Tuesday, July 31, 2018

DOTr reopens PNR Caloocan-Makati line

The Department of Transportation (DOTr) announced on Monday the re-opening of Philippine National Railways (PNR) Caloocan-Makati line.

In an advisory, the DOTr said that the PNR Caloocan-Dela Rosa, Makati line, which was closed 20 years ago, would start its operations on Wednesday, August 1.

Trips from Caloocan to Dela Rosa would start at 5:37 a.m. while the trip from Dela Rosa to Caloocan would start at 6:22 a.m. The fare would cost P15.

An inspection and a final track material adjustment were done following the installation of “turnouts” on Monday morning. /ee



Read more: http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1015913/dotr-reopens-pnr-caloocan-makati-line#ixzz5MoTZJ5X5
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Friday, July 27, 2018

Bombardier to supply 396 metro cars to Singapore

SINGAPORE: Land Transport Authority has ordered 66 six-car trainsets for the North-South and East-West lines from Bombardier.

The contract announced on July 25 is worth S$827m. The value would rise to S$1·2bn if an option is exercised for service support for their design life of 30 years. The rolling stock would replace the 66 trains that have been in service on the two lines since they opened in 1987.

Deliveries from Bombardier’s Changchun factory are due to begin in 2021. The trains will be designed in Germany, with design co-ordination to be led by Bombardier’s team in Singapore.

Interior features would include more multi-function spaces, with tip-up seats. The trains would also be fitted with sensors for condition-based predictive maintenance, and a self-test system that automatically checks whether a train is fit for operation before commencing service. Four of the trains will be fitted with automatic track inspection equipment.

Bombardier is to establish a centre of excellence in Singapore with local partners. The aim is to bring local sub-suppliers to provide obsolescence management and maintenance support more easily.

Cavite-Tagaytay-Batangas Expressway up for NEDA panel approval

If the proposed CTBEX is approved, the Department of Public Works and Highways says construction might start next year and be completed by 2022

The proposed 50.42-kilometer Cavite-Tagaytay-Batangas Expressway (CTBEX) is moving forward with the awarding of the original proponent status to Metro Pacific Tollways Corporation (MPTC) South.

On Thursday, July 26, the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) announced it had granted the status to MPTC South, an infrastructure unit of Metro Pacific Investments Corporation (MPIC).

The company had submitted the unsolicited CTBEX proposal to the government.

Under the country's build-operate-transfer (BOT) and procurement laws, the government deals with unsolicited proposals through a Swiss challenge. This is when the government invites private groups to make competing offers, while giving the original proponent the right to match them.

Now that the original proponent status for the CTBEX has been awarded, Public Works Secretary Mark Villar said they have to seek the approval of the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) Investment Coordination Committee (ICC).

If the NEDA ICC approves the project, it would go to the NEDA Board, chaired by President Rodrigo Duterte. Once the NEDA Board gives the go signal, a Swiss challenge can be conducted in the 2nd quarter of 2019.

"We expect to start construction by next year. This year, we are going to the NEDA ICC process. Once we go to the Swiss challenge, we start with the project," Villar told reporters.

The project is estimated to cost P22 billion, including right-of-way acquisitions. The DPWH expects the construction to be completed by 2022.


The CTBEX will start at the Silang East Interchange of the Cavite-Laguna Expressway (CALAX).

It will have 8 major interchanges traversing Silang, Amadeo, Tagaytay City, Mendez, Alfonso, and Magallanes in Cavite; and Tuy and Nasugbu in Batangas.

The CTBEX is expected to help decongest Aguinaldo Highway in Cavite and the Tagaytay-Nasugbu Road, potentially diverting some 23,000 vehicles.

Once completed, travel time from Governor's Drive in Dasmariñas City, Cavite to Nasugbu, Batangas would be cut down to 44 minutes from the usual one hour and 42 minutes, while Sta Rosa City, Laguna to Tagaytay City would only take 46 minutes.

Travel time from Manila to Tagaytay would also be reduced from two and a half hours to around an hour.

https://www.rappler.com/business/208252-cavite-tagaytay-batangas-expressway-for-neda-panel-approval

MPTC’s Cavite-Tagaytay-Batangas expressway project gets OPS

In photo are DPWH Undersecretary for planning and PPP Maria Catalina Cabral, DPWH Secretary Mark Villar, and president and CEO of Metro Pacific Tollways South Luigi Bautista.
The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) yesterday granted the original proponent status (OPS) to the 50.42-kilometer Cavite-Tagaytay-Batangas Expressway (CTBEx) project of Metro Pacific Tollways Corp. (MPTC).

“This is one of the first projects we will grant OPS for DPWH in this administration. This is a sign that the Build Build Build of our President is all systems go,” Public Works Secretary Mark Villar said.

Villar said the project was given the OPS because of its significance in addressing congestion in the CALABARZON area.

“Travel time going to Tagaytay and Nasugbu from Manila will be cut short so this will really help ease congestion,” he said.

The P22.43 billion CTBEx will connect from the west of Silang East Interchange of the Cavite Laguna Expressway and will pass through Silang, Pook, Amadeo, Tagaytay, Mendez, Alfonso, Magallanes, Tuy and Nasugbu.

The project was conceived in early 2016 in line with MPTC’s desire and commitment to help bring progress to the western part of Southern Luzon.

 “This awarding of the OPS status of CTBEx is just the beginning, we are cognizant that this proposal will still be subject to NEDA approval, successful negotiation with DPWH on the terms of the concession and lastly, a Swiss challenge. All of which should be completed by the second quarter of 2019, and subject to the acquisition of the right of way; 2020 is the target date of construction,” said Luigi Bautista, president and CEO of Metro Pacific Tollways South, a business unit of MPTC.

 “Once completed, CTBEx will be the preferred route for motorists going to Tagaytay and Nasugbu from Manila and vice versa as this will seamlessly connect to CALAEx and CAVITEx,” Bautista said.

MPT South is currently constructing the Cavite Laguna Expressway which will connect to CAVITEx and the C5-Southlink that will enable transfers from Laguna, Cavite, Manila, Las Piñas, Parañaque and Taguig to be seamless.

Thursday, July 26, 2018

LRT fare hike should wait for 'right time,' says Sec. Villar

Public Works Secretary Mark Villar said Thursday he is not in favor of hiking LRT fares "at this time" as the country grapples with rising inflation.

The operator of the LRT-1 has been asking for a P5 hike in fares to fund the extension of Manila's oldest light rail system to Parañaque and Cavite.

But Villar, who sits on the board of the Light Rail Transit Authority (LRTA) that approves fare hikes, said the government needed to weigh the operator's appeal against the "public interest."

"Maybe now is not the best time for these spikes in prices," Villar said in an interview with ANC.

He said the fare hike can be negotiated, moved to a later time, or implemented on a staggered basis to ease its impact on the public.

The Light Rail Manila Corporation, which operates the LRT-1, has said that the P5 fare hike is needed to convince banks to lend to the firm and fund the line's extension.

Metro Pacific Tollways South gets original proponent status for CTBEx

SILANG, Cavite — The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) awarded Metro Pacific Tollways South the original proponent status for proposing to build a P22.43-billion tollroad connecting Silang and Tagaytay in Cavite to Nasugbu, Batangas or CTBEx.

The 50.42-kilometer Cavite-Tagaytay-Batangas Expressway (CBTEx) will connect the West Silang Interchange of the ongoing Cavite-Laguna Expressway to Tagaytay City and Nasugbu.

It will have eight main interchanges including Silang East, Pook, Aguinaldo, Amadeo, Mendez, Alfonso, Magallanes, and Nasugbu; and two spur roads.

The project is estimated to cost P22.43 billion.

Public Works Secretary Mark Villar said the project will be submitted to the National Economic and Development Authority-Investment Coordination Committee (NEDA-ICC) then to the NEDA Board—chaired by President Rodrigo Duterte—for approval.

Once approved, it will be go through a Swiss Challenge.

All due diligence, including the Swisss Challenge, will be completed within the year, Villar noted.

“We expect to start construction by next year,” Villar told reporters on the sidelines of the awarding ceremony.

MPT South will seek financing from lenders once it gets the final award to proceed with the project, MPT South president and CEO Luigi Bautista said

The CTBEx project is expected to ease traffic congestion along Aguinaldo Highway and the Tagaytay-Nasugbu road.

MPT South chief financial officer Christopher Dizo said the company expects to open at least two sections of the CTBEx by year 2022.

Travel time will be shortened along Governor’s Drive to Nasugbu, where the usual trip of one hour and 42 minutes will be shortened to 44 minutes; and the Sta. Rosa to Tagay route, where the usual travel time of two hours will be shortened to 46 minutes.

Villar said the project will boost tourism in Tagaytay and Nasugbu.

The construction phase will provide 2,500 to 3,000 job opportunities

Metro Pacific Tollways South Management Corp. is the business unit of Metro Pacific Tollways Corp. (MPTC) for projects in southern Luzon.

MPTC is the infrastructure arm of Pangilinan-led Metro Pacific Investments Corp. —VDS, GMA News

http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/money/companies/661949/metro-pacific-tollways-south-get-original-proponent-status-for-ctbex/story/?just_in

NAIAx’s BGC extension to start this year —DPWH’s Villar

The plan to extend the Ninoy Aquino International Airport Expressway (NAIAx) all the way to Bonifacio Global City in Taguig is expected to start later this year, Public Works Secretary Mark Villar said on Thursday.

