Abad points out reasons for traffic woes: Past negligence and rapid growth


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Amid the public uproar and frustration over traffic, the government remains confident that it will overcome the problem, according to Budget Secretary Florencio “Butch” Abad.

Abad said President Aquino has been in charge and had put in place key Cabinet officials to solve the traffic situation.

The President spoke before the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Finance Ministers’ Meeting in Cebu with Finance Secretary Cesar Purisima, Abad, Cabinet Secretary Jose Rene Almendras and other officials in attendance.

Almendras, who was designated to coordinate all government efforts to address the traffic woes, said the President held a meeting with them in Cebu but did not elaborate.

Abad acknowledged the traffic problem and sought patience and cooperation, expressing belief that the people would understand the situation and “a lot of efforts are being done right now to address” such woes.

Abad described the traffic nightmare in Metro Manila as a complex problem.

“Negligence in the past and… we are growing faster than we can cope. We are repairing roads that have caused some narrowing of pathways. So the government has put this really as a high priority in concerns that it is addressing right now,” he said.

Abad explained they would not be able to solve this in the short term because the response needed is a long-term solution.

“But in the meantime, we are looking at (various) ways by which we can mitigate the problem,” he said.

Asked if the traffic situation would be an election issue and cause political backlash against the administration’s standard-bearer, Interior Secretary Manuel Roxas II, Abad conceded the opposition would raise the matter.

“But I think the government and the administration will be able to present an explanation, acknowledging the problem at the same time presenting measures by which we can mitigate it in the short term and address it in the long term,” he said.

Abad does not think the traffic problem will be a huge factor against Roxas.

He stressed there are several factors that should be considered.

“You go to every growing metropolis in any capital of the world and they are confronted with – especially in emerging markets – these problems… You have more container vans out there bringing in raw materials… In 2010, we were not selling more than 100,000 vehicles a year. This year, we may just hit 300,000 because we have hit 151,000 end of June,” Abad said.

“I mean people will understand why there is such congestion happening, but of course we cannot simply say that is enough. So I think with urgency, the government is doing its best to try to mitigate that problem and find solutions in the very short term,” he said.

All the administration needs to explain is where this problem is coming from, Abad stressed, and that the government was trying to make it easier for the public to deal with this problem.

Asked about Vice President Jejomar Binay’s comment that this was a crisis situation, Abad replied the opposition would “see crisis in everything that government does.”

“So, maybe that’s their perspective. But… it’s a problem, we acknowledge it and…we ask the public’s patience and cooperation so that together… the government, the private sector and the private citizens, vehicle owners are all part of the solution for this and it is not easy because you have to bring everybody together to address the problem,” he said.

“For example, the call for just simply obeying traffic rules – not parking on thoroughfares… I think, that’s part of the solution there and they want an answer to this, they are also part of the solution,” Abad said.

In the initial attempt to solve the traffic problem in EDSA, President Aquino tasked the Highway Patrol Group (HPG) of the Philippine National Police to take over traffic management from the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA).

Photo: Gov.ph

This article has been re-published with permission from ABS-CBNnews.com.



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