PUV staging areas / Tourist, UV express services out of city streets / Project checks
>> Saturday, March 14, 2020
CITY HALL BEAT
Aileen P. Refuerzo
BAGUIO
CITY – Tourist transport and utility vehicle (UV) express services will no
longer be allowed to use staging areas, parking spaces and public streets in
the city effective March 17.
Mayor Benjamin Magalong
issued Executive Order No. 50 revoking all administrative orders and similar
issuances that allow these vehicles to utilize temporary staging and parking
areas and public streets being administered and regulated by the city and for
said services to permanently vacate said premises.
The service companies
were given 15 days from the effectivity of the mayor’s order dated March 3,
2020.
In
his order, the mayor said reports had reached him that colorum vans or services
are being clandestinely allowed to load and unload in temporary staging areas,
pick-up and drop points allotted to the tourist transport and UV express
services in the city in exchange for paying regulatory fees.
“This kind of scheme
endangers the safety and escalates the risks for the riding public and it adds
to the difficulty of ascertaining whether the vehicles servicing the public are
colorum or not,” the mayor said.
He
said the privileges given to said services to use the spaces are just temporary
and given that they are being abused now need to be revoked.
The mayor added that as
holders of franchise or Certificate of Public Convenience, these services
should have their own off-street garage, terminals and hop-on hop-off points in
compliance with Department Order No. 2017-011 or the Omnibus Franchising
Guidelines of the Dept. of Transportation and Communication, Memorandum
Circular No. 2017-30 or the Guidelines for Off-Street Terminal Operations) of
the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board and Memorandum
Circular No. 2017-027 or the Implementing Guidelines for Garages.
He
said there is a need to weed out colorum vehicles which continue to proliferate
in the city despite the passage of Ordinance No. 55-2017 or the Anti-Colorum
Ordinance in 2017.
The mayor tasked the
City Engineering Office and the Baguio City Police Office to enforce the
order.
***
The
adoption of new schemes involving staging areas of public utility vehicle
trunklines servicing Benguet towns is part of the traffic decongestion strategies
being implemented in the city and not a way to get back at the province for
disapproving a city project.
Mayor Magalong in the
Ugnayan press briefing Feb. 26 belied claims that the city purposely moved the
terminals of some Tuba trunklines to another place to get even for the
rejection of the city’s piggery contract farming project.
The city will never
resort to such feeble acts just because of a small debacle.
“It is unfortunate that
the community did not accept the project and they were supported by their mayor
so we can’t do anything but to accept their decision,” the mayor said.
The mayor said the city
will still pursue the project possibly in another province like Pangasinan or
will divert to another venture like button mushroom production which he said is
a promising industry considering that the whole country only produces 15
percent of the total requirement.
The mayor said contrary
to the notion, the city is bent on helping Tuba town and other municipalities
in the BLISTT (Baguio-La Trinidad-Itogon-Sablan-Tuba-Tublay) in attracting
investments to rev up their economy possibly through the creation of economic
zones for which initial negotiations were made with the Philippine Economic
Zone Authority and information technology companies.
The adjustments
involving PUJ terminals including the Tuba and Taloy Sur trunklines are part of
the ongoing revisions and experimentations being adopted by the Land Traffic
and Transportation Management Committee through the Baguio Traffic and
Transportation Technical Working Group to untangle traffic bottlenecks around
the city.
In fact on
recommendation of the committee the mayor issued on Feb. 13 Executive Order No.
39-2020 enjoining all operators of the PUJ trunklines to and from La Trinidad
town and Benguet municipalities using the La Trinidad terminal at the Rabbit
Sinkhole area along Magsaysay Avenue and Dangwa Center Mall to comply with the
Dept. of Interior and Local Government-Dept. of Transportation and
Communication Joint Memorandum Circular No. 1 series of 2008 which provides
guidelines in the establishment and operation of public transport terminal and
the Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board locational guidelines and standards
for terminals and garages.
The orders provide that PUJ
terminals may be located within commercial zones but should not be near a major
intersection; must be accessible to commuters but access to major thoroughfares
should be discouraged; and should be more than 100 meters away from
institutional establishments like schools and hospitals.
Pending compliance with
the said guidelines, the operators were ordered to limit units for each route
to a maximum of two units at a time.
***
The
regular inspections being conducted by the city’s team led by Mayor Magalong
and City Administrator Bonifacio Dela Peña resulted to marked improvements on
how contractors implement projects in the city.
In the Feb. 28 meeting
with close to 200 contractors undertaking projects in the city, Magalong and
Dela Peña thanked them for cooperating and for being open to the city’s thrust
to foster integrity in project implementation to achieve quality and beneficial
outputs.
The mayor acknowledged
that these improvements are good signs that contractors are beginning to have a
“change in mindset” in that they are now conscious of following project
specifications and of producing quality infrastructures.
He expressed hope that
this will further develop into genuine concern for the end users of the project
more than the monetary benefits they will gain.
The weekly round of
inspections which the two officials hold with the City Building and
Architecture Office and City Engineering Office was initiated in October last
year after observing that substandard projects abound in the city including
school buildings and flood and erosion control works.
Since then, the team had
checked 65 projects and those that failed were refused payment and given punch
lists for corrective measures and most of the offending contractors had
complied.
The two officials also
directed City Engineer Edgar Victorio Olpindo and City Buildings and
Architecture Officer-in-Charge Johnny Degay to ensure that projects programmed
even if done in phases will be usable by the intended beneficiaries.
According to Olpindo,
they target to finish plans and cost estimates of all projects programmed under
the Annual Investment Plan (AIP) by the end of this month for bidding in April
and May.
The mayor also updated
the contractors on the “big ticket” projects lined up for implementation in the
city beginning this year: Burnham Park upgrading, city market redevelopment,
youth convergence building, City Hall Annex building, sewerage system
expansion, sidewalk rehabilitation, arboretum , Mines View Park rehabilitation,
Baguio Athletic Bowl bleacher expansion, modular parking buildings, modern
barangay halls and the Smart City project components.
He assured that no graft
practices will be tolerated under his administration so that contractors will
earn their keep and have no reason to shortchange the government.
“Kung walang kalokohan,
kikita na kayo at masaya pa kayo sa resulta ng trabaho nyo so what we are just
asking in return is please give us quality projects.” the mayor said.
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