Saturday, November 8, 2014

PNP QUESTIONED OVER AWARD FOR PATROL JEEPS TO MAHINDRA

(updated November 19, 2014)

Coming in the heels of Philippine National Police (PNP) Director General Alan Purisima’s corruption scandals is an allegation of graft and favoritism in the bidding of Patrol Jeeps for the PNP.  The brand:  Mahindra.  Also known as Mahindra & Mahindra ltd. (M&M).

I have recently blogged about this deal and I thought it was brilliant!  Why wouldn’t it?   The PNP will soon be running tough, relatively cheap Jeeps from a brand that has been building Jeeps since after World War II. 
  

An early Mahindra

Today, Mahindra continues to make military vehicles for India in road and traffic conditions that are far worse than anything we find on Philippine roads.  I added a disclaimer though:

I expect the Bolero to simply dance through the PNP tests, they having survived worse conditions in India.  Let us just hope that "Daang Matuwid" would carry the day and Mahindra would not need to line the pockets of yet more Directors and Officials, after all, 560 brand new jeeps will go a long way into making the Philippine Police force, a more credible and effective police force.

Again, the Bolero is going to be sold to the Government at P895,000.00.  In other words, that is a great big diesel SUV at the price of a compact sedan.  Not a bad deal.


Note however that we are not yet clear on what vehicle was actually the subject of the bidding.  I will assume that the PNP was testing the Bolero since it seems to fit the bill.  Likewise, Top Gear Philippines also seems to suspect that it is the Bolero:

When we asked a colleague who had recently visited Mahindra's manufacturing facility in India, he said: "They wouldn't confirm the model (for the PNP fleet) yet. But it will most likely be the Bolero, which will be called the Enforcer here. And it has many variants, from cab-only to pickup to SUV, with 4x2 and 4x4 options. But I understand that the PNP has placed an order for 4x2 units only."


I am writing this article to clarify certain issues.  I maintain that the Bolero is the ideal police vehicle for the Philippines.  In this article I will denounce certain government procedures and corruption in general as it is preventing the acquisition of these badly needed vehicles.  I will try to keep this blog updated as more issues crop up. 

Concerns about the vehicle

Looking at discussion boards, it seems that the main concern for the choice of Mahindra jeeps are (not necessarily in order of importance):

1.     Appearance



Mahindra Bolero… They Look Ugly…
            Believe it or not, I have heard someone complain that the Bolero is ugly and therefore, the PNP should not use them.  Indeed I agree as regards to the appearance.  Yes, they look top heavy and inelegant.  In a car chase, who will the citizens root for?  The baddie in the stolen Mercedes or Honda?  Or the incompetent Police in the funny looking truck that looks like it has already crashed?However, there is nothing we can do about its appearance and appearance should take a back seat when practicality and efficiency are the real issue. 


2.     Lack of after sales services

            I have argued that a Mahindra is a simple piece of technology that can be fixed with a brick and a piece of string if the going gets tough.  Therefore, the friendly neighborhood talyer or PNP Quartermaster (if something like that exists) can fix it. 

However, in hindsight, this is a very valid concern.  As with anything government does, there has to be bidding and audits.  It is not enough that the jeep can be fixed at the talyer as the parts for the car have to first be procured somewhere and the maintenance has to be bidded out to a contractor.  

All these government processes and procedures may seem tedious and inefficient, but that is supposed to be how they are supposed to work.

3.     Price

Another valid concern.  A quick search in Google reveals that the Mahindra Bolero is worth between 5.9 to 7.8 Lac.  This is equivalent to between $9,440 to $12,480 US in today’s exchange rate.  This in turn can be converted to about to between P425,500 to P563,000.  Reports said that the bid price offered by the Mahindra dealer pegged at P895,000.00--close to the budget the government was willing to spend according to the bid specs.  This amount includes (1) A full conversion of the pickup complete with siren lights with speakers; (2) Rear body conversion, full body build with convertible back to back & front facing seats; (3) Cost of maintenance for a year; (4) Logistics, meaning delivery to the end users all over the Philippines; and (5) 3 years TPL & registration etc (NAPOLCOM specs). [source:  Philippine Star] 

This might explain why the auction price for each car is more than three hundred thousand pesos more than the car's price in India.  Is P300,000.00 a fair price for the conversion, addition of gear, import and registration?  I think it is, though an investigation is still in order.







4.     Chinese cars are cheaper

That is true but that does not mean that they would necessarily fit the bid requirements.  If the PNP wanted a single cab or double cab SUV or 4x4 vehicle, the Mahindra would still be a good choice.



Foton Blizzard – MMDA
Photo Courtesy of Top Gear Philippines

Besides, the word Chinese really doesn’t denote mean quality whenever I hear it.  The Chinese also have a conflict of interest here.  They are supposed to be our enemies(?), so their brands should not be chosen for our police force.

5.      Brand track record

A survey conducted on Top Gear Philippines shows that the major concern with people is that Mahindra is an untested brand.  It has no track record in the Philippines and that it is likely to cost longer in the long run.  



There is fear that a Mahindra would not last in PNP service.  I beg to differ.  Mahindra has been making military vehicles for a long time.  The Indians have been using Mahindras for the police.  Jeremy Clarkson in the Top Gear India Special famously encountered the Bombay 5-0.  The screencap below looks like a Bolero, possibly a Scorpio, but it is definitely a Mahindra.  Therefore, they should be ideal cars for our PNP.



