BEHIND
THE SCENES
Alfred
P. Dizon
COMMUTERS pissed off
at taxi drivers who refuse them rides can now report these nincompoops at any Land
Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board office.
The LTFRB launched Wednesday
its “Oplan Isnabero” campaign to stop taxi drivers from contracting and
refusing service to passengers.
LTFRB Chairman Martin
Delgra said the move was in anticipation of the expected increase in the number
of commuters during the holidays.
Delgra said around 30
LTFRB enforcers and 90 personnel of the agency would be deployed in Metro
Manila malls to protect passengers from erring cab drivers.
“This year, we made it
a little bit innovative, entertaining and educational not only for taxi drivers
but also for commuters with the use of standees and with the active
participation of the mall operators,” he said.
The LTFRB will set up
assistance desks in malls where the public can file complaints against taxi
drivers. The agency signed a memorandum of agreement with mall owners for the
implementation of Oplan Isnabero.
Delgra said erring
taxi drivers would be fined P5,000 for the first offense, P10,000 for the
second and P15,000 as well as franchise revocation for the third offense.
***
If you still don’t
have your car plates from the Land Transportation Office, here’s news that will may make you feel better.
The Dept. of Justice
has approved the indictment of officials of the consortium that bagged the
P3.8-billion contract of the Land Transportation Office in the previous
administration for the controversial new car plates.
In a resolution
released recently, investigating prosecutors found probable cause in the
charges of estafa through falsification of commercial documents, false
testimony and perjury, and violation of Republic Act 9184 or the Government
Procurement Reform Act against executives of local firm Power Plates
Development Concepts Inc. (PPDCI) and Dutch company J. Knieriem B.V. Goes
(JKG).
The DOJ found merit in
the complaint filed by the Anti-Trapo Movement (ATM) in August 2013, which
alleged that the officials of the PPDCI-JKG consortium “have consciously,
intentionally and purposely submitted to an official government exercise what
they know is an insufficient document and passing the same as authentic and
accurate.”
Preliminary
investigation showed respondents led by the consortium’s corporate secretary
Ron Salo and managing director Christian Calalang submitted to the Bids
and Awards Committee (BAC) a document they said was the audited financial
statement of JKG as a requirement for bidding for the Motor Vehicle
License Plate Standardization Program (MVLPSP).
“However, upon careful
examination of the said document, it turned out that it is not the audited
financial statement of JKG. What the respondents submitted during the bidding
were the 2011 annual accounts of respondent JKG issued by the Chamber of
Commerce of The Hague, the Netherlands, the 2011 consolidated accounts of H3 BV
(the parent company of JKG),” read the resolution by Assistant State Prosecutor
Ricardo Estrabo.
The prosecutor cited
as proof a letter from Calalang wherein he “admitted that they submitted the
financial statement of H3 BV.”
“Thus, JKG and PPDCI
submitted a falsified 2011 annual report and claimed it to be the audited
financial statement of JKG because none such audited financial statement
exists. Or if one exists, the contents will show that JKG is not qualified to
bid for the DOTC (Department of Transportation and Communications)-LTO
project,” the DOJ said.
“This would be the
reasonable conclusion, especially since the respondents did not submit their
countervailing evidence showing their financial capability to undertake the
project,” the DOJ said.
***
Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year to all in this season of
uncertainty and fear.
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