“We’re planning it now, we’re coordinating with the concessionaire,” Villar told reporters in an interview here.

Asked when the construction of the ramp connecting the elevated tollroad to BGC will actually start, Villar said there is no specific date so far.

“We don’t have an exact date pa pero within the year.”

The Department of Public Works and Highways plans to extend the 7.7-kilometer elevated expressway to BGC and ease traffic congestion along the adjacent Sales Road in Pasay City.

Complimentary to the NAIAx extension is the ongoing road widening of Lawton Ave., also called Fort Bonifacio-Nichols Field Road, is in preparation for building the ramp to the elevated tollroad.

The NAIA Expressway is built and operated by conglomerate San Miguel Corp. under a 30-year concession agreement awarded in 2013.

The elevated tollroad became fully operational in June 2017. —VDS, GMA News

Wednesday, July 25, 2018

DPWH to give original proponent status to MPT South for P22.43-billion CTBEx

DPWH to give original proponent status to MPT South for P22.43-billion CTBEx

THE public works department has scheduled for Thursday the award of the original proponent status to Metro Pacific Tollways South Corp. (MPT South) of the P22.43-billion Cavite-Tagaytay-Batangas Expressway (CTBEx) unsolicited proposal.

Based on a media advisory, the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) will finally award the said status to the Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC) unit on July 26, with ceremonies prepared in Silang, Cavite.

Being granted an original proponent status will give the proponent a competitive advantage against its would-be competitors during the competitive challenge for the project.

Under the implementing rules and regulations of the build-operate-transfer law, the government must place unsolicited proposals to a Swiss challenge  which, in a nutshell, is a legal process of inviting other groups to bid for an unsolicited deal.

The original proponent then has the right to submit a counteroffer.

Public Works Secretary Mark A. Villar is expected to lead the agency’s delegation, while Metro Pacific Tollways Corp. President Rodrigo E. Franco and MPT South President Jose Luigi L. Bautista will receive the said document from the government.

Other Cabinet officials and local government executives are expected to join the ceremonies on Thursday.

The agency earlier aimed to officially subject the CTBEx proposal to a Swiss challenge as early as the first half of 2018.

But given the movement of the proposal, it may seem the timeline for the Swiss challenge will have to be pushed back a little further.

After receiving the original proponent status, the company and the implementing agency will then enter into an exclusive negotiations process to further polish the offer to be more beneficial to the state and the public.

The offer will then be subject to the approval of several bodies under the National Economic and Development Authority (Neda), including the Neda Board, which is chaired by President Duterte.

Once it gets the green light from the Neda Board, the project will then undergo the Swiss challenge.

CTBEx, a proposed 49-kilometer (km) expressway, will connect Cavite and Batangas, with a spur road to Tagaytay City and ultimately terminate in Nasugbu, with another spur road to Tuy, Batangas.

The project will substantially improve access to Tagaytay City and Nasugbu, thereby ensuring faster travel and support for the government’s tourism thrust. Once completed, travel time will be reduced to less than an hour from the current 2.5 hours, he added.

The whole expressway will take about three years to complete, but the company can open the first section in one and a half years.

CTBEx will start at the Silang East Interchange of the Cavite-Laguna Expressway. The alignment shall traverse the towns of Silang, Amadeo, Mendez and Alfonso in Cavite; Tagaytay City; and Nasugbu in Batangas.

Expected to handle an initial 60,000 vehicles per day, the proposed expressway will have eight major interchanges, two spur roads and a number of overpasses.

It is divided into three phases: Section 1, a 17.4-km road from Silang, Cavite to Tagaytay; Section 2, a 9.86-km road from Tagaytay to Alfonso; and Section 3, a 22.2-km road from Alfonso to Nasugbu.

Should the project be awarded by mid-2018, the proponent can start the construction of the infrastructure by the third quarter of 2019. The whole expressway is expected to be opened by mid-2022, the last year of President Duterte’s term.

MPIC, an infrastructure-holdings conglomerate in the Philippines, is no stranger to unsolicited proposals for toll projects.

After waiting six long years, it bagged last year the multibillion-peso connector road, an 8-km road that will link the North and South Luzon Expressway. It also has existing proposals for the development of thoroughfares in Metro Manila.

Metro Pacific is the largest tollways operator in the Philippines. It also has interests in expressways in Thailand and Vietnam.

https://businessmirror.com.ph/dpwh-to-give-original-proponent-status-to-mpt-south-for-p22-43-billion-ctbex/

Tuesday, July 24, 2018

GROUNDBREAKING NG SLEX NORTHBOUND EXIT, ISINAGAWA

“Great works are performed not by strength but by perseverance.” – Samuel Johnson. Ito ang iniwang inspirasyon ng Punong Lungsod Lourdes Cataquiz sa kanyang bating-panimula sa katatapos lamang na Ground Breaking Ceremony sa pagpapasimula ng SLEX Northbound Exit Interchange noong ika-19 ng Hulyo, 2018, ganap na 2:30 ng hapon sa Barangay San Antonio, lungsod ng San Pedro. Sa isang makasaysayang araw na ito, binigyang diin muli ni Mayor Cataquiz ang pagpapasalamat sa Panginoon sa biyaya ng tagumpay na maisakatuparan ang matagal nang minimithing proyekto. Ipinahayag din niya ang pagpapasalamat kay Pangulong Rodrigo Duterte, DPWH Secretary Mark Villar, Congresswoman Arlene Arcillas, sa Pamahalaang Lungsod ng San Pedro at sa mga mamamayan na nagbahagi ng kanilang lupang pagmamay-ari bilang pagsuporta at pagpapahayag ng kanilang ‘Best Shared Intentions’ para sa lungsod ng San Pedro. Patuloy na nilalayon na sa pamamagitan ng SLEX Northbound Exit Interchange ay maisakatuparan din na maging Business Hub ang nasabing lungsod. Ipinangako ng alkalde ang transparency at kasiguraduhan na matatapos ang proyekto sa takdang petsa. Nagpahatid din ng pagbati si Congresswoman Arlene Arcillas, Gov. Ramil Hernandez at ang kinatawan ni Secretary Mark Villar na si DPWH Region 4A Director Samson Hebra. Ang kanilang mga pagbati ay pawang sumesentro sa tagumpay na naidudulot ng pagkakaisa ng Pamahalaan at ng Pribadong Sektor. “Ang katuparan ng proyektong SLEX Northbound Exit Interchange ay makapagbibigay ng kaganapan sa Lungsod ng San Pedro bilang Gateway to Laguna,” dagdag pa nila. Ang Ground Breaking Ceremony ay dinaluhan din ni DPWH Asst. Regional Director Yolanda Tangco, DPWH Construction Division Chief Carolina Pastrana, TRB Executive Director Abraham Sales, Executive Assistant V Aaron Cataquiz, DepEd Supervisor Jovito M. Barcenas Sangguniang Panlungsod, Liga ng mga Kapitan ng Barangay, kinatawan ng iba’t-ibang kumpanya sa San Pedro, Local Media, kinatawan ng Simbahan, mga Kawani ng Gobyerno, Alaska Corporation, Homeowners Associations, at old San Pedronians.





Luzon Spine network on track

The Department of Public Works and Highway (DPWH) is targeted to double the length of the country’s high standard highways by the end of the Duterte administration.

DPWH Secretary Mark Villar  said  by 2022,  the administration would have constructed the Luzon Spine Expressway Network -- a network of high standard highways with a total length of 834.72 kilometers (kms) which is about twice the length of existing expressways of 382 kms.

“We are on target. We have already opened several sections of the Tarlac-Pangasinan-La Union Expressway, the Arterial Plaridel Bypass Project, the Laguna Lake Expressway and the Radial Road 10. Within the year, we expect to open the NLEX Harbor Link Project, which will connect McArthur Highway and C3 and reduce travel time from Quezon City to Manila to only 10 minutes,” Villar said.

Once completed, travel time from Metro Manila to San Fernando, La Union will be reduced from six  hours and 55 minutes to three hours and 10 minutes. Travel time from Ilocos to Bicol will be reduced from 19 hours and 40 minutes to 8 hours and 15 minutes.

The DPWH has so far built a total of 3,945 kms. of roads since the start of the Duterte administration.

“Since the term of President Duterte, we have widened 1,908 kms. of roads, built 328 kms. of bypasses and diversion roads, 393 kms. of missing gaps connecting national roads, and 1,316 kms. of access roads leading to airports, seaports/Ro-Ro (Roll on-roll off)  ports and tourist destinations.

For the inter-island linkage projects, the DPWH will start the construction of the 3.77-km Panguil Bay Bridge that will connect the City of Tangub in Misamis Occidental to the Municipality of Tubod in Lanao del Norte by October.

“Once completed in 2021, it will only take 10 minutes to reach Tangub City from Tubod using the bridge compared to the 2.5 hours it would take using the 102-km. route via the Tubod- Kapatagan-Molave-Tangub road. Travel time between Ozamiz City, Misamis Occidental and Mukas, Kolambugan, Lanao Del Norte will be reduced from 2.5 hours using Ro-Ro operations to 20 minutes using the Panguil Bay Bridge,” Villar said.

Also included in this network is the Bataan-Cavite Interlink, the Mindoro-Batangas Super Bridge, the Panay-Guimaras-Negors Link, the Negros-Cebu Link Bridge, the Panguil Bay Bridge, the Guicam Brdige, the Camarines-Catanduanes Friend Bridge, the Luzon Sorsogon-Samar Link Bridge, the Davao Samall Bridge, among others

 Meanwhile, Villar noted that while reforms are still being done to further improve fiscal spending, the agency’s absorptive capacity in 2017 is the highest it has achieved since.

 “In 2017, DPWH has already recorded the highest absorptive capacity at 92 percent above the 85 percent target —with P674.93 billion in allotments and P621.94 billion in obligations incurred. This is historically the highest absorptive capacity achieved by the department,” Villar noted.

 “This is far higher than the 70- percent absorptive capacity recorded in 2011 — at a budget far lower. Allotment then was only at P173 billion and obligations was at P121 billion,” he added.

 As of June 15, 2018, DPWH has already recorded a 68-percent absorptive capacity — with P457.13 obligations already incurred out of the P675.27 billion obligated. This is excluding the projects executed by the department outside the General Appropriations Act, such as unsolicited proposals.

 “While the department is performing at its best — we learned that the problem of underspending is an institutional issue that can only be cured by institutional reforms. We need to ensure there is discipline in the planning process,” Villar noted.

“The Filipino should not be held liable for the flaws in the system. Corruption is a function of discretion and monopoly. In increasing accountability inside the system, we ensure faster budget execution and service delivery,” he added.

 To ensure efficient delivery of infrastructure, Villar has ordered to intensify and strictly impose the sanctions based on calculated actions on contractors with negative slippages.

“As early as when the system detects a 5 percent negative slippage — the contractor involved in the project will be given a warning and required to submit a `catch-up program’ to eliminate the slippage or delay,” Villar said.

 “If such slippage furthers to at least 10 percent – (the contractor) will be given a second warning and required to submit a detailed action program on a two-week basis. At any point that such contractor incurs a delay of at least 15 percent, (the contractor) will be given a final warning and required to come up with a more detailed program of activities with weekly physical targets, together with the required additional input resources,” he added.

 Villar also noted that all contractors with ongoing DPWH contracts which have incurred negative slippages of beyond 15 percent, the project manager, district engineer  and regional director of the agency shall initiate termination of the contract, following the due process. 

Monday, July 23, 2018

Libu-libo ang mawawalan ng bahay sa NLEX Segment 8.2

Ang North Luzon Expressway (NLEX) C-5 North Link o Segment 8.2 ay planong expressway na magdudugtong ng C-5 Road at Commonwealth Avenue sa North Luzon Expressway (NLEX) sa pamamagitan ng Mindanao Avenue.

Ayon sa DPWH, nasa 8.35 km (7.85 km ayon sa NLEX Corp.) ang haba ng Segment 8.2 expressway na 2×2 (4-lane divided) at expandable hanggang 2×3 (6-lane divided). Sasakupin nito ang Republic Avenue, liliko papuntang Luzon Avenue, at titigil sa Congressional Avenue Extension. Hindi lamang road widening ang proyekto—gaya ng mga napapabalita sa komunidad, kundi pagtatayo ng expressway.

Bahagi ito ng mas malaking NLEX Harbor Link Project, isang extension road na may habang 21.65 km mula sa Mindanao Ave. sa Quezon City hanggang C-3 Road sa Caloocan City at Commonwealth Avenue sa Quezon City. Bahagi rin ito ng kontratang 1998 Supplemental Toll Operating Agreement for the Manila North Expressway.

Ruta ng NLEX North Link o Segment 8.2
Ka-partner ng administrasyon ni Pangulong Rodrigo Duterte ang Manila North Tollways Corp. (MNTC) na pagmamay-ari ng malaking negosyanteng si Manuel V. Pangilinan (MVP) para sa konstruksyon ng daan. Galing ito sa panukala ng Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) at Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) para sa isang master plan ng High Standard Highway Network sa Metro Manila. DPWH din ang mangangasiwa sa pagkuha ng Right of Way (ROW). May nakalaan na P7.5 bilyong piso ang gobyerno para sa proyektong kalsada.

Ang NLEX 8.2 ay bahagi ng Build, Build, Build (BBB) ni Duterte. Katulad ng Public-Private Partnership (PPP) ng dating Pangulong Benigno Aquino III, gagawing pagkakakitaan ng mga pribadong negosyo ang dapat mga batayang serbisyo, gaya ng mga kalsada at daan, sa ilalim ng BBB ni Duterte, na kapalit naman ay buhay at kabuhayan ng daanlibong mamamayan.

Gagastos umano ang MNTC ng P10.5 bilyon, na uutangin sa malaking dayuhang mamumuhunan, gaya ng Asian Development Bank o ADB. Bagaman hindi maglalabas ng pera ang negosyo, babawiin naman sa mga mamamayan ang inutang nito sa pamamagitan ng pagpapabayad ng toll fee sa loob ng 25-50 taon. Dahil expressway ang itatayo, hindi na libre ang paggamit sa kalsadang ito at may pinakamababang bayad na P45 sa Class 1.

Nagsimula ang proyekto noong 2012. Bago ang kasalukuyang plano, tinarget itong masimulan noong 2015 at matapos sa 2019, ngunit hindi na ito posible dahil na-delay sa pagkuha ng ROW. Ayon sa DPWH, sa bagong phasing, magsisimula ang konstruksyon ng unang kwarto ng 2019 at matatapos sa 2021.

Nagsimula na muli ang pagkuha ng ROW noong pangalawang quarter ng 2017 at balak tapusin sa ikaapat na quarter ng 2018. Nagsagawa na ng house tagging noong Marso nitong taon at noong Abril ay nagkaroon ng validation sa mga bahay na tatamaan ng proyekto. Sinasabing mula pa 1999, o 19 taong nakalipas, dapat nakuha ng DPWH ang ROW para makapagsimula ang MNTC sa konstruksyon ng expressway kung kaya’t minamadali na nila ito ngayon.

Itinayo na rin ang isang depot sa Brgy. Sauyo kung saan nakatambak ang mga malalaking kagamitang gagamitin sa paggiba ng mga kasalukuyang daan at bahay at para sa pagtatayo ng expressway.

Demolisyon at pagpapalayas sa mamamayan ang una’t pangunahing epekto ng NLEX 8.2.

Aabot sa higit 50,000 pamilya (nasa 29,000 lamang ang bilang ng pamahalaan) ang maaapektuhan ng pagtatayo ng NLEX 8.2. Libu-libong kabahayan ang gigibain para sa kabuuang lapad ng expressway na 90 metro (60 m para sa main road, 30 m para sa planong pabahay). Malawakan ang mangyayaring demolisyon at pagpapalayas ng mga mamamayan, katulad ng nangyari sa North Triangle sa Quezon City at sa proyektong Philippine National Railway Modernization and Rehabilitation Plan mula Caloocan, Maynila hanggang Los Banos, Laguna. Noong 2012, tinaya ng gobyerno na may 16,605 kabahayang matatamaan ng proyekto.

Walong barangay sa Quezon City at isang barangay sa Valenzuela ang matatamaan ng proyekto. Kasama rito ang Sauyo, Pasong Tamo, Culiat, Talipapa, Bagbag, Fairview, Matandang Balara, at Holy Spirit, sa Quezon City at Brgy. Ugong sa Valenzuela.



Para maitayo ang NLEX 8.2, gigibain ang mga tahanan, negosyo, parokya, at iba pang establisyemento sa kahabaan ng Republic Avenue at Luzon Avenue. Kinakailangan ng gobyerno na linisin ang pagtatayuan ng kalsada na batay sa plano ay 100% dumadaan sa kabahayan ng mga maralita. Sadyang iniwasan naman ang mga malalaking paggawaan at pribadong subdibisyon.

Inihahapag ng gobyerno ang in-city housing alternative sa pamamagitan ng Medium-Rise Public Housing Program ng NHA. Kukunin din daw ang budget para dito sa alokasyong nakasaad sa RA 7835 o ang Comprehensive and Integrated Shelter Financing Act of 1994. Dahil dito, lumalabas na hindi libre ang pabahay. Nakasaad sa batas ang iba’t ibang paraan ng pagpapabayad sa mga magkakaroon ng alokasyon sa sinasabing itatayong pabahay. Idadaan ito sa loan o mortgage program na huhulugan sa loob ng 20-30 taon.

Sa isa na namang proyektong pangkaunlaran nagbabadyang maranasan ng nasa 50,000 pamilya o aabot sa 250,000 indibidwal ang pag-atras ng kanilang kabuhayan at pamumuhay.

Mawawala rin ang mga kabuhayan at mapapalayo sa kanilang mga trabaho ang mga mapapalayas. Hindi madaling makahanap at hindi naman nakalilikha ang gobyerno ng mga estableng trabahong may nakabubuhay na sahod. Nagkakasya ang mamamayan sa kanilang mga sari-sariling diskarte para makatawid sa araw-araw, at maging ang ganoong pamamaraan ay maipagkakaila sa kanila kapag dinala sila sa mga relokasyon sa mga hindi pa maunlad na pamayanan.

Hindi rin malayong matulad ang mga mapapalayas na mamamayan sa iba pang mga dinemolis ng gobyerno ang kabahayan, gaya ng mga residente sa C-5. Sa mga napalayas sa C-5 widening, karugtong lang din ng proyektong NLEX 8.2, inalok lang ng one-time cash payment katumbas ng laki ng kanilang bahay na giniba at walang alok na relokasyon.

Sa napalayas sa itinatayong depot para sa NLEX 8.2 sa Brgy. Sauyo, dinala sila sa relokasyon sa Morong, Rizal. Walang kuryente, tubig at kabuhayan sa relokasyon kung kaya’t nagsisibalikan sa syudad ang mga tinapon sa relokasyon.

Dala rin ng dislokasyon ang pagkaantala ng pag-aaral ng mga kabataan, gayundin ang kawalan ng kabuhayan ng kanilang mga magulang na lalong nagpapahirap sa kanilang kalagayan.

Saturday, July 21, 2018

ADB, JICA to fund Malolos-Clark railway

By Franco Regala

CLARK FREEPORT, Pampanga — The Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) will co-finance for the construction of the Malolos-Clark rail project, Transportation Undersecretary for Railways Timothy Batan said Friday.

Batan said that the 69.5-kilometer rail project will connect Malolos to Clark International Airport segment of the Philippine National Railways (PNR) North Phase 2 project.

“ADB will provide financing for the civil works of the structure of the elevated two-way railtracks. It will be built along the old routes of PNR,” Batan said.

JICA, on the other hand, is completing the detailed engineering design for the P211.5 billion project. It also conducted a series of public hearings regarding the PNR North Phase 2 project.

According to the official, PNR North 2 will be an electrified, fully elevated, and a standard-gauge railway. It is designed to ensure seamless interoperability for the entire Philippine railways system.

“We have coordinated with National Housing Authority on the relocation of about 1,000 families along the route. It includes all illegal structures in Malolos and Calumpit in Bulacan, as well as Apalit, San Simon, Santo Tomas, San Fernando and Angeles City in Pampanga,” he said.

Phase 2 will complement the PNR North Phase 1 which runs from Tutuban in Manila to Malolos City.

https://news.mb.com.ph/2018/07/20/adb-jica-to-fund-malolos-clark-railway/

Friday, July 20, 2018

DPWH: Skyway users from South may now exit up to Java Street, Makati City

In an effort to help alleviate traffic in Metro Manila, Public Works and Highways Secretary Mark A. Villar on Friday, July 20, 2018 opened the 3-lane, northbound direction of Skyway Stage 3 from Buendia Avenue up to near Java Street in Makati, City.


DPWH Secretary Villar said instead of using Buendia as an off ramp, motorists may now exit a kilometer further along South Super Highway through a temporary ramp constructed near Java Street.
 
“The section, which spans 1-kilometer, will be temporarily opened until full completion of Phase 1, which ends in President Quirino Avenue in Manila,” said Secretary Villar. 
Secretary Villar said the temporary ramp near Java Street is currently one (1) lane passable but will be constructed into two (2) lanes, and eventually four (4) lanes, when the on-ramp and the southbound direction will be opened to the public.
 
The Skyway Stage 3 is a 6-lane, elevated expressway stretched in its entirety over Metro Manila from Buendia, Makati City to Balintawak, Quezon City with a length of about 17.54 kilometers.
 
The project is divided into five (5) sections namely: 3.76-kilometer Section 1 from Buendia Avenue, Makati City to President Quirino Avenue, Manila City; 0.96-kilometer Section 2A from Pres. Quirino Ave. Manila to Tomas Claudio St., Manila; 3.93-kilometer Section 2B from Tomas Claudio St., Manila to Aurora Blvd., Manila; 2.71-kilometer Section 3 from Aurora Blvd., Manila to Quezon Ave., Quezon City; 4.46-kilometer Section 4 from  Quezon Ave., Quezon City to A. Bonifacio Ave., Quezon City and 1.56-kilometer Section 5:     A. Bonifacio, Quezon City To NLEX.



Concessionare Citra Central Expressway Corporation (CCEC) has so far completed about 1-kilometer viaduct and constructed a total of 2.7-kilometer deck slab of Skyway Stage 3 Section 1.
 
Upon completion, Skyway Stage 3 will ease traffic through the eight (8) access ramps/interchanges strategically located as follows: Buendia Avenue, (South Superhighway, Makati City), Pres. Quirino Avenue (Malate, Manila), Plaza Dilao (Paco, Manila), Nagtahan/Aurora Boulevard (Manila), E. Rodriguez Avenue (Quezon City), Quezon Avenue (Quezon City), Sgt. Rivera St. (Quezon City) and NLEX.


DoTr targets common station contract award next month

THE Department of Transportation (DoTr) said the contract for the construction of the Metro Rail Transit (MRT)-Light Rail Transit (LRT) common station project is scheduled to be awarded by August.

“By August this year we will award the common station contract. We could… finish the project by 2020,” DoTr Undersecretary for Railways Timothy John R. Batan said in a media briefing in Clark on Tuesday.

Transportation Secretary Arthur P. Tugade told reporters construction is expected to begin immediately after the awarding.

“We have two eligible contractors. What we’ll talk about now is their qualifications… their bids will be opened by end of July,” he said.

The DoTr broke ground on part of the common station in September. The original completion target for the project was 2019, but because of a failed bid in November, progress stalled.

The common station project is meant to link major commuter rail lines — LRT Line 1, MRT Line 3, and MRT Line 7, which is currently being built.

Last year, the government signed a memorandum of agreement with Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC), SM Prime Holdings, Ayala Corp. and San Miguel Corp. — to settle the long-disputed location of the project. Parts of the station will be built near the SM North EDSA Annex and TriNoma mall in Quezon City.




MPIC is one of three key Philippine units of Hong-Kong based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT, Inc. Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Denise A. Valdez

RMN News: DOTr, target i-award ang kontrata para sa pagpapatayo ng MRT-LRT common station

Nakatakdang i-award ng Department of Transportation (DOTr) sa susunod na buwan ang kontrata para sa pagpapatayo ng MRT-LRT common station project.

Ang MRT-LRT common station ay itatayo sa pagitan ng dalawang mall sa North Avenue, Quezon City kung saan kokonektahin nito ang apat na linya ng tren, ang LRT line 1, MRT line 3, ang MRT line 7 na kasakulukuyang under construction, maging ang Metro Manila subway.




Ayon kay Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade, agad masisimulan ang konstruksyon ng common station pagkatapos mai-award ang kontrata.

Aniya, mayroon silang dalawang eligible contractors at pinag-uusapan na ang kanilang kwalipikasyon.

Bubuksan ang kanilang bid sa katapusan ng Hulyo.

Inaasahang matatapos ang proyekto sa taong 2021.

LRT common station to start construction in September

The Department of Transportation said it expects to finally start the construction of the common station linking Light Rail Transit Line 1, Metro Rail Transit Line 3 and the planned MRT 7 by September this year.

“By August, we expect to award the contract for the construction of the common station,” Transportation Undersecretary for rails Timothy John Batan said.

Batan said the construction of the project would start in September and would be completed by 2020.

The P2.8-billion common station will be financed and built by the DOTr.

The government and its private sector partners signed a memorandum of agreement in January last year for the construction of the common station.

SM Group’s Hans Sy, Ayala Corp.’s Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala, San Miguel Corp.’s Ramon Ang, Metro Pacific Investments Corp.’s Manuel Pangilinan and Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade signed the memorandum of agreement to build the common station.

The MoA contains the design parameters for the common station, which will be the basis of the detailed designs that will be developed after the signing.

The location is agreed to be between the original 2009 location in front of SM Annex and the 2014 location near Trinoma mall.

The common station project started in 2009 but was put on hold due to legal issues. The Light Rail Transit Authority signed a deal with SMPHI to build the station near SM North Edsa.

Five years later, the Transportation Department decided to build the station near Ayala’s Trinoma, citing reasons to cut costs.

In June 2014, SM Prime Holdings Inc. asked the court to stop the government from building the proposed P1.4-billion common station that will link the 3 railway transits in Metro Manila at the Trinoma shopping mall owned by Ayala Land Inc. In a petition for injunction filed before the Pasay City Regional Trial Court, SM Prime also asked the court to order the Department of Transportation and Communications (DOTC) and the Light Rail Transit Authority (LRTA) to honor the provisions of a memorandum agreement they signed in 2009.

The court intervened and issued a temporary restraining order in favor of SMPHI to stop the construction of the project.

Thursday, July 19, 2018

Sumitomo taking over MRT-3 next month

Sumitomo will take over the Metro Rail Transit (MRT) 3 next month and the number of operating Light Rail Vehicles can go down to 12 train sets, or 36 train cars, while the line is being rehabilitated, based on “initial discussions,” according to the Department of Transportation (DOTr) the other day.

“After Sumitomo takes over next month, one of the things that they will do is overhaul all MRT-3 train coaches, which BURI failed to accomplish until their contract was terminated last year,” according to transport officials.

“The contract-signing is targeted next month. After that, there will be an orderly transition from our MTT to Sumitomo.”

At present, discussions are still ongoing with JICA and Sumitomo on the rehabilitation program and timeline for MRT-3’s 72 Czech train cars.

The objective is to rehabilitate all trains as soon as possible to restore MRT-3’s reliability and increase its capacity, meaning several train cars will be worked on at the same time, transport officials explained.

As designed, the 72 Czech trains are supposed to undergo general overhaul every 8 years.

MRT-3 started operating in 2000, and Sumitomo completed the first round of general overhaul in 2008. A second round was due in 2016.

However, BURI only managed to overhaul 3 out of the 43 train cars covered by its contract when the DOTr terminated its services in November, 2017.

The upcoming rehabilitation of MRT-3’s trains is a catch up for works already overdue in 2016, and which BURI failed to perform, the DOTr maintained.

Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Japan offers railway lore to boost PHL’s battle vs. monstrous traffic woes

METRO Manila traffic. It is as much of a Filipino monster as the legendary aswang, tiyanak or tikbalang—except it is no myth. Filipinos live through this nightmare every day. They fear it; they live through it; they breathe it.

With approximately 9.5 million motor vehicles, cars on the road have formed a perpetual gridlock, adversely affecting not only travel time for motorists and commuters but also the country’s revenue and its overall air quality.

Traveling in Metro Manila has taken a toll that guarantees commuters are on the road at least 66 minutes before getting anywhere else, according to a study conducted by the Boston Consulting Group (BCG), which ranked the Philippines as the third worst in terms of traffic congestion in Southeast Asia.

The impact of traffic congestion is also being felt by the country’s coffers, with the Japan International Cooperation Agency (Jica) reporting an approximate P3.5-billion loss in opportunities and revenue every single day since 2017.

More than losses from traffic congestion, health hazards have also been noted by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources, which reported that 80 percent of air pollution in the country was a result of the transport sector.

Globally, 4.2 million people die from outside air pollution, according to the World Health Organization. While a report from the National Economic and Development Authority (Neda) showed that the number of Filipinos whose health was adversely affected due to exposure to particulate matter grew to 1 million in 2003 alone.

The problem for the chronic pain that Filipinos suffer—both literally and figuratively—from traffic congestion is always seen to have come from poor infrastructure, poor urban planning and poor traffic management.

However, experts view that the root cause of the problem is a mix of decades of underspending, miles of bureaucratic red tape, personal agenda and legal tussles.

Develop railway systems

One way to help alleviate the traffic mess in Metro Manila, according to Jica Senior Representative to the Philippines Tetsuya Yamada, is to develop railway systems in the metropolis.

Train lines are seen as one of the most effective solutions to addressing the need for a mass transit system that is more efficient than buses, jeepneys, taxis and even Internet-based ride-hailing apps.

A passenger boards a train run by the Philippine National Railways, which began operations on November 24, 1892, as the Ferrocarril de Manila-Dagupan, during the Spanish colonial period. It operates a single line of track on Luzon.

“In our view, transportation is a network service,” he said during a BusinessMirror Coffee Club forum recently. “Just like power situations or water services, they are a network—not really a pinpoint, point-to-point services.”

This, however, remains true for Metro Manila. Currently, the metropolis has four railway lines servicing different corridors in the capital. Some stations of the four systems intersect, but moving from one line to another can be of a hassle, as none of them have a common station for ease of transfer.

Based on the recent competitiveness report by the World Economic Forum, the Philippines ranked a dismal 97th out of 137 countries when it comes to infrastructure, 104th in road quality, 91st in railway infrastructure, and 124th in transport infrastructure.

This comes in stark contrast to Jica’s reports of Manila’s dense population count.

Despite numbering at 20,785 people per square kilometer (sq km), only a total 79 kilometers of rail track is currently in operation to serve this group.

Other major cities like London, England, have a total of 590 km of railroad serving a 5,375 people/sq km density count. Similarly, New York City, despite having only 10,250 people per sq km, has an 890-km stretch of railroad.

‘Strong backbone, feeder lines’

HOWEVER, this presents an opportunity for the Philippines to step up its game in the railway game, according to Yamada.

The Philippines, while  boasting of having the first overhead railway line in Southeast Asia, is still in the nascent stage of railway development, he pointed out.

“Network should be developed in the future. But there’s always a starting point. And we are at the starting point,” he said.

The good thing about having a starting point, he said, is that it allows the country to first build a “strong backbone.”

“We all know that roads are congested. There is no more room for roads, for more cars in the future. So that means we have to stretch the living areas and the working areas, north and south of Metro Manila,” he said. “We need strong transportation backbone running north and south—that’s the whole concept.”

Yamada was referring to the Jica-financed North South Commuter Railway project, a roughly P136.3-billion railway initiative that will create a 38-km commuter line that runs from Malolos, Bulacan, to Tutuban, Manila.

The objective of the said project is to reduce travel time between the two areas from over 1.5 hours to only 35 minutes. It is expected to serve more than 300,000 passengers per day, and is expected to be fully operational in 2022.

“Even people outside Metro Manila can agree with the necessity of building a railway transportation system in the national capital, Metro Manila area,” Yamada said.

Japan is extending a loan facility of $2 billion to finance the project, the largest loan commitment that Jica has ever made.

Currently, the Department of Transportation (DOTr) is in the process of finalizing the bidding for the construction of the said railway system. Bids are expected to be placed in August.

Jica is also assisting the Philippine government in the creation of the supplemental feasibility study and detailed engineering and design of the second phase of the North South Commuter Railway, which aims to connect Malolos to Clark, and Tutuban to Calamba.

Complementing this backbone, according to Yamada, is the proposed Metro Manila Subway system, which Japan is also funding through an initial tranche of loan amounting to P49.5 billion. The whole project costs about P378.6 billion.

The first phase of the whole project involves the construction of a 25-km underground train line that connects Mindanao Avenue in Quezon City to the Food Terminal Inc. compound in Taguig City.

According to Yamada, his group is currently studying the possibility of extending the first phase of the subway project to the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (Naia), as requested by the Philippine government.

“Our plan is to complete everything by 2025,” he said.

But aside from having a strong backbone, the railway network in the Philippines should also include feeder lines, which are basically peripheral routes that connect remote areas that are carrying heavy traffic.

Yamada cited the Metro Rail Transit (MRT) Line 7 as a good example of a feeder line.

Targeted to be finished by 2019, the 2.8-km rail-transit system is envisioned to operate 108 rail cars in a three-car train configuration with a daily passenger capacity ranging from 448,000 to 850,000.

It will have four stations, starting with the North Avenue Station on Epifanio de los Santos Avenue, passing through Commonwealth Avenue, Regalado Avenue and Quirino Highway, up to the proposed Intermodal Transport Terminal in San Jose del Monte City, Bulacan.

The said railway infrastructure is being constructed by a unit of San Miguel Corp.

“I think when it comes to feeder lines, private bodies can come in to serve certain areas or certain passenger segments,” Yamada noted.

‘A little too late‘

WHILE these new projects paint a rosy picture for the future of the Philippines, some critics are skeptical of the progress these projects assume to deliver.

Prof. Jose Regin F. Regidor from the University of the Philippines-Diliman’s National Center for Transportation Studies pointed out that the Philippines is playing catch-up with its neighbors in terms of railway development.

“We should have built a network starting back in the 1980s. The original network plans for subways, for example, were in the mid-’70s yet the government then opted for light rail, thus Line 1. Events during the 1980s and 1990s made sure we didn’t get a second line, Line 2 until the late 1990s,” he said in an e-mail to the BusinessMirror.

Backtracking through past policies concerning the country’s railway confirms Regidor’s findings. Following the Philippine National Railways’ (PNR) success and continued use after the Second World War, three comprehensive railway plans were created and proposed, but were eventually dismissed when the government decided to settle just for the Light Rail Transit (LRT) Lines 1 and 2, and the MRT Line 3, through an executive order and a republic act.

These abandoned plans were the Urban Transport Study for Manila Metropolitan Area (UTSMMA) in 1973; the Metro Manila Urban Transport and Land Use Plan Study (MMETROPLAN) in 1977; and the Metro Manila Urban Transportation Integration Study (MMUTIS) in 1999.

The UTSMMA recommended five rail rapid transit lines with a combined stretch of 141.87 km of railway. It would have connected areas like Construction Hill and Talon; Novaliches and Cainta; Marikina and Zapote; Meycauayan and Manila; and provided passage along C4. This plan was supported by the Overseas Technical Cooperation Agency (Otca), the precursor of today’s Jica.

The MMETROPLAN opted for a network of five light rail transit lines, 36.76 km long, which would have superimposed the current roadwork in Metro Manila.

The country currently follows a “bastardized” version of the MMUTIS, which was supported by Jica back in 1999. Only three out of the nine lines proposed in the study were followed in its implementation, thus forming only a brief stretch of 74.5 km of railway; with only 43 percent, or 61 of the original 142 proposed stations.

The study “What if Metro Manila Developed a Comprehensive Rail Transit Network?” conducted by Regidor and his colleagues found that full implementation of the MMUTIS plan would have reaped the “most benefits” to the country, alleviating the major problem of exaggerated travel time.

Even Yamada conceded the late timing: “I would agree. It was too late. If you look at the other countries at the same level in terms of the national income such as Indonesia or Vietnam, they are actually lower when it comes to national level of income but they are moving ahead of us—building subway systems. In that sense, I think we were a bit late to start.” Still, he quickly added, it’s best to start somewhere.

BCG’s report also finds that despite the ambitious plans to remedy the congestion issue through increasing rail-based public transport capacity, estimating “that the added capacity of rail transport alone will not be sufficient to meet growth in transport demand by 2022.”

Integrated transport system

AND while it is a little too late to develop railway infrastructure, Yamada believes that the current administration’s initiatives are “better than nothing.”

However, these are only the initial batch of railways that should be developed by the Philippine government in the next few decades. There are more train lines that need to be constructed in order to really achieve a better, more efficient transportation system in the Philippines.

“Basically, in order for people to rely more on public transportation, instead of using cars, we need a more comfortable network system where, basically, you can walk to the station. Or you can walk to the bus or para-train system to go to the station. So that’s the ideal situation of the public transportation system that needs to be further developed,” he said.

“So it shouldn’t be only the train system that serves all the passengers, but what we need [are] more integrated, comprehensive routes and franchising system that need to be rationalized,” he said.

Included in the government’s plan for a more efficient transport system is the modernization of the public utility vehicles in the Philippines. In the said program, routes for road transport modes will be rationalized and further developed, and old, dilapidated models of vehicles will be replaced by new ones.

Railway education

To complement the hard infrastructure being built to address traffic congestion and the country’s stunted growth in public transportation, Jica plans to put up a Philippine Railway Institute (PRI), a body that will act both as a training institution and a licensing agency, when it comes to railway management. The project began in April and will officially end in March 2023.

“The objective of establishing this Philippine Railway Institute is basically to avoid the same mistakes that happened all the time for railway systems in this country,” explained Yamada.

The institute is also the government’s response to past mistakes in terms of the poor management and maintenance that led to the deterioration of facilities like the MRT 3, which is deemed as the most congested of all three overhead railway lines.

The said train system is also marred by legal cases, procurement hullabaloos and corruption issues. It has also figured in an uncoupling incident that caused one of the train cars to ram against its barricade in Pasay City, causing injuries to several passengers.

“I believe the major, major issues related to the unlucky event are lack of proper maintenance and lack of people capable of doing that. So that’s a whole objective of establishing this Philippine Railway Institute in terms of building the capacity that is involved in the future railway business in the country,” Yamada said.

The Japanese agency will be developing curriculum and teaching materials to train Filipinos in handling train systems.

“We’re going to help the Philippines develop the laws and regulations and safety standards. And, based on that, we will build training material. And we’re going to develop training programs and facilities. This not only serves the railway business employees in the public sector, but anyone involved in the railway business, including the private sector, can come in to be trained under this PRI,” Yamada said.

Policies, laws

HOWEVER, in order to help implement all these hard infrastructure development projects and education programs, the government must also implement laws and policies pertaining to railway management.

“Basically, we have railway laws in Japan so that all the railway operators should follow some sort of norms and standards, in terms of safety and business efficiency and benefit of the passengers that use the train system,” Yamada said.

He said the Japanese government is keen on helping the Philippine government develop laws and policies that are targeted for the local market.

“What we are trying to do is, first of all, introduce the Japanese system to show to Filipino counterparts to help understand what kind of laws are there in Japan. And we will discuss further what needs to be introduced in this country. Basically, we have very different conditions,” Yamada said.

Separate operator, regulator

Specifically, a policy on the separation of operator and regulatory functions should be implemented in the Philippines, he noted.

Currently, the DOTr plays the role of railway operator and regulator at the same time through the Light Rail Transit Authority. Only the LRT 1 is privately operated.

“In Japan’s case, it’s totally different systems. We have various railway operators, but regulation is taken care of by the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism—they don’t run the train system. Some train systems are run by public sectors, but not the ministry itself,” he said. “So that’s one of the things that we’re thinking about introducing.”

Sustainability

WITH all these plans now up and running, and assistance from foreign groups pouring in, the Philippines is on the right track to attaining a better railway and overall transportation sector.

However, for Rene S. Santiago, president of Bellwether Advisory Inc. and longtime critic of the country’s transportation system, plans for infrastructure development and policies are things that need continuation.

“The solutions to traffic congestion—there’s nothing new there. The newness is the people coming in. They are always new. They’re always groping and trying to learn. When they see something from the past, something that happened in the previous administration, they tend to dismiss it—just like that,” Santiago said in a phone interview.

Yamada agreed, saying that sustainability is the way to go, as politicizing projects will not benefit the common Filipino.

“We need support from the public. We need continuation. We cannot stop by 2022. Everyone wants it. Everyone wants good transportation network. Everyone wants to ride the train. Everyone wants to be at the work place faster than what we are currently experiencing right now. And we all need to support that idea,” he said.

Yamada added: “I think that’s the top priority issue for the entire Philippines as an administration—which is basically traffic and decongesting Metro Manila; preventing the same situation to happen in the future for some other parts of the country.”

But for as long as these infrastructure projects are not yet completed and policies remain unchanged or improved, traffic congestion will continue to haunt the common Juan like the monsters from Filipino folklore. With additional report by Wynzyleen L. Lee, Intern

LRT 1’s Sucat extension project done in 2021 if…

The project to extend Light Railway Transit 1 (LRT 1) service to Sucat, Parañaque, could start serving commuters by the end of 2021 if work on site starts by February 2019, and the right-of-way (ROW) is free and clear by May 2019.

“We are just waiting for the complete ROW and government approvals, especially on the delayed increase in our fares from around an average of P20 to around P25 depending on the distance traveled, which is basically the same as bus fares,” Juan Alfonso, president of the Light Rail Manila Corp. (LRMC), operator of LRT1, said in a news statement issued on Wednesday.

He added: “The main difference is we can bring our riders from Baclaran to Sucat or vice versa in 15 minutes, rush hour or not, and even if the roads are flooded. We are traffic-free.”

Alfonso said its contract with the government provided that the fares be increased automatically every two years starting in 2016 to allow LRMC to have the funds to properly maintain and operate the line. The railways operator wants the P5 fare increase to cover both the 2016 and 2018 adjustments.

Without the increase, LRMC said, it might not be able to borrow from banks the funds needed to build the extension.

“The banks want to make sure we can repay them, and the only way this can be attained is for us to be able to earn enough through higher fares,” Alfonso said.

LRT1: Traffic-free 15-min. trip from Baclaran to Sucat

The extension of the Light Rail Transit Line 1 to Sucat in Parañaque City could start serving riders by the end of 2021 if work on site starts by February next year, and the right of way is free and clear by May 2019.

Juan Alfonso, president of the Light Rail Manila Corp., the operator of LRT 1, said they are just waiting for the complete ROW and government approvals, “especially on the delayed increase in our fares from around an average of P20 to around P25 depending on the distance traveled, which is basically the same as bus fares.”

“The main difference is we can bring our riders from Baclaran to Sucat or vice versa in 15 minutes, rush hour or not, and even if the roads are flooded. We are traffic free,” he added.

Alfonso said its contract with the government provided that the fares be increased automatically every two years starting in 2016 to allow LRMC to have the funds to properly maintain and operate the line. LRMC wants the P5 fare increase it’s asking for to cover both the 2016 and 2018 adjustments.

Without the increase, LRMC might not be able to borrow from banks the funds needed to build the extension, he noted.

“The banks want to make sure we can repay them, and the only way this can be attained is for us to be able to earn enough through higher fares,” Alfonso said.

After Sucat, the extension will go to Las Piñas and Niog, in Bacoor, Cavite.

“But we can go to Las Piñas and Bacoor only after we have built Sucat, and that means we must have the fares adjusted first,” he said.

Travel from Baclaran to Las Piñas via LRT 1 will take only 20 minutes, and 30 minutes to Bacoor.

“The LRT 1 is a solution to traffic and to people’s daily commute, which is so long because of traffic that they have less time for themselves and their families,” Alfonso said.

Similar railway systems abroad are efficient and well-run because riders pay the proper fares, he added.

Under the contract, if the fare is not adjusted, the government will pay LRMC instead, which means that taxpayers—including the salaried workers in Visayas and Mindanao, not the riders themselves—will be paying for it.

“It is not sustainable to keep fares at the current level without sacrificing service quality. We strive to bring world-class service to the Filipinos and this will entail new investments,” Alfonso said.

Every business must earn a profit to be able to keep its serving. If bus companies do not earn a profit, eventually there might be no buses to ride for the public, he added.

LRMC: Right of way issues blocking LRT-1 extension to Sucat

Extension of the Light Rail Transit line 1 (LRT-1) up to Sucat could be done by 2021 if the issue of right of way (ROW) is resolved by May 2019, the Light Rail Manila Corporation (LRMC) operator of the line said on Tuesday.

LRMC president Juan Alfonso said they are just waiting for needed documents in order to start with the line’s extension.

“The extension of LRT1 to Sucat could start serving riders by the end of 2021 if work on site starts by February 2019, and the right of way is free and clear by May 2019,” he said.

Once extended, LRT-1 passengers will arrive at the line’s Sucat, Parañaque station from Baclaran in just 15 minutes, Alfonso said.

Alfonso added that the delay in the approval of their petition for a fare increase is also hampering the start of the LRT-1’s line extension.

“We are just waiting for the complete ROW and government approvals especially on the delayed increase in our fares from around an average of P20 to around P25 depending on the distance traveled, which is basically the same as bus fares,” Alfonso said in a statement.

“The banks want to make sure we can repay them and the only way this can be attained is for us to be able to earn enough through higher fares,” he added.

Alfonso earlier insisted that the P5 fare increase would be used for the line extension.

Bayan Secretary General Renato Reyes earlier said the LRMC plan was “unfair” to commuters.

Alfonso however said that it would be unfair for the general taxpayers to shoulder the expenses of the line’s extension.

“Under the contract, if the fare is not adjusted, the government will pay LRMC instead, which means the taxpayers including the salaried workers in Visayas and Mindanao, not the riders themselves, will be paying,” Alfonso said. /muf

LRMC aims for 2021 completion of LRT 1 extension to Sucat

The LRT 1 extension to Sucat could be finished by the end of 2021 if work on site can start in February 2019 and the right of way is free and clear by May 2019, operator Light Rail Manila Corporation said.

In a statement, LRMC president Juan Alfonso said that the company is just waiting for the approval of a fare increase to start working on the extension of the Light Rail Transit's Line 1.

"We are just waiting for the complete ROW and Government approvals especially on the delayed increase in our fares from around an average of P20 to around P25 depending on the distance travelled, which is basically the same as bus fares," he said.

Alfonso said that the LRT 1 will be able to bring passengers from Baclaran to Sucat and vice versa in just 15 minutes, compared to buses with a similar fare.

"The main difference is we can bring our riders from Baclaran to Sucat or vice versa in 15 minutes, rush hour or not, and even if the roads are flooded. We are traffic free," he added.

LRMC's contract with the government provides that fares will be increased automatically every two years, starting in 2016, to allow it to have sufficient funds to properly maintain and operate the line.

The P5 increase will cover both the 2016 and 2018 adjustments.

"The banks want to make sure we can repay them and the only way this can be attained is for us to be able to earn enough through higher fares," Alfonso said.

"It is not sustainable to keep fares at the current level without sacrificing service quality."

After Sucat, the extension will go to Las Piñas and Niog in Bacoor, Cavite.

The company expects travel from Baclaran to Las Piñas to take 20 minutes, and 30 minutes to Bacoor, with the line extension. — Maia Tria/BM, GMA News

LRT 1 operator says fare hike needed for Sucat extension

The operator of the LRT-1 said on Wednesday it planned to finish the railway's extension to Sucat, Parañaque by 2021, but it must be allowed to raise fares to fund the project.

Without the P5 increase in fares, the Light Rail Manila Corp said it might not be able to secure bank financing. The proposed fare hike would push the cost of an end-to-end LRT trip to P25 from P20.

"The banks want to make sure we can repay them and the only way this can be attained is for us to be able to earn enough through higher fares," said LRMC president Juan Alfonso.

LRMC said the Sucat extension could start serving riders by the end of 2021 if work on site starts by February 2019, and the right of way is free and clear by May 2019.

After Sucat, LRMC plans to extend the capital's oldest light railway to Las Piñas and Bacoor, Cavite.

LRMC is a joint venture company of Macquarie Infrastructure Holdings and subsidiaries of Metro Pacific Investments Corp and Ayala Corp.

MRT 3 to field fewer trains once system rehab starts in 2019

Only 12 Metro Rail Transit (MRT) 3 trains may be left running once the Japan-led rehabilitation project for the entire system starts next year, according to the Department of Transportation (DOTr).

The limited number of operational trains, which might once again result in long lines at stations, emphasized the need to get the 48 brand new China-made trains running as soon as possible, Transport Secretary Arthur Tugade said on Tuesday.

Tugade added that he had given Dalian Corp. until Aug. 20 to finalize its assessment of the needed repairs which it should also shoulder.

The P11.6-billion MRT 3 rehabilitation project funded by a loan from the Japanese government is aimed at overhauling and restoring to their original condition the train system’s 72 coaches within 26 months or until 2020.

It will be carried out by Sumitomo Corp. which will return as the MRT 3’s maintenance and service provider. But once the rehabilitation of the MRT 3 begins, only 12 trains can operate as the rest undergo repairs, Tugade said.

This will affect the operations of the MRT 3 which has been fielding an average of 15 trains since April from a record low of eight.

Waiting for audit report

The DOTr has yet to release the results of the independent audit conducted of the Dalian trains which would have determined whether these were safe to operate.

But Transport Undersecretary for Rails TJ Batan said that while the new trains failed to comply with some of the provisions in the terms of reference, they could still be used after Dalian Corp. makes the necessary adjustments and repairs. —WITH A REPORT FROM FATE COLOBONG

ONLY 12 TRAINS TO RUN: Sumitomo to come in August as MRT3’s rehab contractor

CLARK, Pampanga—Japan’s Sumitomo Corp. and its technical partner, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, will start rehabilitation and maintenance works on the glitch-plagued Metro Rail Transit Line 3 (MRT3) in August, the Department of Transportation (DOTr) said Tuesday.

“Sigurado na. Darating na ‘yung Sumitomo next month,” Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade said in a press conference here.

For his part, Transportation Undersecretary for Rails Timothy John Batan said the loan agreement with Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), covering the cost of maintenance services to be incurred, will be signed “within August.”

Sumitomo will start working on the rehabilitation of MRT3 after the loan deal has been signed.

During the 43-month rehabilitation and maintenance of MRT3, the number of trains may be reduced to 12 from the present average of 15 to 16 trains running per day.

“Habang ginagawa ‘yan in ... 43 months, ang train lang po na tatakbo is 12 trains,” Tugade noted.

“Ang ibig sabihin hind natin maa-achieve ang gusto natin na 500,000 per day ridership.”

Expect better service

The Cabinet official gave the assurance that after the rehabilitation works are done, commuters may expect better service from the mass rail transit system such as a shorter headway or waiting time for the next train to arrive and pick up passengers, faster running time of trains, and better air-conditioning.

In December last year, the governments of the Philippines and Japan have exchanged a series of notes verbal on a government-to-government agreement for a Japanese service provider to take over the maintenance and rehabilitation of MRT 3.

The DOTr earlier estimated the rehabilitation cost at ¥34.480 billion or P16.985 billion.

The rehabilitation will cover the trains, the power supply system, the radio system, the CCTV system, the public address system, and the signaling system.

The contractor is also expected to fix the rail tracks, road rail vehicles, depot equipment, elevators and escalators, and other station building equipment.

The overall rehabilitation of MRT 3 is expected to take 43 months—31 months for simultaneous rehabilitation and maintenance works and 12 months for the defect liability period. —VDS, GMA News

Transport Secretary: Fewer MRT trains to run during three-year repair

Transport authorities said Tuesday fewer Metro Rail Transit (MRT) 3 trains will be operational starting August while the line is undergoing rehabilitation and maintenance.

Transport Secretary Arthur Tugade said as few as 12 trains will run daily once Sumitomo Corporation returns as the service provider for MRT-3.

"Yung rehabilitation program, kukumpunihin yung riles, titingnan ang tren at bagon," Tugade said. "Ang tren lang na tatakbo per target is 12 trains. Ibig sabihin hindi ho natin maa-achieve yung gusto natin na 500,000 per day ridership."

While Tugade did not reveal an exact date when the rehabilitation will start, he said it will last for 43 months, or about three years and seven months.

Sumitomo built the MRT system in 1998, and maintained it until 2012.

Since April 2018, at least 15 trains have been running on the railway line on weekdays.

Tugade said the reduction of working trains is necessary to conduct repairs on the aging railway line, which serves 500,000 passengers daily. He said passengers will have a better riding experience once the repairs are finished.

"On the immediate term, hopefully you'll have a better headway, yun bang tinatawag na six minutes, seven minutes baka pwede nang three to four," Tugade said.

The Transport Secretary also said he is optimistic that the 48 train coaches bought from Chinese company CRRC Dalian will eventually be used, after German audit firm TUV Rheinland finished inspecting the trains and found that they can still be used after making certain adjustments.

"Kung magagamit yung Dalian at masusuportahan ng riles, the best case scenario, hindi ba the more trains the better?...The exact when, when we finished talking," Tugade said.

The Dalian trains are part of a ₱3.8-billion contract signed in 2014 between the Chinese firm and the Aquino administration. The trains arrived in 2015, but these were not used because of issues of weight and compatibility with the MRT-3 maintenance facilities and signaling system.

The Transportation Department has given Dalian until August 20 to finalize details of the adjustments it will make on the trains, in time for the high-level talks between the Philippines and China.

DOTr sees full dev’t of Calbayog Airport

TACLOBAN CITY -- The Calbayog Airport, eyed as the region’s alternative to the Daniel Z. Romualdez Airport in this city, got a PHP357-million budget for improvement in the next two years.

The development of Samar’s busiest airport will continue until 2019, Department of Transportation (DOTr) Project Management Service Director Eduardo Mangalili said in a project presentation here Tuesday.

“This year, the airport got a budget of PHP248 million for the completion of widening of runway, apron expansion, runway strip grade correction, construction of runway safety area, construction of vertically separated approaches, and construction of perimeter and security fence,” Mangalili said.

The DOTr had bid out the 2018 project two weeks ago and civil works will proceed this year, said the DOTr official.

For the 2015 to 2017 appropriations, the airport got an allocation of PHP781 million. The past releases was meant for widening of runway, including shoulder grade correction, asphalt overlay, passenger terminal building, apron and taxiway construction, expanded runway site expansion, and shore protection area.

In May 2017, DOTr started the construction of new passenger terminal and site development. It is expected to be finished on April 28, 2019, Mangalili added.

The construction will increase the passenger capacity of the airport tenfold from the present 450 square meters (sqm) to 4,500 sqm.

The airport's apron will also be expanded to comply with International Civil Aviation Organization standards as the present ramp is too narrow to support an airbus A320 jet.

The airport that serves more than 2,000 passengers monthly has a runway length of 2,100 meters and is classified by the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines as a minor domestic airport.

Calbayog, one of the biggest cities in the country in terms of land area, has regular flights to Clark by Philippine Airlines and to Cebu by Cebu Pacific.

The Duterte administration committed the full development of the Calbayog Airport until 2022 with a price tag of PHP1.2 billion. (PNA)

DOTr underspends P12B due to policy shifts

PAMPANGA, Philippines – The Department of Transportation (DOTr) on Tuesday, July 17, described as "savings" the P12 billion they did not spend from their 2017 budget allocation, saying this came about due to "shifts in policy."

According to the latest Commission on Audit report, the DOTr had committed to spend 80.9%, or P57.6 billion of its P71.2-billion budget, but it only got to spend 25.6% of its funds, or P18.23 billion.

Some P12 billion were reverted to Bureau of Treasury while close to P2 billion was extended to be used for the following year.

In a press briefing on Tuesday, Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade clarified that the department's low disbursement rate did not mean they were "negligent."

"We were not able to utilize P12 billion from our funds, but it doesn't mean to say that we weren't able to [implement projects]. These are savings," Tugade said during the briefing at the DOTr office in Clark, Pampanga.

"Secondly, we weren't able to obligate 20% of our budget not because of negligence, but because of shifts in policy. These were reverted because there is no use for it anymore," he added.

COA said that among the funds unspent by the DOTr were some P213 million allocated electricity budget for the controversial 48 trains from China-based CRRC Dalian Company Limited. These trains remain unused. Another "savings" were the P279 million earmarked for operation of these trains. (READ: Dalian trains may be used later this year but...)

The DOTr also incurred savings of P102 million from the terminated maintenance service contract with Busan Universal Rail Incorporated (BURI) in November 2017, as it failed to address issues raised by the government.

Delays?

State auditors pointed out that several projects were "put on hold" due to policy shifts.

According to the report, 144 of 150 locally funded and all 9 foreign-assisted projects were "slowly" implemented. COA said that projects with less than 75% of its funds released within 2017 are "slow."

State auditors attribute this slow release of funds to "changes in policy directions by political leaders and economic managers."

An example of a project "put on hold", COA said, is the Metro Manila Bus Rapid Transit (BRT). The pending BRT project is an unobligated balance of P563.65 million, which was reverted to the Bureau of Treasury.

The DOTr has since said it was considering scrapping the BRT project in Metro Manila, citing physical infrastructure constraints. (READ: DOTr to scrap bus rapid transit project)

"The BRT assumes a dedicated lane along EDSA. The current situation of 5 lanes is with that much traffic – maybe BRT is not the solution to [traffic] in EDSA," Tugade said on Tuesday.

The transportation chief also said that the "delayed" projects have been in the pipeline of the previous administration, specifically citing the Metro Rail Transit and the Light Rail Transit common station in North Avenue.

"The common stations was delayed not because of us. We came in, and it has been delayed…Comparing speed of implementation, we're not entirely delayed," Tugade said.

The MRT-LRT common station has been delayed for a decade due to issues with contractors. It is scheduled to be operational by 2020.

To improve disbursement rates, Tugade said that they will "expedite in-house preparation for detailed engineering design for complex projects." They will also reorganize DOTr's project management office to ensure efficiency.

For 2019, DOTr is also looking at earlier procurement activities, so that projects are implemented prior to yearend.

DoTr to adopt new project rules after CoA report

THE Department of Transportation (DoTr) said it will adopt new rules to address delays in the roll out of projects and fund disbursement pointed out by the Commission on Audit (CoA).

Transportation Secretary Arthur P. Tugade said in a media briefing in Clark on Tuesday, “We’ll start the process early, so when the Congress approves the budget, we can allocate and spend it more readily.”

He added that the reforms cover expediting the preparation of the detailed engineering design (DED) which usually takes three months after receiving budget approval from Congress, and to issue the notice of award and notice to proceed at the same time.

The CoA report found issues with the launch of 153 out of 159 projects because of policies that hamper execution.

The DoTr said the policy changes were meant to make the process more efficient as older policies cause longer delays.

“The CoA report is correct, but the conclusion or perception of others that it means we are not doing our jobs is wrong,” Mr. Tugade said.

The DoTr said its obligation rate, or the funding it secured for projects in 2017, was at 80%, with a disbursement rate of 25%.

He said getting to fund disbursement usually takes the DoTr eight months, but with the changes, it hopes to remove as many as four months from the process.

“If you remove the notice to proceed, you’ll save 30 days. If you remove the DED after Congress (approval), you’ll save around three months. That’s the time we’re looking to cut,” Mr. Tugade told reporters.

The DoTr also addressed the supposed “quadrupling of expenses” when it moved to its office in Clark, saying although it indeed pays more rent for its new office, it now occupies a bigger land area and pays its lease to the Clark Development Corp., which in effect goes to the government, instead of a private institution.

The former office of the DoTr was in 58 condominium units at Columbia Towers in Mandaluyong CIty.

Mr. Tugade noted the bigger space is meant to accommodate more DoTr units including the back offices of the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB), the Land Transportation Office (LTO) and the Toll Regulatory Board (TRB).

He said this is to help ease road congestion in Metro Manila, especially East Avenue in Quezon City where the LTFRB and LTO hold office. — Denise A. Valdez

http://bworldonline.com/dotr-to-adopt-new-project-rules-after-coa-report/

COA audits DOTr

Sabi na nga ba something was not right. Now the Commission on Audit (COA) has confirmed our suspicions about the ability of the Department of Transportation to get things done. It is not just the DOTr under Art Tugade, but also DOTC under Jun Abaya.

But since it has been two years since Mr. Tugade took over, the faults of Jun Abaya are now also his. At the very least, he is not seen as having done enough to correct some of the problems he inherited. He blames government procedures that take time.

Tugade may be well on the way to solving the driver’s license,  car plates, and maybe even the MRT-3 fiasco of Abaya, but there are also problems that are of his own creation.

One positive development on the MRT-3 rehabilitation and possibly in the construction of other commuter lines is the decision of Tugade to adopt the single point of responsibility principle in commissioning contractors. The chop chop mode of the Abaya DOTC is why LRT-2 extension to Masinag is proceeding very slowly.

Going back to COA’s audit report for last year, the DOTr was reported to have been unable to fully implement P46.6 billion worth of funded projects due to frequent changes in policy.

According to the COA, the changes in “policy directions by political leaders and economic managers” resulted in the failed or delayed implementation of 153 out of 159 DOTr projects last year.

“In view of the department’s unutilized allotments and cash allocations, timely delivery of its mandated services, particularly the improvement of road safety by expanding safe, affordable, and accessible public transport was not achieved,” COA reported.

COA pointed out a total of P700 million worth of projects for regional airport expansions and maintenance, supposed to be undertaken through public-private partnerships, were hobbled because of policy changes. Because Tugade cancelled a ready-for-bidding bundle of regional airports, DOTr is now back to square one, the conduct of feasibility project study for each of the airports.

The COA also cited a list of projects that were funded, but not implemented or only partially accomplished: the technical support consultancy project for the Cebu Bus Rapid Transit worth P2.4 billion; the P1.9-billion Light Rail Transit (LRT) Line 2 east extension; the P1.4-billion LRT Line 1 north extension common station, and others.

Indecisiveness also resulted in DOTr putting on hold the Metro Manila Bus Rapid Transit Line 1-Quezon Avenue project, which had been provided a funding of P563.6 million. According to COA, this happened because officials supposedly could not decide on whether to push through with it.

On the Quezon Avenue BRT, it is just as well that it was not implemented. It doesn’t seem to be the right solution given the increasing number of commuters on this line.

The Cebu BRT is also a project that had been overtaken by commuter growth. It was unwise for the previous administration and the World Bank to have wasted so much money on studying the project for such a long time. It is obvious Cebu’s rather narrow streets provide little or no room for a BRT.

Not on the COA list, but still waiting for DOTr action is the rehabilitation of the NAIA, also a NEDA-approved project left over from the previous administration. There are now two unsolicited proposals to do the NAIA rehab waiting for DOTr to decide.

It is taking Tugade a long while to understand that two or even three airports for Mega Manila would be alright as is the case in New York, San Francisco, London among other mega metropolitan areas. We will still need NAIA for the next 15 years while a new airport complex is being built.

Now Tugade is hinting he wants government to undertake the NAIA rehabilitation, in other words, himself. Maawa naman sa madlang public. We are suffering enough for his inability to execute projects quickly.

 But Tugade can be decisive if he wants to. He managed to transfer DOTr’s head office from Ortigas to Clark in a matter of weeks even without a vetted plan and causing waste of government funds. As the website politics.com.ph puts it, “Dahil lang sa kapritso! DOTr quadruples HQ costs just because Tugade wants to spend more time in Clark.”

According to the audit agency, DOTr lacked a “structured transfer plan” before it relocated its office operations to the Clark Economic Zone and Freeport in Pampanga. As a result, DOTr’s total expenses have increased.

Because the move was made on a whim, taxpayers also lost P19.2 million in unrealized rentals from the 58 condominium units at its previous headquarters at Columbia Towers. COA observed the rentals could have been used to offset what DOTr spends to shuttle its employees from Manila to Clark.

 According to COA, DOTr is now spending close to P30 million for shuttle services for its employees. It has a 10-bus rental deal with Genesis Transport Service which picks up DOTr employees from six points to travel the 100 kilometers to Clark every day.

 Other increased annual costs attributed to the transfer cited by COA include: rent (up 278 percent to P50.9 million a year); communication (up 188 percent to P15.344 million); fuel and lubricants (up 379 percent to P11.682 million); and repair and maintenance (up 100 percent to P3.444 million).

 Tugade claims he did the transfer to set the example for other agencies to help decongest Metro Manila. It could have been done with more planning and foresight for the sake of taxpayers.

(Incidentally, if the plan is to eventually move government to Clark to decongest Manila as Tugade claims, why is the Senate and the Supreme Court constructing new office buildings at BGC?)

Because Tugade is responsible for a large part of BBB infra projects, we should all be very vigilant he gets his job done. Hopefully President Duterte gets very vigilant too about getting his Cabinet members to deliver.