Bombay 5-0

      
6.     Irregularities

The most glaring irregularity in the bidding is the allegation of favoritism.  Apparently, there is a requirement that a car brand should have been distributing cars in the Philippines for at least 10 years before it can be considered for service.  Though there is a nuance to this as James Deakin of Philippine Star explains:

It seems that the issue mostly stems around the fact that the brand has not been sold in the local market before and the PNP’s procurement requirements clearly state that they must have been in operation on Philippine roads for ten years.

Fair enough. But it is unclear whether the vehicles are required to have been in operation for a number of years or the distributor. If it is the former, the distributor claims that there are Mahindras still in operation, specifically the jeep, which were built and sold locally through Francisco motors and even used by the AFP.

But some would still argue that the model they have chosen, which is called the Enforcer, hasn’t been operating on Philippine roads for the set amount of years. True. But then again, if that were the case, any new model introduced, even by the more established brands, would also fall under the same fate. Case in point, the Innova, which doesn’t turn 10 till next year.


On the other hand, the Journal Online outlined the bidding process for the vehicles:

The pre-bid conference  at Camp Crame was attended by almost all major Philippine vehicle suppliers, the Journal Group learned. They include JAC Automobile International Philippines, Inc, Ford Global City, Tata Philippines Taj, Columbian Autocar Corporation, United Asia Automotive Group, Inc. representing Foton Philippines, Prado & Sons Industries, Inc., Kolonwel Trading, Diamond Motors Corporation and Toyota Otis Inc.
   
Several officials privy to the PS-DBM-supervised procurement said that Mahindra was the only company that participated in the recent pre-bidding and was declared as the ‘Lowest Calculated Bidder.’
   
Other major car companies in the Philippines did not join the PS-DBM pre-bidding for various reasons. However, most of them is due to their failure to meet the National Police Commission specifications, the Journal Group learned.
   
Representatives of Toyota for one claimed that they could not join the pre-bidding since their torque is only 200 compared to the 240 torque specified by Napolcom.
   
Ford, meanwhile, has a 2.2 liter-engine displacement which is way below the Napolcom-specified 2.4 engine displacement.
   
Isuzu Philippines on the other hand claimed it could not meet the production demand while Mitsubishi did not join the pre-bidding claiming that it cannot meet the requirement to deliver within 150 days and even asked for a 270-days or a nine-month delivery period.
   
“Many are wondering why the big players did not join the PS-DBM-supervised pre-bidding and only Mahindra did. But in truth, the patrol jeeps being offered by the other companies did not meet the requirements and other specifications of the Napolcom,” one official who demanded anonymity since he is not allowed to speak on the matter, said.

The inevitable conclusion from these sets of facts was that the specifications for the vehicle were tailor fit for the Mahindra.  Whether this is good faith or bad faith and whether the specifications were ideal or not remains unclear and will benefit further investigation.  Another area to investigate is the overpricing, since the cars do seem overpriced even calculating importation costs, and this can only lead to the suspicion of someone benefitting from kickbacks.  I will keep this page updated as the issue gets threshed out.

Conclusion

Needless to say I am very disappointed and disillusioned with this turn of events because I was genuinely looking forward to having Mahindras patrol the streets.  I am convinced of their capability and reliability and I think that the PNP’s law enforcement capabilities will be improved. 

But the allegations of graft may change all that.  Nevertheless, dura lex sed lex, and right is right.  If there was indeed graft and corruption here, the one responsible should answer for 



Related Posts


MAHINDRA COMING TO THE PHILIPPINES: ITS THE INVASION FROM THE SUBCONTINENT




Monday, October 27, 2014

PARKING: PUBLIC SERVICE AND PUBLIC GOOD



Source:  The Telegraph

Manila’s streets are heavily congested, traffic is already a nightmare.  You can say that there are just too many cars in Manila.  Then again one cannot blame people for buying or wanting to buy cars, as cars are an object of desire—a thing to be owned for its own sake, as well as being a convenient, cost-effective and safe way of going around the country. 

Indeed, a car is easily attainable for most of the middle class—thirty thousand pesos can already get you an old “Boxtype” Lancer or “Owner” Jeep.




30 grand and you’re already spoiled for choice

            Yet most of the time, these extra cars are just extra mass—dead weight, both on the Megalopolis’ infrastructure and its society.


Watch your car boyzzz
Photo Courtesy of villageidiotsavant.com

            Top Gear Presenter James May writes.

The real problem, however, contrary to much popular belief, is not cars being driven, but cars not being driven. Over the past couple of weeks I’ve used quite a bit of public transport for long journeys, and I’ve worked out that in the past 336 hours the Fiat Panda has been in use for only eight of them, or a pathetic 2.4 per cent of the time. For 97.6 per cent of the time it’s been sitting outside by the road gathering pigeon poo. At any given time a handful of cars is doing something useful but most of the rest are simply in the way.

I don’t doubt that the issue could be partly resolved if we all bought a Smart ForTwo or a G-Wiz, but then we would simply be substituting one social problem with another, most probably widespread depression and low self-esteem.

