Please Solve Traffic President Duterte
The Road Users
Protection Advocates urged the incoming President Duterte to immediately solve
the horrible traffic problem in the metropolis.
In a statement, the Road
Users Protection Advocates (Rupa) said the worsening traffic situation in Metro
Manila was a “result of a confluence of mistakes from the past
administrations.”
“We hope to see concrete
steps in the nightmares in our roads,” Rupa said.
The group also asked
President-elect Rodrigo Duterte to heed the recommendation of the Japan
International Cooperation Agency (Jica) to develop Sangley Point, Cavite, as
the site of a modern $10-billion airport.
It described as a “first
mistake” the location of the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (Naia) “right
in the center of the metropolis,” noting that the country’s premier air gateway
has become “a magnet to traffic.”
“The international
airport should be brought out of the city,” Rupa argued.
The group also lamented
how the government had tolerated the uncontrolled increase in the number of
brand-new vehicles sold by car companies.
“Every year, hundreds of
thousands of cars join the millions now clogging our roads,” Rupa said.
It said the Duterte
administration should “correct the errors in the mass transit program and send
to jail those who made big money from these errors.”
“We believe that
President Duterte has the vision and political will to find a long-term
solution to the traffic problem and the congestion in Naia,” Rupa said.
It said building a new
air gateway to Metro Manila would help realize the incoming President’s
economic agenda to entice more investments and create job opportunities.
“The public has been
burdened by the airport congestion at Naia which the outgoing Aquino
administration has miserably failed to address for the past six years,” Rupa
said.
“Even big businesses
have been complaining about the billions of pesos in losses due to the late and
cancelled flights in Naia. The adverse effects of the airport problem would
definitely be felt by the economy for years,” the group said.
Citing government
records, Rupa said airline companies have been losing some P7 billion a year
from additional fuel costs and engine maintenance due to the air congestion in
Naia.
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