LTO suspends ‘no plate no travel policy’
>> Tuesday, June 16, 2015
After
a series of hearings conducted at the Senate, the Land Transportation Office
heeded calls of Senate majority leader Alan Peter Cayetano and the public to
suspend its “No plate, no travel’ policy.”
“Ako’y
natutuwa na nagka-solution -- that LTO met with car dealers, and tried to solve
existing problems,” Cayetano said on the sidelines of the Senate Committee on
Public Services and Blue Ribbon Subcommittee's joint investigation on the
alleged irregularities in the agency’s license plate program.
“Pero kung kinonsulta siguro muna nila ang mga tao bago ipatupad ang polisiya,
hindi na sana nangyari itong napakalaking problema,” he added.
LTO
officials agreed to the senator’s proposal to defer implementation of its
policy, a press statement from Cayetano’s office said.
"While
we commend LTO's suspension of its 'No Plate, No Travel' policy, it does not
end here. We know that the DOTC, among other agencies in government, are still
riddled with several problems," Cayetano said.
The
senator earlier blasted the LTO for imposing penalties to car owners and
drivers under its ‘No Plate, No Travel’ policy.
He
said while noting that it was in fact
the agency’s fault that there had been a delay in the issuance of plates for
new vehicles.
He
also cited LTO’s failure to clarify the guidelines of its regulation to law
enforcers on the ground, which he feared could have caused confusion and
possible abuse of the public.
Cayetano
said LTO enforcers should not have penalized car owners who travel without the
necessary license plates, provided they have shown proof of registration.
He
said no fine should be imposed if the motorist can present an official receipt,
since the LTO failed to issue the license plate, considering the current
shortage.
"The
public should not in any way be burdened by what is clearly a product of the
LTO’s and the plate contractor’s failure to deliver and process plates on new
vehicles," he said.
"Vehicle
owners who have registered their vehicles promptly should not have been barred
from using their vehicles nor penalized for government's inefficiency," he
added.
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