I also have a sneaking suspicion that most Smarts are bought by rich people as a city runabout rather than as a replacement for an existing car, which means there are now one and a half cars on the street where there used to be only one.

I therefore conclude that what we really need, in the absence of any emerging folding car technology, is more garages.

            Indeed such a public service is the provision of parking lots that many frequent goers to the Makati City Hall (mostly lawyers who have business in the courts) defend the overpriced parking lot that the Dark Lord built there as having provided an essential service to the all who have business with city hall.

            Legislation
Valenzuela Representative Sherwin Gatchalian recently filed two consecutively numbered House Bill No. 5099 (“Parking Fees Regulation Act”) House Bill No. 5098 (“Proof of Parking Space Act”) about parking.



Valenzuela City Rep. Sherwin "Win" Gatchalian
Source:  Inquirer.net

House Bill No. 5099 provides: 

[A] standard parking fee of only P40 per vehicle for up to eight hours and additional P10 for every succeeding hour. A one-time fee of P100 per vehicle will be imposed for overnight parking.

In particular, those who have purchased at least P1,000 worth of goods or services will have their parking fee waived, provided that they have used the parking space for three hours or less.

As for safety, business establishments will be required to provide security in parking spaces. If they opt to collect parking fees, shops will be liable for loss of property or damage to customers' vehicles.

Any person or establishment violating the Act will be made to pay a fine of at least P150,000 per overcharged customer or a prison term of one to three years.

“Consumers, especially those in Metro Manila and urban areas, have no choice but to pay the excessive parking fees imposed by malls and other establishments even if these businesses already profit from the sale of their products and services,” Gatchalian said. “The key is to strike an equitable middle ground that will afford consumers the necessary protections without excessively hampering the ability of legitimate parking enterprises from conducting fair and profitable business.”

House Bill No. 5098 on the other hand:

Gatchalian proposed that buyers of brand-new cars, whether individuals or firms, be mandated to execute an affidavit indicating the availability of an existing parking space for the vehicle to be bought. The said affidavit shall be certified by a notary public.

Gatchalian pointed out that motor vehicle owners should be made responsible to provide a permanent parking space for their own private vehicles, whether this is made an integral part of their house or building structure, or is a leased facility.

The Act also orders the Land Transportation Office to make such affidavit a prerequisite in the registration of vehicles. The LTO, the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority and other concerned local government units are mandated to make ocular inspections in implementing the Act.

Owners found making untrue claims shall have their vehicle registration revoked and will be banned from registering a motor vehicle under their name for three years. Violators will also be fined P50,000.

LTO personnel who allow the registration of vehicles despite knowing the falsity of the affidavit, or without the required document, shall be suspended for three months without pay.

“Although it is good news for the automotive industry, it is bad news for Metro Manila motorists and commuters who must brace themselves for slower traffic as more cars join the vehicle population,” Gatchalian explained. “And traffic congestion in the capital is worsened by the idle vehicles parked on the sides of streets, hampering the flow of automobile and foot traffic.”

I approve of both these measures for reasons that a new industry of parking establishments will be created and congestion will be alleviated.  I discuss these below.

One thing I did notice however was that this was not the first time anyone from the House of Representatives tried to pass a law to regulate parking.  In the 15th Congress there were a number of measures filed but as far as I know, none of these ever made law. 

 
Source:  House of Representatives Website

This was of course, the 15th Congress—the most pork barrel charged congress our country has ever had—this was the congress that impeached the Chief Justice and tried to impeach the Ombudsman.  This is the Congress that swims in DAP.  It was a Congress so distracted with money-making activities that it forgot that its duty was to legislate.  Implementation of the law is yet another concern…haaay Pilipinas.

            We’ll just have to wait and see.

The Start of a New Industry
With the passage of these laws, parking spaces will become coveted real estate.  No longer would families vacate their garages to make extra space for their homes and instead park their cars on the street.  There will be people willing to buy and lease them for convenience.  Indeed, this will herald the growth of a new industry to operate parking establishments. 

In Makati CBD, Ortigas, Taguig and Alabang, interspersed among the skyscrapers are parking lots—basically empty asphalt lots with painted rows indicating parking slots.  But I have yet to see a purpose built parking building in a business district open for the public which caters specifically to nearby establishments and buildings.  In Eastwood, I know of some people who live in a nearby condominium but they park their car at a mall.

Needless to say, the only ones now that have an incentive to build large purpose built parking buildings are malls, hotels and condominiums.  With these laws, malls may no longer have an incentive to build more parking space as they won’t profit from its operation anymore.  Instead, for profit parking establishments will provide the much needed service.  In the cities, we may see the rise of multi-storey parking lots.  Subdivisions may soon start to provide them in order to earn extra profit for homeowners who want to own more than one car.  Condominiums may soon start building more expansive parking lots, possibly with a 2:1 parking lot to condo unit ratio for purposes of lease.

We may also see the rise of the “reserved” parking slot within parking buildings.  As people buy or lease more and more parking slots, there is a danger that slots for drivers casually driving into a place for some quick business or visit will become so rare because almost all of the space is taken up by the reserved slots (which may or may not be occupied).  Thus there is a danger that not all of the space in a parking lot or building will be utilized—a eerie phenomenon where there are lots of empty spaces in a vast parking lot which no one from the outside who needs a space can park in.  Such a Phenomenon can be avoided by legislating that a parking establishment keep at least half or 50% of its parking slots open for visitors.  However the free market may obviate the need for legislation because we know that the most profitable slot is a slot where people pay 10 pesos every hour, instead of a slot rented out for P3,000.00 per month.  Thus a parking establishment will have to keep slots open.

