By Dexter
A. See
BAGUIO CITY – Officials of two bus companies operating
here agreed to settle their brewing conflict over the city’s award of the
parking slot of an old bus company along Gov. Pack road to a new bus company.
During the regular
session of the local legislative body, company officials of Solid North agreed
to return to the management of Philippine Rabbit Bus lines one of its two
parking slots previously awarded to the former by the city’s Transport and
Traffic Management Committee to avoid further conflicts.
Earlier, Philippine
Rabbit officials protested the sudden award of its two parking slots to Solid
North despite having continuously paid its obligations with the local
government representing parking fees for the said slots amounting to P14,000
since the company stopped serving the Baguio route in 2014 to rehabilitate its
old buses.
Philippine Rabbit
officials claimed now that they have around 10 to 16 newly acquired buses
servicing its Baguio route, the company was surprised to learn that its two
slots were already awarded to Solid North despite having consistently paid the
required parking fees to the local government as evidenced by its receipts
attached for the possible renewal of its memorandum of agreement.
In its latest action,
the TTMC decided to return one parking slot to Philippine Rabbit while the
other parking slot will remain with Solid North to serve as its staging area.
Solid North was able
to purchase a property along South Drive as its terminal once it completes its
development.
The concerned company
officials of the two bus firms agreed to settle the dispute with the
representative of Solid North committing to return to Philippine Rabbit the
slot previously awarded to the former to avoid further complications in their
relationships.
This agreement between
the two bus companies will be submitted to the TTMC for appropriate action in
the committee’s next regular meeting.
At present, Philippine
Rabbit occupies the two slots it had been regularly paying for while Solid
North will use two similar slots along the stretch of Gov. Pack road.
Gov. Pack road is
temporarily being used as the city’s south-bound terminal while the city is
scouting for an available area for a permanent south-bound terminal to
decongest the roadline due to the buses coming in and out of the area.
The city government is
planning on segregating some 10 hectares of the 92-hectare Baguio Dairy Farm
owned by the agriculture department as a permanent south-bound terminal for all
lowland bound buses to free most of the city’s main roads from the daily traffic
created by the presence of passenger buses around the central business district
area.
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