...The Next Moment You're
Crushed!
I am
writing about the ill-fated bus that fell off the skyway and killed
18 people. It fell thirty feet from the sky bridge and crushed a
truck that was just minding his own business, likely trying to
deliver some goods and products for the use of the one for whom it
was destined.
Imagine
the fury of that person whose contract for delivery could no longer
be made.
What if
that bus fell on a bus carrying young students from a rich kid
school—the hope of our nation? The bus company will be shut down
for sure. What if that truck was carrying a nuclear weapon? We'd
all, literally, be toast.*
The bus accidents just keep on coming and nobody is safe. Neither is this bus accident the first time that road safety is brought to the public consciousness in recent memory. Does anyone remember how the owner of Sarabia Optical met his untimely demise? Remember how all the years of rigorous training of UP Professor Chit Estela-Simbulan ended in vain?
So what are we trying to do about it and what solutions do I suggest?
So what are we trying to do about it and what solutions do I suggest?
The
government has suspended the bus company. This is good for thirty
days (December 16, 2013 – January 15, 2014). The authorities are
going to investigate the bus company and conduct drug testing on the
bus drivers. They will continue to investigate camera footage and
eye witness reports to determine who is at fault. Using this, they
may decide to cancel the public service franchise of the bus company.
It is
worth mentioning that just last month, another bus company got into
another fatal accident killing six pedestrians. This accident
occurred last November 14, 2013, therefore the bus company's thirty
day suspension has already passed so their buses are likely out
there, barreling down the highways at the speed of sound, ready and
waiting to slay the hope of the Nation. I wonder how their case is
coming along now.
Authorities and the skyway operator is also looking into ways to improve safety on the skyway.
Authorities and the skyway operator is also looking into ways to improve safety on the skyway.
The
victims are free to file charges against the driver (but he's dirt
poor, so good luck trying to get damages from him) and/or the bus
company. This is important because the Courts can order the company
to pay exemplary and moral damages. This is important because it
makes it expensive for bus companies to have accidents, they will be
forced to conduct extraordinary diligence in picking bus drivers and
in the maintenance of their rusting hulks of a bus.
Some
legislators have suggested creating new speed limits for the roads
and for each class of vehicle. I am of the opinion that this is
un-called for and stupid. First, there are already speed limit laws.
Second, the speed limits he's proposing are far too slow. He wan't
40 kph for an arrow straight boulevard! So, we should instead just
enforce the current speed limits and perhaps install some speed
cameras and radar traps—something that is already being done in
rich countries.
A better
suggestion which the authorities are investigating is the
installation of an electronic speed limiter on the buses, so that
they would never stray over 60kph. This is more feasible. It
probably just entails the installation of a chip or a remapping of an
engine's ECU. And there is no driver discretion involved. His bus
will NEVER go over 60kph.
My
suggestions:
1. Just
pay the bus drivers salaries. This is the most obvious solution.
In fact, the DOLE has already passed a memorandum on this which
requires bus companies to pay their driver's fixed salaries. The bus
operators were able to get an injunction over this for a time but the
Court was able to rule against the bus operators, therefore busdrivers are now supposed to receive salaries instead of the old boundary system. However, the bus drivers
are still paid on commission basis in over and above their salaries,
so the competition for passengers and the “demonic racecar”
mentality still remains. (Note: The Don Mariano Bus Company appears to have violated this order)
2. Sue
the LTFRB and/or the LTO. I'm suggesting a taxpayers
suit. Sometimes, government is so inutile in its implementation that
a petition for mandamus is needed before it would so something so
obvious. In MMDA vs. Concerned Citizens of Manila Bay, the
Concerned citizens had to sue the MMDA and other government agencies
to clean up Manila Bay—something which is obviously within their
power as provided for under many laws already existing which protect
the environment.
I am not
the only one who shares this sentiment, the following passage is from
a nationally syndicated opinion columnist, Atty. Batas Mauricio in
his daily column Kakampi mo ang Batas, speaking
on the Don Mariano Bus “frenzied flight of doom” says:
LTO,
LTFRB REMISS IN THEIR DUTIES: I do not want to engage in
finger-pointing now, but I certainly blame both the Land
Transporation Office (LTO) and the Land Transportation Franchising
and Regulatory Board (LTFRB), and say they are greatly responsible
for the death of 21 or more people after a passenger bus jumped off
the Skyway toll plaza in Las Pinas City and pinned down a van at the
South Luzon Expressway on Monday, December 16, 2013.
Why?
Well, it is quite clear that the LTO and the LTFRB are completely
remiss in their duties to see to it that only the psychologically
and mentally-prepared are issued driver’s licenses and allowed to
drive public utility vehicles such as the ill-fated Don Mariano Bus
that fell off the Skyway.
As
things stand in both the LTO and the LTFRB now, anyone who can pay
are able to get licenses, and then drive away. This is reprehensible
because both the LTO and the LTFRB ought to know, if only they are
properly doing their work, that many holders of driver’s licenses
are not fit to drive, psychologically and mentally, as shown by their
totally reckless driving, rude behavior, and, many a time, gross
ignorance of even the most basic rules of road courtesy.
3.
Women bus drivers.
In my opinion, women drivers are more capable of compassion and
driving precision.
4.
Last suggestion is for the drivers themselves. The bus
drivers should police their own ranks.
They should realize that whenever one of them has a fatal accident,
their bus company will get suspended, they will have no work for a
month and they will have no pay. There should be lynching among
themselves. If one of their fellow drivers causes their company to
be suspended, his fellow drivers should gang up and lynch him,
publicly humiliate him and dismember his remains in front of the
barrio where he resides. This is not a time for pakikisama,
it is a time for vengeance.
I
know that being accountable for one's actions is a foreign concept to Filipinos and most Bus drivers would rather just tolerate the
reckless ways of their own, but they should change. I'm sure the
drivers and conductors affected by the suspension would very much
love to slay the one who caused the accident.
Fear of reprisals from their peers should serve as an adequate deterrent to reckless driving. A bus driver should at the back of his small mind remember that his fellow drivers, equally barbaric and small-minded, knows where he lives and will publicly dismember him if he causes an accident. This should always be at the back of his mind whenever he is tempted to barrel down Commonwealth ave at twice the speed limit of 60kph.
-----------Fear of reprisals from their peers should serve as an adequate deterrent to reckless driving. A bus driver should at the back of his small mind remember that his fellow drivers, equally barbaric and small-minded, knows where he lives and will publicly dismember him if he causes an accident. This should always be at the back of his mind whenever he is tempted to barrel down Commonwealth ave at twice the speed limit of 60kph.
*Nevermind
the constitutional prohibition... this is merely a hypothetical.
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