We may also see the rise of a “full-service” parking establishment.  Imagine a building, five storeys tall with a five level basement.  Such a building has the capacity to accommodate 1,000 cars—one hundred cars for each level.  Some space can be rented out to car mechanics and service stations.  They can sell fuel (including electricity for electric cars), tires, batteries and all manner of car parts, fluids and services on site!  Think of the profits—a single slot can make P240.00 pesos a day if it is rented out at ten pesos an hour. 

Parking buildings can be built cheaply as well, especially those which incorporate a modular design and steel construction.  Labor is cheap since one only needs to hire security guards and parking attendants. 

            If these bills become laws, we may soon find highly efficient parking establishments.  To get some idea of what I am talking about, check this article on Web Urbanist.

Parking as a Public Service
The provision of parking establishments is a public service.  They clear up space on the streets so that traffic can flow smoothly, they can improve the desirability of the area and profitability of surrounding businesses.  Indeed, businesses may soon find that a place near a parking establishment will be more frequented than one which is not.  This is because I anticipate that a customer will go a shop or office where he can be sure that he can readily park his car and in our consumption-based economy, this is essential.

Safety will be improved.  Carnappers will be discouraged to break into cars at a parking establishment for the simple reason that they expect a parking establishment to be more heavily watched.  Indeed, customers will expect and demand greater safety from parking lots since they will assume that the success of such a business will depend upon the goodwill of its patrons—an unsafe establishment or one that has a poor reputation will not enjoy such goodwill.

Conclusion
I think that a part of the Philippine congestion problem is the lack of parking lots.  Let’s face it, cars are cheap enough for the middle class.  This means that a lot of cars are put on the road, and stay “on the road” even when not in use.  In the cities, parking space is highly sought after, and is a factor to consider when doing something as simple as eating out at a restaurant or buying groceries.  The search for parking space unnecessarily consumes fuel and is a strain on the earth’s resources.  Lastly a car parked out on the street, is a target for vandals and carnappers. 


I hope that the bill gets passed and entrepreneurs see that as a viable business opportunity and a chance to offer a public service.

Monday, October 20, 2014

Hairstyles of the 1940s

Men’s hairstyles during this time seem timeless; they are still used today with some variations from how they were originally used back in that decade.  The resilience of these looks may come from the fact that they evoke a sense of manly elegance and seriousness not captured in today’s hairstyles. 

This post will try to explain some of the salient features of this hairstyle as well as how the look is achieved.

The first half of the 1940s was wartime; the second half was a time of reconstruction in Europe and Asia and prosperity in the Americas.  Because men were generally too busy fighting and killing during this time, men’s hairstyles did not change much from the hairstyles of the 1930s.  Of course, later in the decade, innovations began to emerge such as the rockabilly and greasier hairstyles that would become prevalent in the 1950s.

As mentioned earlier, the 1940s was wartime and the hairstyles during these days were acceptable in the regular army (in contrast to today).  Soldiers back then had longer hair than they do in armies today, but at the same time they needed their hair not to get in the way, thus, hair was always short for men in the back and sides and the face was always clean shaven or otherwise had a well-groomed moustache or beard.  Men went to the barber regularly usually every 3 to 6 weeks or whenever the hair on the back of the head already touched the collar.  In European fashion, it was not rare to see a man with the sides of his head shaved with a razor (just look at pictures of German soldiers and politicians and Even Adolf Hilter as an example). 

The German Fashion
  
The top of their head, in contrast to the back and sides, was left long, especially the bangs.  This was intentionally done so that the hair can be brushed straight back.  It gives one the illusion that the hair is short but the lie is soon revealed when an individual, sporting the said hairstyle, gets into strenuous physical activity which throws hairstyle into disarray revealing long bangs that cover the forehead and sometimes over the eyes.  Just watch Godfather I where Don Vito Corleone is gunned down – look closely at his hair.



As mentioned earlier, the preference was to have the hair brushed backwards.  This was not the only way to do it.  More frequently, the hair was parted at the sides or at the center.  The center part hairstyle in those days was a little different.  It looks a bit like how Sergio Osmeña looked like in his younger days.  Needless to say, one rarely sees this style anymore. 


Sergio Osmeña 

Men used a variety of oils and pomades to achieve this.  One product was used above others – Bryllcreem – a kind of oil based, greasy hair cream.  It was invented in the 1920s and worn de rigueur by gentlemen up to the 1960s.  Indeed, it was fashionable to have shiny hair back then without comb marks and so Bryllcreem or pomade was used in conjunction with a military hair brush (which shows the military origins of this look) which is a fine brush and the use of which is to prevent comb marks on hair. 

Thus one can see that the men’s hairstyles of the 1940s combined wartime propriety and masculinity with a certain elegance that has not been captured in decades since.  This may partly explain why the style still remains popular to this day, coexisting with more modern looks.

