BAGUIO CITY -- Transport groups led by the
Baguio-Benguet Movement Against Jeepney Phaseout held a caravan April 30 to
protest implementation of Dept. of Transportation order 2017-11, known as PUV
Modernization Program.
Calling for a “pro-people” modernization program, these groups also filed a
petition with the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Bureau (LTFRB)
which outlined their alternatives to the government’s PUVMP.
“We are doing this as part of our continuing campaign against economic insecurity that the present PUVMP will inevitably bring,” said Carlito Wayas, spokesperson of PISTON Metro Baguio.
This was the first protest action done by the movement since the March 31 deadline for consolidation lapsed.
“We are doing this as part of our continuing campaign against economic insecurity that the present PUVMP will inevitably bring,” said Carlito Wayas, spokesperson of PISTON Metro Baguio.
This was the first protest action done by the movement since the March 31 deadline for consolidation lapsed.
According to him,
while some jeepney operators and drivers associations (JODAs) have continued
with the consolidation, many are still reluctant to comply.
“For us, consolidation
means the loss of livelihood. The PUVMP mandates us to surrender our individual
franchises and in turn take away our ownership of our jeepney units we
painstakingly worked for,” he said.
He added losing
ownership of their jeepneys was tantamount to losing their means of
income.
Under Land
Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Bureau (LTFRB) guidelines, JODAs
which fail to comply with consolidation will no longer be allowed to ply their
routes. Wayas noted uidelines are forcing JODAs to push through with the
consolidation.
“This is why we ask that as we comply the consolidation, the LTFRB should keep
their hands off our individual franchises and jeepney units to ensure that we
have a livelihood to fall back on,” Wayas said.
The petition to be
passed before the LTFRB also asked that JODAs be allowed to manage their own
cooperatives under the Cooperative Development Authority guidelines. “This will
foster a pro-people and participatory spirit of cooperativism between
operators, drivers and commuters,” Wayas said.
He added they were not
against modernization considering JODAs are capable of rehabilitating their
units into environmentally-sound and safe vehicles, provided there is
government support, as opposed to the PUVMP’s anti-poor framework.
“If there is
appropriate and adequate subsidy from the government, we JODAs are perfectly
capable of doing this without the entry of big cooperatives and foreign units,”
he added.
The movement earlier
filed petitions before the Sangguniang Panglungsod of Baguio City and the
Benguet Provincial Board, seeking their support against the PUVMP.
In a resolution July
last year, the Benguet Provincial Board asked President Rodrigo Duterte to
temporarily stop implementation of the PUVMP due to economic hardships brought
by the Covid-19 pandemic.
“As the government
continues to implement the PUVMP, we continue to explore and lobby alternatives
that will work for all and will not leave us more economically disadvantaged,”
Wayas said.
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