City council backs taxi operators’ stand vs tax
>> Monday, October 29, 2012
By Ramon
Dacawi
BAGUIO CITY -- The city council Monday joined
taxi operators in asking the Bureau of Internal Revenue to forego imposition of
a three percent tax on gross earnings of units based on the receipts coming out
of their meters.
The local legislature adopted the
recommendation of its committee on public utilities, transportation and traffic
legislations headed by councilor Nicasio Aliping Jr. to endorse the plea of the
Samahan ng Taksi sa Cordillera Administrative Region (STCAR) headed by Melanio
Panayo.
In a petition to BIR commissioner Kim
Henares, Panayo said the implementation of the three percent tax also known as
Common Carrier Tax under Republic Act 9337 would add to the burdens of a
transport industry already saddled by escalating cost of operations.
Panayo said while taxi operators in Baguio
were already apprised of the BIR plan to impose the three percent tax on gross
receipts, inquiries from taxi operators in Metro-Manila and other major
cities in the country revealed they have not been informed of such plan.
“Imposing the CCT to the local taxi operators
while the same is not yet being enforced on taxi operators in
Metro-Manila and other major cities in the country will not be a fair and equal
proposition,” Panayo said in his letter to Henares, through revenue district
officer Fely Simon.
He explained that majority of local operators
have only one or two units (who) “bear the brunt of operating below break-even
because the continuous hikes in the costs of transport operation could not be
controlled by government”.
Panayo added that the taxi rates in Baguio
are lower than those pegged for Metro-Manila and other cities despite its
mountainous terrain that results in bigger fuel consumption and more frequent
replacement of auto parts.
These were precisely the reasons, Panayo
said, why the Cordillera used to be a grantee of higher fare rates in the 1980s
and 1990s on recommendation of the the Committee on the Revision of Public
Service Law of the University of the Philippines Law Center.
“But even this was forgotten by the (Land
Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board) after a few years of
implementation, to the prejudice of taxi operations in Baguio City and (the
Cordillera),” he said.
The BIR is set to implement this month the
registration of all taxi meters issuing receipt pursuant to Revenue Memorandum
Order No. 12-2012, Panayo told the city council.
0 comments:
Post a Comment