Originally posted here:  http://proactivewriters.wordpress.com/2010/07/19/hairstyles-of-the-1940s/

Friday, October 17, 2014

MRT-3 Woes: Why aren’t we outraged that the DOTC, manned by Aquino’s officials, are taking us for fools?

Part 1. MRT-3 mess the worst kind of corruption
October 5, 2014 11:14 pm; Appeared in the October 6, 2014 edition of the Manila Times
Why shouldn’t it be derailed? Memo that only 2.5 pieces of rail replacement available. Inset: MRT-3 car derailed in August.


Why do MRT-3 trains keep breaking down that the train system needs to be shut down for hours at times; why do the trains stop in the middle of the tracks, and why are the trains derailed and jump off the tracks?
Why are there fewer trains now compared with the previous years such that its carrying capacity has decreased, causing the long queues of commuters at the stations?

Why were there no such incidents and queues before, from 2000 to 2011?

The reason is quite simple, and I was astonished when I learned its details, shocked at why we Filipinos allow such anomalies that torture the working class daily, and outraged that mainstream media hasn’t gone to town against this scandal.

The P1.2 billion reason
The reason involves the P1.2 billion—so far—in maintenance contracts given by the DOTC starting October 2012 to two firms that appear to have close ties with President Aquino’s political allies.

These outfits – first PH Trams and then APT-Global – turned out either to be bumbling amateurs in light-rail vehicle maintenance, or decided to skimp on the necessary spare parts to keep the trains running efficiently.
They didn’t import and stockpile the high-quality spare parts needed for the light-rail vehicles and the replacements for the tracks. Parts were, instead, cannibalized from the other cars that were put out of operation, so that only 50 out of the 73 cars operating in 2011 are running now.

One evidence of this is a September 4, 2014 report to the DOTC official in charge of the MRT-3, Renato San Jose, which read:

When Global-APT JV assumed as (sic) the Temporary Maintenance Provider of MRT 2 on 4 September 2013, there were twenty nine pieces of Stock Rails replacement. Since then, the said number has gone down to two and a half (2.5) pieces. Furthermore, the latest Rail Replacement Summary as of 06 August revealed that in at least two instances, Global APT JV has used old rails instead of new ones.

This is one reason why the trains’ speed has had to be slowed down: parts of the track had worn out and should have been replaced, but hadn’t because there were no replacement rails. The result: fewer trains have been running, requiring commuters to queue for hours to ride the jam-packed, not to mention, dangerous trains.

Capital costs are huge for a train maintenance operator since the spare parts needed have to be ordered in advance because of the minimum six-months’ time for these to be manufactured and shipped to the country from abroad.

Light-rail system parts aren’t exactly items one could buy at the hardware store or ordered at amazon.com: They’re things made of high-grade steel which mostly only the original builder can provide, and on a “per-order” basis.

A unit of the giant manufacturing Japanese firm Sumitomo that built MRT-3 with Mitsubishi Corp. in the late 1990s, when it maintained the system until September 2012, had a six-months’ inventory of the usual parts needed to be replaced.

Manual signaling system
There is a second reason why the MRT trains’ speed had to be reduced. Its signaling system – its computerized, sensor-based network that manages railway traffic in order to prevent trains from colliding – had been built more than a decade ago by a unit of the Canadian aircraft manufacturer Bombardier Inc. The firm informed the DOTC in 2010 that the system had to be upgraded, as there were no longer parts for it since it had become outdated.

The upgrade would have cost P185 million, and included in the maintenance contract. It wasn’t. Why? Was it too big a cost that would eat into the contractors’ profits?

Bombardier engineers who were initially hired by PH Trams to maintain the signaling system reportedly left in a huff in 2013 when they stopped receiving their due fees.

The result: There’s an inadequate signaling system that train operators have resorted to a manual method, using “walkie-talkies’ bought from Ace or True Value, to report their positions, a process that requires much slower train speeds.

Out of the total cost for maintaining the MRT in the past ten years, 60 percent was used for buying spare parts for the cars and rail-tracks, as well as for maintaining the computerized signaling system, while the remaining 40 percent was for management and labor costs.

These means that if the two maintenance operators who got the P1.2 billion contract from the DOTC had not purchased the parts needed for the trains’ maintenance, they could have easily pocketed the 60 percent that should have been used for their parts inventory, which means a huge P742 million income. The Senate committee that has been investigating the MRT problems should subpoena these firms’ books.

What makes this kind of corruption so outrageous is that the grafters were as dumb as they were so arrogant. They thought they could make money by taking over the contract of a world-class, experienced engineering firm that built and had maintained the system for a decade, and that they didn’t need to import the high-grade precision-engineered spare parts for the trains.

I can just imagine what a top DOTC and Liberal Party official told his accomplices: “Pukpok lang naman ang mga kailangan sa mga bakal na gulong at riles na iyan, hindi na kailangang mag-import tayo ng spare parts kaya malaki ang kita natin. Magagaling naman ang mga Pinoy na mekaniko. [A little pounding is all that’s needed on the steel wheels and the rails. We don’t really need to import the spare parts, so we’re going to make a killing on this. And Filipinos are good mechanics.]

Because of such arrogant stupidity and insatiable greed of Aquino’s people, hundreds of thousands of Filipino commuters have been suffering every day going to and from their workplaces.
Continued next week.

