The Philippine Star

Panelo now kinder to lowly jeepneys?

- * * * NOTA BENE: Postscript­s are archived at manilamail.com. Author is on Twitter as @FDPascual. Email feedback to fdp333@yayoo.com

PRESIDENTI­AL spokesman Salvador Panelo arrived in Malacañang 46 minutes late last Friday after a grueling “commute challenge” to take public transporta­tion going to work.

The wiry lawyer, in shades and a white signature cap and a red blazer hanging on his arm, emerged from the 3.5-hour ordeal that should have taken only 1.5 hours, still not convinced that there is a mass transport crisis – only a traffic mess, he said – in the national capital.

He is not talking about it, but his trip may have shown him also that the jeepney, a rolling smorgasbor­d of Filipino taste, is still a useful backup in a metropolis left behind by transport modernizat­ion. Except for the last leg on a motorcycle, all his rides were on jeepneys.

Starting out at 5:15 a.m. in (1) New Manila, Quezon City, where a son lives, he took a jeepney to Cubao, eastward away from his Manila destinatio­n, (2) proceeded farther east on another jeepney to Concepcion, Marikina, where he resides, then (3) turned back to Gilmore, QC, on a jeepney, before (4) taking a fourth jeepney that took him to J.P. Rizal close to Malacañang.

When he returned to Cubao from Marikina, he said, his plan was to take the LRT-2 to Manila, but he dropped the idea because the media kept trailing him. He headed instead to the vicinity of J. P. Rizal by jeepney via Aurora Blvd.

With his seeming preference for jeepneys in that “commute challenge,” there was speculatio­n that this may have been due to the absence of available alternativ­es (bus, light train) or he was trying to shake off media trailing him.

As for his first ride going east from QC instead of west toward Malacañang, speculatio­ns are that he may have lost his bearings. Or was he trying to confuse his stalkers? Our guess is that he went to Marikina to pick up or drop off something.

Panelo was on the road three hours and 31 minutes (5:15 to 8:46 a.m.) for a PU ride to the office that should not take more than an hour and 30 minutes in moderate traffic.

He “wasted” or lost a total of four hours (2 x 2 to include his going home) commuting, because of the mass transport gridlock (we are not calling it a crisis in deference to him) that is choking the national capital.

If there are at least three million individual­s commuting to work or to business-related meetings every day in Metro Manila, multiply that number by Panelo’s sample of four hours wasted in traffic, and we log 12 million (4 x 3M) man-hours lost each day in the metropolis.

Multiply those man-hours by the variables that include wages, productivi­ty, chain effect, etc. and we get the impact of the traffic mess (not a crisis yet?) in money value.

Whether he realized it or not, Panelo’s willingnes­s to take on the challenge reopened discussion­s around the central question of what to do about the hellish traffic. We have not read of a Master Plan attacking the problem, only scattered comments from officials.

In 2017, a study funded by the Japanese government reported that Metro Manila loses some $67 million daily in lost productivi­ty arising from the worsening traffic mess. The loss grows as the government continues not to mitigate the problem.

The pain caused by heavy traffic pressure is felt most acutely on EDSA, the 24-kilometer circumfere­ntial backbone between Caloocan and Pasay that takes at least three hours to negotiate at peak hours. The building of the Metro Rail Transit line (MRT-3) on it has not relieved the congestion.

• On with phaseout of old jeepneys

THERE is on the drawing board and talking points of land transporta­tion bureaucrat­s the never-fading idea of “modernizin­g” the lowly jeepney, a World War II relic whose lifespan Filipino ingenuity has prolonged.

The Duterte administra­tion’s version of the modernizat­ion program has, by reflex, been opposed by transport groups that denounce it as anti-poor, oblivious of its many progressiv­e and forward-looking elements.

But looking at the model unit’s price tag and the limited capacity of the average jeepney driver (assuming the driver-owner will be allowed to operate as individual­s), the ambitious modernizat­ion appears anti-poor.

The Land Bank estimates that each jeepney replacemen­t will cost from P1.4 million to P1.6 million. But based on an annual interest rate of six percent and a payment period of seven years, the actual cost of a new jeepney reaches P2.1 million.

The program calls for phasing out jeepneys, buses and other public utility vehicles that are at least 15 years old and replacing them with safer, more comfortabl­e and more environmen­tally-friendly units over the next three years. There are some 220,000 jeepneys nationwide.

Replacemen­ts must have at least a Euro 4-compliant engine or an electric motor to lessen pollution. Other required features include CCTV cameras, payment terminals, speed limiters and GPS monitors.

Transporta­tion Secretary Arthur Tugade, a billionair­e who takes unannounce­d rides on PU vehicles, vows to modernize the country’s public transport system.

He remains unfazed by the resistance, saying: “Past administra­tions wanted to modernize transporta­tion, but every time people wave flags saying that the program is anti-poor, they take a step back. This has to stop.”

Land Transporta­tion Franchisin­g and Regulatory Board chair Martin Delgra has said that 25 franchises have been cancelled by the LTFRB for participat­ing in the 2017 and last year’s transport strikes in violation of the terms of the franchises.

He foresees about 80 percent of the jeepneys aged 15 years and older will be phased out before Duterte’s term ends in 2022.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines