Jul 08, 2020


Helplessly Hoping

Here's hoping that by the time this is being read, traditional jeepneys are back on the road. And the drivers who have been begging on the streets for food are back to making a living.

As this is being written it is just a couple of days after transport authorities announced that traditional jeepneys will be allowed back to providing public transport starting on July 3, a Friday.

But this was with a number of conditions laid out in Memorandum Circular (MC) 2020-026 issued by the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) on July 1, 2020 detailing guidelines for the operation of traditional PUJs during the period of general community quarantine in Metro Manila.

Only PUJs, or public utility jeepneys, currently registered as roadworthy with the Land Transportation Office (LTO) and with a valid Personal Passenger Insurance Policy will be allowed to operate.

Qualified PUJ operators and drivers need not apply for a special permit in their old routes. Instead the LTFRB will issue a correspondingQR Code which they can download from the LTFRB website (www.ltfrb.gov.ph).

The QR Code will have to be printed and displayed on the PUJs allowed back into serving commuters.

LTFRB MC 2020-026 also listed the 46 routes where traditional jeepneys will be allowed to operate covering at most 6,002 vehicle units.

The LTFRB added that the PUJs can only operate at 50 percent of capacity and are "required to comply with a series of safety measures prior to dispatch and during operations, such as checking of body temperature, wearing masks and gloves at all times, and operating at a maximum of 50 percent capacity, and distributing Passenger Contact Forms."

The LTFRB also pointed out that PUJs must charge passengers the "existing fare of P9 for the first four kilometers and P1.50 for succeeding kilometers."

Again here's hoping that PUJ drivers do have the means to go online and download the QR Codes and that many are now back on the road, especially those who, shut down by the community quarantine for around five months, were reduced to begging for alms or sustenance from motorists.

Busway Experiment

Transport authorities and experts working for government touts the EDSA Busway as one of the keys to providing safe and efficient mass transport in the new normal while at the same time helping keep traffic moving smoothly in the busiest thoroughfare in Metro Manila.

The EDSA Busway would extend from Monumento inCaloocan City to the Parañaque Integrated Terminal Exchange (PITX) with buses having exclusive use of the innermost lanes of EDSA. Buses would run like a carousel in the innermost lanes of EDSA, picking up and dropping off passengers at loading and unloading zones also set up in the innermost lanes.

No overtaking allowed. No racing for passengers. No waiting for passengers at loading zones. Drivers and conductors would be paid a fixed monthly sum instead of divvying up the total fare collected less the boundary.

That was the plan.

The Metro Manila Development Authority (MMDA) had been working frantically to set up concrete barriers to ensure private vehicles and motorcycles don't use the lanes set aside for buses, as well as the loading and unloading zones. It had ordered for 36,000 slabs of concrete barriers for this.

But until these are delivered and put in place, the MMDA has decided to push through with what it calls an Interim Operation of the EDSA Busway.

Around 550 buses are authorized to be part of the EDSA Busway but only 150 units were said to have been deployed in the initial run.

The buses would have exclusive use of the median lanes already marked out by barriers on segments of EDSA and would be allowed to pickup and unload passengers curbside only at designated bus stops.

The MMDA said buses will be using the curbside stops "until the needed bus stops, including lighting, fences and canopies, are completed, and when the concrete barriers are placed on EDSA's median lanes."

"The EDSA Busway aims to significantly cut travel time from Monumento to PITX from the usual 2 to 3 hours because of traffic, to just 45 minutes to 1 hour," the MMDA said.

The MMDA appears to be committed to fully implementing the EDSA Busway even in the face of doubt and misgivings expressed by commuters, and even by some legislators, on whether this would be effective and safe.

One misgiving raised is that the doors of buses would not be on the safe side for disembarking or loading. Another concern is how commuters would safely and conveniently go from sidewalk to busway lane and back.

Many are wondering if this will become just another expensive experiment that would soon be discarded like many others in MMDA's long history of trying to solve EDSA traffic.

Waku-Doki Spirit

Toyota Motor Philippines is keeping the waku-doki spirit alive by holding an on-line motorsport event, the GR Supra GT Cup Asia-Philippines.

Toyota hopes the GR Supra GT Cup Asia-Philippines could somehow replace the excitement of the Vios Racing Festival which it had to scrap this year because of the Covid-19 pandemic.

"Because of the current situation, we have decided to postpone VRF this year for safety reasons. The good news is, our waku-doki spirit lives on. This 2020, we are launching the GR Supra GT Cup Asia - Philippines," said TMP president Atsuhiro Okamoto, in a press release announcing the online motorsports event.

"This e-motorsports program will not only continue Toyota's racing legacy, but will also discover the Philippines' top e-Sports talents. We are very excited to find them so they can represent the country in our international races," he added.

The online event is open to gamers 18 years old and above who will race each other using Toyota's iconic flagship sports car in Gran Turismo on Playstation in two classes: the Promotional Class for novice drivers with no professional e-sports background; and the Sporting Class for intermediate and professional e-racers.

Winners in these classes will be eligible to represent the country in the GR Supra GT Cup Asia Regional Round participated in by gamers from other Asia-Pacific countries.

A Junior Class race for competitors below 18 years old will held but the winners cannot qualify for the regional round in compliance with international tournament rules.

Interested players can check out the complete mechanics and register online via toyota.com.ph/gtcup.

Master Mechanics

AC Motors , the automotive and motorcycle arm of AC Industrials, the industrial technology unit of Ayala Corporation, has introduced an online aftersales consultation platform called "Master Mechanics."

Available online via e-mail, Facebook and mobile SMS, Master Mechanics makes available to customers of the six AC Motors' brands -Honda, Isuzu, Volkswagen, KTM, Kia and Maxus - a pool of around 40 veteran after-sales managers and advisors who provide a customer-centric, one-stop after-sales consultation service.

This Master Mechanics pool of after-sales managers and advisors are available to answer customers' concerns and queries seven days a week, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.

The Master Mechanics help desk online services cover the following general concerns: vehicle care (battery maintenance, proper vehicle storage, among others); do-it-yourself maintenance advisory; basic warranty policies; inquiries on car and motorcycle features; dealer information and services; accessories; product and brand-specific questions; and, guided basic checks.

Happy Motoring!!!

For comments & inquiries:

(email) sunshine.television@yahoo.com

(website) www.motoringtoday.ph

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ray Butch Gamboa graduated from the College of Arts and Letters of the University of Sto. Tomas. It was a course that should have been preparatory to a law degree, but the call of broadcasting aborted his plans.

At the age of 16, while still a student, Butch tried his hand at disc jockeying, landing a job at Mareco Broadcasting Network’s AM stations DZBM and DZLM. From there, Butch moved on with his illustrious career as a popular disc jockey, riding the airwaves of Bob Stewart’s middle-of-the-road music at DZXX, and ending his disc jockeying career at ABS-CBN’s DZYL and DZQL.

From there, he stayed on with ABS-CBN, covering live the proceedings at the Manila Stock Exchange and eventually entered into the world of television sales as an account manager for the premier channel of ABS-CBN Channel 2.

In the early 70’s, at the outbreak of Martial Law, Butch was one of the thousands of professionals who woke up jobless when then President Marcos declared the new status of the nation. With the closure of ABS-CBN, Butch ventured into different fields outside of broadcast. He tried his hand and with ease and success at export (Costume jewelry), real estate (brokerage), and restaurants (fast food).

In 1987, after the revolution, with the broadcast industry back to its free state, and with its irresistible call ringing in his ears, Butch made his inevitable comeback and pioneered in a local motoring show, producing Motoring Today on Channel 4 and co-hosting with local motor sports’ living legend Pocholo Ramirez.

After 4 years, he ventured into another pioneering format by producing and hosting Business & Leisure, which was originally aired on ABS-CBN’s Channel 2. The format eventually espoused similar ones in other different channels. But the clones in due course faded away leaving the original staying on airing on Channel 4 and eventually on Shop TV on Sky Cable’s Channel 13.

The following year, the pioneering spirit in Butch spurred him to produce another TV show, Race Weekend, also on Channel 4, covering circuit racing at the Subic International Raceway after the motor sport’s hiatus of 17 years. But when similar shows with duplicated formats sprouted, he decided to give way and ended the program after a year, although still enjoying unparalleled viewership.

In 1998, when the local automotive industry was in a slump, Butch contributed his share to help the ailing industry by producing another popular motoring-related show, this time exclusive to the automobile and its industry—Auto Focus, which became a vehicle for local automotive assemblers and importers to showcase their products and dwell on the industry’s latest technological developments.

In 2003, Butch teamed up with his brother, Rey Gamboa who was a former Shell executive and presently one Philippine Star’s business columnist to co-produce and co-host the TV show Breaking Barriers on Channel 13. It is a talk show that features guests who are in the news and in the middle of controversies. The program ventures to draw deeper insights into current issues to learn how they impact to our daily lives.

Today, Motoring Today on its 28th year of service to the general motoring public still enjoys its unprecedented loyal vierwership nationwide while Auto Focus, after 16 years has firmly established its niche viewership among automobile enthusiasts and on the other hand Business & Leisure is on its 24th year dishing out current business issues and lifestyle features.

Today, aside from writing weekly columns for the Philippine Star (Motoring Today on Wednesdays and Business & Leisure on Saturdays) and executive producer / host of weekly TV shows (Motoring Today, airs Sundays on Solar Sports Channel 70, Business & Leisure, airs Tuesdays on Shop TV, Sky Cable Channel 13 and Auto Focus airs Thursdays on Shop TV, Sky Cable Channel 13, Ray Butch Gamboa is currently the Chairman and CEO of Sunshine Television Production and Marketing Services Corp., President of Gamcor Management and Development Corp., Chairman of Asia-Pacific Realty Corporation, President and Chairman of Socio-Communication Foundation for Asia and Founding Chairman of the Society of Phil. Motoring Journalists (SPMJ)