By
Aileen P. Refuerzo
BAGUIO CITY – Groups
here opposed a proposal of the city council to adapt an odd-even scheme for
private vehicles during weekends saying it was “unfriendly and unfair to
residents.”
The city council
committee on public utilities, transportation and traffic legislation urged
approval of the proposed experimental implementation of the odd-even scheme for
private vehicles during weekends for two months.
Office of the Senior
Citizens Affairs (OSCA) head and Philippine Government Retirees Association
Baguio-Cordillera chapter president Isaiah Barongan wrote the council
registering his group’s opposition to the proposal.
He said the
proposal “is unfriendly and unfair to residents” as it will deprive them of the
free use of their cars to get together and go out during weekends or family
days.
“The privately owned
cars by people from the lowlands especially on weekends are actually the ones
causing heavy traffic in the city. These should be the one to be
controlled in entering the city,” he said.
He also suggested an
in-depth study on the city’s traffic situation and determination of possible
solutions.
Other groups and
concerned citizens have voiced opposition to the odd-even scheme saying it was
unfair to ban private vehicles’ use of roads when owners are paying the
government so much in terms of vehicle taxes among other fees.
The committee chaired
by Councilor Benny Bomogao is poised to submit its committee report which also
suggested the conduct of a month-long information education campaign before the
start of the experiment to be headed by the city public information office, the
Baguio City Police Office and the barangay officials.
Proponent Councilor
Faustino Olowan said the measure aims to decongest the city’s roads during
weekends by prohibiting vehicles with odd number-ending plates on Saturdays and
those ending in even numbers on Sundays from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. in routes also
presently covered by the city’s number coding code.
It will adopt the
exemption provision of the number coding scheme.
“A two-month
experimental scheme will help the city to assess whether such can be adopted
permanently as a means of solving heavy traffic and decongest the city streets
which shall ultimately be beneficial to the community and the city,” Olowan
said.
During the public
hearing on the proposal, concerns were raised on the measure’s possible
negative effects on the tourism industry and on the residents.
In his proposal,
Olowan acknowledged that the influx of tourists during weekends is the main
cause of traffic in the city.
“Based on the records
of the Traffic Management Unit Office as of December 2015, private vehicles are
already at an estimate of 5,266 per day during weekdays with the number coding
scheme being implemented which is 22 percent of the total estimated 23,993
vehicles traversing the city roads a day,” he said.
“This clearly
indicates the need to decongest the roads to ease the traffic during the
weekends wherein the number-coding is not in effect and so much more so during
long weekends and major events or occasions.”
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