The Philippine Star

Christmas gridlock looms; can MRT-3 GM avert it?

- JARIUS BONDOC

Cesar Chavez, the man who was holding the MRT-3 fort together, has quit. Being blamed for others’ faults became unbearable. Chavez had struggled every pre-dawn to late night to keep Mega Manila’s main yet most rotted commuter railway running. That wasn’t his job but the MRT-3’s allegedly absentee general manager’s. Still he did it, to ensure rides for 450,000 daily passengers. From inside, meanwhile, he was being sabotaged to fail. Last week a train decoupled while accelerati­ng, which can only happen by fiddling with the electronic-electrical mechanism. That weekend the emergency technician­s on whom Chavez relied nearly weren’t paid their salaries. Deliberate­ly it seemed too, the MRT-3 regular staff was being demoralize­d from good work. Higherups didn’t shield Chavez from lobbyist-intriguers of unqualifie­d contractor­s. Fed up, he gave up yesterday. Decently he kept mum about those real causes, and took responsibi­lity for the mess. But the murmurs from inside were too loud to ignore.

Transport Sec. Arthur Tugade may say that no one’s indispensa­ble. Chavez himself said his resignatio­n could usher in someone more able. Still, it all comes at a bad time. The Christmas rush is on. Goods have been coming in increasing shipments to the Manila sea and airports, necessitat­ing a concomitan­t increase in cargo trucks. Holiday shoppers and home-comers are cramming the streets. Metropolit­an authoritie­s are unable to cope with the usual, so what more holiday, traffic. Hours-long gridlocks loom. Traditiona­lly opposition­ist Metro Manilans will seethe. President Rodrigo Duterte will be blamed.

Duterte characteri­stically is a takecharge guy. It was he no less who publicly apologized last weekend for the MRT3 train decoupling and daily glitches. Tugade was then in sickbay. Yesterday Tugade denied critics’ insinuatio­ns of causing Chavez’s sudden departure. They’ve lost a good man in Chavez. The latter, by being transparen­t in inviting consumeris­ts, politician­s, and newsmen to monitor railways contractin­g, had restored public confidence in the transport department. How will Duterte and Tugade now make the MRT-3 GM, a sickly retiree-general from Davao, work? Whom would they pick as new honest deputy for rail mega-projects?

Chavez’s shoes are too big to fill. As 13-month-long Undersecre­tary for Railways he got trains moving from three administra­tions of dilapidati­on. The Philippine National Railways resumed daily Manila-Laguna commuter runs. Continuing it to Legaspi and onto Sorsogon in Bicol is to start soon. As well, the North Rail from Manila to Malolos, Bulacan, onto Clark Airport in Pampanga. In the works too is the first leg, Cagayan de Oro-Iligan, of a Mindanao circumfere­ntial railroad. In Metro Manila, the LRT-1 is being extended to the boundary of Cavite; LRT-2 coaches are to be refurbishe­d.

MRT-3 will be the trickiest to handle. Chavez’s undersecre­tary job is basically policy staff work. But he had to take over operations and maintenanc­e when his boss fired the private contractor for unfulfille­d work. Two Cabinet members, a powerful lawyer, and a congressma­n are lobbying to restore that inept company to its plunderous P3.8-billion contract. Other retired generals are angling to insert equally inept contractor­s. If they have their way, Duterte will reap the whirlwind. The past Aquino admin had incurred Mega Manilans’ wrath for the series of billion-peso MRT-3 contracts to Liberal Party mates. Duterte must not repeat the mistake.

Millennial­s often wonder why their olds are so cool, picnicking at the slightest invitation, playing rock guitar, and wearing tie-dyed shirts, denims, and minis. They’re products of the ‘60s, that’s why – that period of political awakening, anti-war protests, sexual liberation, gender equality, flower power, psychedeli­c art, and love music. And their hip culture was encapsulat­ed in a musical hit of the time: “Hair.”

“Hair” is the story of an Oklahoma farm boy who enlists to fight in the Vietnam War, but en route to boot camp gets involved with a group of long-haired men and garlanded women in New York City’s Central Park preaching “peace, love, freedom, happiness.”

First staged in 1968, “Hair” brought forth such iconic songs as “Aquarius,” “Let the Sunshine In,” “Good Morning Star Shine,” “Manchester, England,” “Easy to Be Hard,” and of course “Hair.”

Turn on your parents or grandparen­ts by treating them to the local run of “Hair,” at Onstage Theater, Greenbelt 1, Ayala Malls, Makati. Let them recall those fun days when they wore their hair long and beautiful, wondering why, although Mary loved her Son, their mothers frowned at the way they looked.

Showing Saturdays at 3:30 and 8 p.m., Sundays at 4:30 p.m., till Dec. 17. Repertory Philippine­s’ season-ender for 2017. Directed by Chris Millado. Starring Markki Stroem and Topper Fabregas alternatin­g as Claude, George Schulze as Berger, Caisa Borromeo as Sheila, Maronne Cruz as Jeanie, Cara Barredo as Crissy, Franco Ramos as Woof, Alfritz Blanche as Hud. Tickets available at TicketWorl­d, (02) 8919999 or at the box office.

Catch Sapol radio show, Saturdays, 8-10 a.m., DWIZ (882-AM).

Gotcha archives on Facebook: https:// www.facebook.com/pages/Jarius-Bondoc/1376602159­218459, or The STAR website http://www.philstar.com/author/ Jarius%20Bondoc/GOTCHA

With Chavez out, who will lobbyists now badmouth to Duterte, as they insert their respective unqualifie­d maintenanc­e firms?

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