Part 2. MRT-3 may collapse anytime
October 7, 2014 11:04 pm; Appeared in the October 8, 2014 edition of the Manila Times

Second of three parts
That warning was made back in September 2011 by TES Philippines (TESP) Inc., which has been the maintenance operator of the Metro Rail Transit System Line 3 (MRT-3) since 2000. The firm is a joint venture of Sumitomo and Mitsubishi Corporation, the two Japanese companies that built the light-rail mass-transit infrastructure in the late 1990s.

President Benigno S. Aquino 3rd to date has failed to implement the solution the TESP said was the only solution to prevent such collapse: Immediately supply an additional fleet of trains and upgrade the electrical and electronic systems supporting it.

We are just plain lucky that the relevant incidents that have occurred so far have only involved trains that had stopped mid-way between stations, car doors that had remained opened even as the train had sped away toward its next destination, and a car that got derailed, plowing its way into a busy thoroughfare in August. But given the bad state of MRT-3 since 2011, according to the firms that built it and had maintained it for a decade, it is a disaster waiting to happen.

I thought it was another case of incompetence bordering on criminal negligence by this student-council government, as former Senator Joker Arroyo vividly described this Administration. It is appearing, though, to be the consequences of a case of a botched extortion attempt.

I cannot find enough words to express my outrage: The solution had been delayed for three years now because the Czech firm, Inekon Group, which was supposed to supply the new fleet of trains, refused to play ball, and protested the alleged attempt by transport and communications officials to extort $30 million as bribe for the $174 million contract to push through.

The DOTC did finally find a supplier to replace Inekon – a Chinese firm, but which reportedly has no experience in building the kind of double-articulated light-rail system that the MRT-3 uses. But even if it manages to manufacture the cars, the next question is, when will the delivery be? Late 2015, the DOTC says. No way, industry sources say, predicting that it will be in 2016 at the earliest, after Aquino steps down.
And I’m sure DOTC Secretary Emilio Abaya would vouch that this Chinese firm didn’t have to pay a single centavo of bribe money for the P4 billion supply contract it got without any bidding. The Chinese just don’t do that kind of hanky-panky.

With the increase in ridership in the four years since that 2011 warning was made, and the reduction of train cars from 72 to just 50 running now, this Administration has criminally subjected our commuters to the risk of death and injury if the MRT trains do collapse.

In a detailed six-page memorandum dated 21 September 2011 to Honorio Vitasa, then general manager of the transport and communications department’ MRT3-EDSA Line unit, maintenance operator TESP President Kiyoshi Morita said that the train cars’ “overloaded condition exceeded the maximum allowable ridership, which will give mechanical and electrical stress to equipment and damage (sic) the total train system.”

Eventual Collapse
“Eventual collapse of the rolling Stock System and even the Wayside system may happen if drastic and immediate changes will not be made,” Morita warned. (The rolling stock refers to the light-rail vehicle cars, while the “wayside system” refers to the tracks and the electrical/electronic systems to keep the cars on it.)

Morita provided statistics which showed that ridership increased from 11.5 million in August 2005 to 13.8 million in the same month in 2011, which is way beyond the number of passengers the light-rail vehicles were designed to carry. On weekdays, according to Morita, the average ridership had increased from 417,000 in 2005 to 510,000 by 2011.

Using Morita’s annual figures from 2005 to 2011 to derive the annual average rate of increase of 7 percent annually in daily ridership, MRT-3 would now be carrying—dangerously—625,000 passengers daily, nearly double the 350,000 people it was designed to transport per day.

Morita in his memorandum explained: “Since the year 1999, TESP has already made many countermeasures and changes to prevent the recurrence of many failures. Seemingly and theoretically and based on the maintenance manual, these improvements will result in better performance of the trains.”

“However, with this overloading situation, it is very difficult to recover the peak performance of the trains in spite of the many changes that it has implemented because this is beyond the capacity of the trains to perform normally and recover after serious stress,” the memorandum read.

He explained: “Please note that even if overloading is experienced only for a few times, the elevated stress will weaken the electrical and mechanical properties of the equipment. In the case of MRT-3, the number of passengers onboard the trains exceeded daily, except Sundays [emphasis in the original], the maximum number (394) allowed per car.

“Consequently, failure resulting in the abnormal removal of trains, and a major incident will be experienced,” according to Morita, who put that sentence in bold and underlined it for emphasis.

Morita, though, was writing in that peculiar Japanese way of understating things.

What he really, obviously meant for “abnormal removal” was the derailment of a train or a portion of it (which had already actually happened)—a grave disaster if a car on an elevated portion of the tracks were to be derailed and fall on cars and buses along EDSA, which is what the Japanese executive was likely referring to when he used the term “major incident.”

“Worse,” according to Morita, “breakdown of the vital equipment may occur at almost the same time and this will affect the secondary and minor equipment. At this point, any good maintenance may not be enough to recover the regular performance of the trains, and safety will be compromised. Also, maintenance will be too costly and impractical to perform, while the recovery and safety may not be “assured.”

To the junk shop
Again, the Japanese executive was being polite. What he obviously meant: “If breakdown of the system finally happens, you’d be better off just selling the MRT to the junk shop.”

Morita explained that temporary solutions, which his firm in fact had been doing, involve shortening the cycle for the cars’ preventive maintenance periods, and taking measures to reduce the number of passengers on the cars.

However, Morita emphasized: “These are not enough to solve the problem on the deterioration and early ageing of the equipment, which was already evident. Eventually because of the steady increase in passengers, the Rolling stock and the wayside equipment will again experience many failures and troubles.”

Morita recommended: “We need to pursue the capacity expansion project of the MRT3-system to provide additional trains for revenue service. By adding more trains at the main line, we will relieve the present MRT-3 trains from overloading and prolong the life by having lesser electrical and mechanical load on the trains. We need to upgrade the wayside equipment to accommodate the changes and slow down the system’s deterioration.”

Morita concluded his memorandum by emphasizing his warning: “We reiterate that the train and the system of the MRT-3 are designed for a maximum capacity of 394 persons per car. If more passengers than the maximum capacity ride the train even for a short time, the train system might be damaged. The overloading would have detrimental effects resulting in the shorter life of parts and early deterioration of the trains and may lead to a breakdown and the total collapse of the Rolling stock.”

So, did this Administration heed Morita’s warning?

Yes, and no. And the story behind the “yes” and the “no” will outrage you, enough for you to wish that this Administration would go to hell ASAP, I guarantee that. Read about it on Friday.

CHINA STATE FIRM TO SUPPLY TRAINS
Part 3. Why isn’t the Senate investigating the outrageous P4-B MRT deal?
October 14, 2014 11:50 pm; Appeared in the October 15, 2014 edition of the Manila Times

Third of a three-part series
I’m referring to the contract signed by the Department of Transportation and Communications (DOTC) with a Chinese firm in June to buy 48 light-rail train cars for the decrepit Metro Rail Transit Line 3 (MRT-3) worth P3.9 billion.

It’s certainly a bit ironic: A state-owned company of a country, which President Aquino has called a bully in claiming our territory, has bagged not only a huge procurement government contract under his watch, but a strategic one involving the safety of our main metropolitan mass transit system, the MRT-3.

Maybe it’s so stupid of us as a nation, but so brazen – and arrogant that they believed they could get away with it – for the DOTC officials to have done so. Consider the facts:

The Czech Ambassador to the Philippines Joseph Rychtar alleged in April last year that the DOTC’s MRT-3 general manager Al Vitangcol 3rd asked $30 million (P1.3 billion), in bribes for the Czech firm Inekon Group to be given the contract to supply 52 new light-rail vehicles (LRVs, or the train cars) for the mass transit system. Rychtar alleged Vitangcol was extorting the money for a group that included personalities closely linked with the Liberal Party.

This occurred, he claimed, in July 2012. That was when the DOTC was still headed by Mar Roxas. It is not known whether Roxas’ transfer just a month later to the interior and local government department was related to the bribery attempt.

(The reason why Inekon, the fourth largest supplier of LRVs in the world, was keen on the contract is that it had pirated train engineers from CKD Tatra, which was the original supplier of MRT-3 trains, and therefore was confident it could build the right trains and within schedule. CKD Tatra had gone bankrupt in the early 2000s and was sold to a German engineering firm.)

A political earthquake
As an ambassador for five years (to Greece and Cyprus), I can say without a doubt that such an accusation of high-level corruption by an envoy against officials of the host government is a political earthquake. In countries complying with the rule of law and with an independent press, that would have required the host government dropping everything to get to the bottom of such serious allegations. If we only had a fiercely independent press that was not under Aquino’s influence, I’m sure this government would have already been toppled in the wake of such scandal.

What makes the ambassador’s allegation credible, that it could have involved the highest levels of this government, is that funding for the contract was made available at that time, unknown to most people, but told to the Czechs.

This was because Budget Secretary Florencio Abad had, at that time, hijacked the Congress-approved budget through his scheme that was euphemistically termed the “Disbursement Acceleration Plan.” Through the DAP, which was exposed only last year, Abad issued on the last day of the year (Dec. 28, 2011) what was called a “Notice of Cash Allotment” (NCA-BMB-A-11-0023872) to the DOTC.

The NCA informed the DOTC that P4.5 billion was already in the Land Bank of the Philippines for the department to use for the “capacity expansion of MRT3,” which meant money was available for the purchase of new trains to add to its 50 odd cars in service.

I was told that the Czech ambassador had been told that if Inekon agreed to the “arrangement” for the payment of $30 million, the contract would be awarded in a few days’ time and payment for the contract made right after that.

Sorry I have to use that worn-out cliché: Only in the Philippines. After the extortion attempt was exposed by the Manila Times’ chairman emeritus Dante Ang Sr. on June 2013, DOTC Secretary Emilio Abaya matter-of-factly vouched for his official, while presidential spokespersons muttered their overused “we-will-investigate” replies.

Suspended a year later
Vitangcol would even remain in his post, and was suspended only a year later for involvement in another allegation of corruption – one of his relatives and his friends were part of the firm that got the P600-million maintenance contract for MRT-3.

In his statement submitted in May to a committee of Congress investigating the allegations, Rychtar said: “I, as the Ambassador of the Czech Republic, confirm that an extortion attempt took place in July 2012, followed by other suspicious circumstances, which led to a questionable bidding process in March 2013.”

