Four persons were killed in two separate
vehicular accidents in Ilagan City, Isabela and Balaoan, La Union on March 2
even as the Department of Public Works and Highways – Cordillera dismissed
allegations that poor road conditions were main cause of recent vehicular
accidents in the region including that in Bontoc, Mountain Province where 15
persons died while 31 others were injured Feb. 17.
Jimmy Abarca and
Lizalyn Domingo died at the scene after their motorcycles collided in Barangay
Sta. Victoria, Ilagan City, said Superintendent Vicente Valdez, chief of
the city police.
Valdez said Abarca was
allegedly drunk during the incident.
Meanwhile,
MelchorFerrer and Marcus Cariaso, were declared dead on arrival at the Balaoan
District Hospital after their tricycle crashed into a Partas passenger bus in
the village of Camiling in Balaoan town.
Bus driver Ignacio
Villamor surrendered to the police after the incident.
In Baguio City, allegations of poor road condition and lack
of traffic signs and road safety devices were resurrected following the tragic
accident along the Bontoc-Banaue Road in
Talubin, Bontoc.
Engineer Edilberto P. Carrabacan,
Cordillera Highways director said roads in the Cordillera were safe as these
were built with proper engineering
standards that fit mountainous terrain
of the region.
He said roads were
placed with the traffic signs and safety devices such as concrete barriers to
help drivers and prevent accidents.
According to
Carrabacan, most of the traffic accidents in the Cordillera region were caused
by human error, mechanical failure of vehicles and by the roads.
‘If you look at the
history of the accidents in the region, 90 percent of the all the road
accidents were caused by human or mechanical error such as drunk drivers,
overloaded vehicles or over speeding,’
Carrabacan said.
In Benguet, police
provincial office director Senior Supt. Rodolfo Azurin Jr. reported that of 952
vehicular traffic accidents in the province last year, 920 were caused by human
error while 21 were due to mechanical defect and 11 due to road conditions.
This, as the driver
and conductor of the G.V. Florida bus that fell into a ravine in Bontoc last
month appeared before during the hearing on the incident at the Land
Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board Tuesday.
Driver Edgar Renon,
30, said he was trying to maneuver the bus when he suddenly lost control of it,
as its front right wheel suddenly burst.
He said the road was
also slippery due to the sand scattered on it.
Moments after Renon
lost control, the bus fell into the mountainside, killing 15 people, including
comedian Arvin “Tado” Jimenez and two foreigners.
More than 30 other
passengers were injured in the incident.
Renon admitted that he
was unable to stop the bus when two passengers told him that they were getting
off in a waiting shed in Barangay Bayyo.
He said the bus simply
slowed down, but it kept on going down the slope.
Alex Versoza, lawyer
for G.V. Florida Transport Inc., said investigators found that a piece of metal
caused the tire to burst.
He maintained that the
brakes were functional, noting that it was engaged during the incident as
proven by the fact that the bus slowed down when Renon tried to stop it.
He said the bus might
have failed to totally stop because of the “velocity, weight of the bus, and
the downhill slope.”
According to Renon,
some passengers told him to crash the bus to the mountainside when it became
apparent that the brakes were not enough to stop it.
He added, however,
that he thought that it might not be a good idea as it might hurt the
passengers.
He said he was trying
to maneuver the bus to the bottom of the slope when the tire burst.
Renon admitted that
the only training that he got during his time with G.V. Florida was when he was
asked to drive a bus – loaded with passengers – in a different route.
He added that he was
part of an apprenticeship program for some time in the Mt. Province Cable and
Tours, the previous owner of the license plates attached to the ill-fated bus.
LTFRB Chairman Winston
Ginez said they will take this into consideration in coming up with their decision.
Meanwhile, bus
conductor JerymiahAgnapan, 34, testified that Renon took over the steering
wheel from another driver, Alexander Lucas Longalong, during their second
stopover in Sta. Fe, Nueva Vizcaya at around 2 a.m.
The incident happened
past 7 a.m.
Agnapan said Renon was
resting at the back of the bus from 8:35 p.m., when they departed from Manila,
until the time when he took over.
He said he jumped off
the bus before it fell because he was afraid that Renon had already lost
control.
Ginez said they expect
to decide on all issues involving the incident on or before March 14.
G.V. Florida Bus
Transit was given until March 10 to file its position paper on the case.
Ginez declined to
grant the request of the bus company to lift the preventive suspension on some
of its buses, saying this might preempt the decision on the main case.
Versoza said they
respect the decision of the board, adding that they would have wanted the
suspension lifted because their drivers and conductors currently do not earn
income for their families.
Meanwhile, some
complainants in the case – including Jimenez’s wife Lei and survivor Charley
Sta. Maria – rushed to the LTFRB following reports that G.V. Florida has
provided financial support for all the victims and survivors of the crash.
Sta. Maria said she
and her boyfriend, who also survived the incident, have yet to receive help
from the company.
Versoza apologized to
the survivors and relatives of the fatalities and invited them to discuss the
matter.
Ginez said they have
checks amounting to P150,000 each for the families of three victims, including
Jimenez’s.
He said they are
coordinating the release of the checks to their legal representatives.
The lawyers of G.V.
Florida said the insurance for victim Ben Sicam has been given to his family,
while they are still coordinating with the other families.
Meanwhile, the
Department of Transportation and Communication
Cordillera investigation showed the ill-fated bus was travelling in high
speed and a mix of human and mechanical error may have caused the accident.
DOTC – Cordillera
director Celina Claver said the bus brake was working and “engaged” but somehow
it did not stop the bus from falling off the 116 meter ravine in Talubin,
Bontoc.
“The engineers who
inspected the bus found out that the brakes were functioning well and engaged
meaning the driver was able to step on the breaks but the bus did not stop and
the speed and the weight of the bus were among the reasons why the bus did not
stop,” she explained.
The investigation also
showed that the bus arrived two hours earlier than scheduled and that one of
its tires exploded 100 meters before it crashed indicating it was in high
speed. – With reports from Raymund Catindig
and RedgieMelvicCawis
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