Road woes
>> Monday, April 27, 2015
EDITORIAL
All over northern Luzon, if not the whole
country, road construction projects are on with motorists griping over slow
construction in some areas like Baguio where good roads were destroyed for
“reblocking.”
The timing
of these construction projects is auspicious, 2016 being election year. But
then, if one asks the average person on the street, he would retort that you
should know the answer – meaning, there is more on the part of government
officials in being sincere in improving roads.
Despite
pronouncements of Highways officials that “good” roads have to be replaced as
these have “lifespans,” the common tao
knows that government officials want to spend taxpayers’ money, on the pretext
of doing good for the people when the main reason is accompanying SOPs.
So for the
populace, they just grin and bear it as wrecking crews tear up roads disrupting
their routines while they have to bear heavy traffic. In some if not most
instances, work is at snail’s pace even as some projects are being alleged as
substandard.
Such topic
is fodder for comments in public vehicles. Private engineers are saying roads
could last longer and need not be torn apart to be replaced. The average man on
the street is saying money allotted for road construction projects could have
better been spent for livelihood projects for the poor.There are no public
hearings before such road projects are started that even some officials are
complaining themselves.
In Cordillera, Baguio, Benguet and tourism
officials urged the Dept. of Public Works and Highways to make proper planning
and necessary coordination before implementation of projects.
Road
rehabilitation projects in in Baguio including central business started a week
before Holy Week when tourists were expected to flock to the city.
Mayor
Mauricio Domogan said absence of close coordination between implementing
agencies and city government coupled with inadequate information dissemination
on simultaneous implementation of nationally-funded infrastructure projects were
cited as major cause of tremendous traffic congestion in the city.
Domogan said
the DPWH – Baguio City District Engineering Office and the winning contractors
failed to coordinate with the city government and traffic officers as well as
stakeholders to ease effects of diggings.
He said projects being implemented along
national roads are nationally-funded and not city-funded, that is why the
DPWH-BCDEO has the jurisdiction over said projects. The Hotel and Restaurants Association of
Baguio also expressed dismay with the timing of road rehabilitation works.
Many
visitors have canceled hotel reservations during the Holy Week due to news on
traffic in the city including one-way traffic scheme of the Kennon Road imposed
by the DPWH which resulted to heavy traffic and discouraged visitors from
coming up to the city.
Benguet Gov.
Nestor Fongwan also expressed resentment over lack of coordination by the DPWH
when it implemented the one-way traffic experimental scheme in Kennon Road
during Holy Week, adding he learned of experimental traffic scheme through
media.
The governor
said the scheme affected lives and created problems particularly with residents
of barangays along Kennon Road.
While
tourism industry stakeholders said they were toying with the idea of filing
charges against the DPWH and contractors for loss of revenue, officials and
stakeholders urged proper coordination before projects are implemented to avoid
losses and inconvenience to residents and tourists.
Indeed, implementation of such projects needs consultation and coordination. But then, when lucre rears its ugly head, expect
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