He added: “I wish to inform you… that the Czech company Inekon Group was, of course, not blacklisted officially by the DOTC, but we did receive the informal information that our proposal would not be entertained, which was manifested by the fact that our letters to DOTC (asking about how to participate in the bidding) were unanswered.”

The bidding the Czech ambassador was referring to actually was done on June 11, 2013, which, unlike most government biddings, was not open to media. DOTC spokesman Michael Sagcal would only reveal the results of the bidding after it has taken place:

“Two Chinese companies participated in the bidding, Dalian Locomotive & Rolling Stock Co. CNR Group and CSR Zhuzhou Electric Locomotive Co. Ltd.”

“CSR Zhuzhou was declared ineligible by the DOTC’s Bids and Awards Committee due to its failure to submit a certificate of reciprocity and to comply with a technical requirement. As a result, its financial proposal was no longer opened,” the spokesman said.

What a charade.

The “CNR” in the CNR Group, of which Dalian Locomotive and Rolling Stock Company is a member firm, stands for China North Railway, while the CSR in CSR Group Zhuzhou Electric Locomotive Co. Ltd is an acronym for China South Railway.

If their names seem the same except for the “North” and “South” adjectives, it is because both were formed in the 2000 and 2002 period out of the mammoth “China National Railway Locomotive & Rolling Stock Industry Corporation,” the monopoly in train service in the country. As with the original mother company, the two firms are both state-owned enterprises supervised by the State Council of the People’s Republic of China, and likely under a single commissar.

In short, the two bidders were two firms owned by the same entity, China, and the DOTC claims there was a proper bidding?

Given our quarrel with China, shouldn’t we be realistic and worry that if our relations get worse with that superpower, it may decide to chuck unilaterally that deal, give some convoluted excuse for doing so, then watch the MRT-3 collapse with its decrepit trains, and gloat at the resulting political chaos here? Have the DOTC officials compromised our national security?

LRV manufacturers
There has been a boom in light-rail mass transit systems in the world because of environmental concerns and the US’ recent rush to adopt the technology. Hence, there are more than a dozen LRV manufacturers today. The four firms that have the biggest shares are Germany’s Siemens (which bought CKD Tatra, the company that manufactured the first MRT-3 trains), the Japanese Kinki Sharyo, the American United Streetcar, and the Czech Inekon. Other LRV manufacturers are the Canadian Bombardier Transportation, the Austrian Lohner-Werke, the Swiss Stadler Rail, the German Duewag, and CAF USA.

None of these firms, if we are to believe the DOTC, were interested in supplying MRT-3 with their LRVs? Only the Chinese Dalian, which hasn’t manufactured the kind of LRVs needed by MRT-3, showed an interest?

And why this Chinese firm, which on its website itself says that the MRT-3 deal is the first contract it has obtained to build such type of LRVs? It even noted that the LRVs will operate in extreme conditions, “close to the equator, where the monthly maximum temperatures are above 30 degrees, the air humidity and salt content high, and with a complex weather with typhoons and rainstorms.”

And when will the Chinese deliver its 48 trains? “The first train is scheduled for delivery in 18 months,” its website reported in June. That means we will see a prototype only at the end of next year. Delivery of the trains is likely to happen after Aquino steps down from office and bunkers down in Hacienda Luisita.

Why aren’t we outraged that the DOTC, manned by Aquino’s officials, are taking us for fools?

DOTC officials are accused by a reputable Czech firm Inekon of trying to extort money for the contract to supply MRT-3’s new trains. The DOTC undertakes, less than a year later, a bidding Inekon did not, or could not participate in. A Chinese firm with no experience in LRV manufacturing “wins” in a bidding participated in by its sister company.

And there is nothing fishy in that?

What we should all be livid over is this:


If the Czech envoy’s accusations are proven right, that means Aquino’s officials had delayed the procurement of new trains—which would have made MRT-3 safer and reliable, and reduced commuters’ waiting time—in order to make money for themselves and more likely for the Liberal Party, and I would suspect also for this President. That’s the worst kind of corruption. Even our national security has been compromised.

End

Blogger's Note:  I did not write this article, Amb. Rigoberto Tiglao did.  This article appeared in the Manila Times in three (3) parts, the first part appearing on the October 6, 2014 issue, the second on October 8 and the third on October 15, 2014.  Assuming that his information is correct and suspending, for the moment, Tiglao's bias against the present administration, we find that he actually asks a very important question: "why aren't we outraged that the DOTC, manned by Aquino's officials, are taking us for fools?"  Have we so totally fallen for the Daang Matuwid sloagan that he and his minions have been bombarding us with for the past 4 years?  One will also notice that all of the space devoted for in the news and in blogs have been all about the corruption of the Vice President.  Some commenters in the online edition of the Manila Times have questioned its decision to run this piece by Tiglao instead of running another off the mill story about the Binays.  I actually support the Times decision to run this piece on the ground of materiality.  What is the point of running stories on Binay? It will ultimately have no effect on the day to day running of Daang Matuwid.  What power does Binay have now?  Apparently, his popularity has got the Administration scared shitless which is why they would mount a black propaganda campaign long before the scheduled elections.  In any case, I chose to run the full piece here because I think it is worth reading all in one go, rather than in parts, so we can all ask ourselves, "why aren't we outraged???"