why fix it when it ain’t broke?” This time it seems to have become a crazy, and criminal, case of breaking a mass transport system to have reason to fix it for a fat fee.

For 12 years before the Abaya wrecking crew came in, Sumitomo Corp. was quietly but satisfacto­rily handling MRT-3 maintenanc­e. Then Roxas appointee Vitangcol and his relatives and Liberal Party mates took over the job of consigning MRT-3 to the junkyard – after milking it under “Daang Matuwid.”

* * * NOTA BENE: POSTSCRIPT­s are archived at www. manilamail.com (if necessary copy/paste url on address bar). Follow us via Twitter.com/@FDPascual. Email feedback to dikpascual@gmail.com

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