Gov't begins crackdown on unconsolidated PUVs

By Raymond Carl Dela Cruz

May 16, 2024, 2:54 pm

<p><strong>ENFORCEMENT.</strong> A traffic enforcer of the Philippine National Police (PNP) flagged down a public utility jeepney along Kalaw Street in Manila on April 11, 2024. Traffic enforcers of the Land Transportation Office, Metropolitan Manila Development Authority, and the PNP began their crackdown on unconsolidated public utility vehicles on Thursday (May 16, 2024), 15 days after the end of the consolidation deadline of the Public Transport Modernization Program.<em> (PNA photo by Yancy Lim)</em></p>

ENFORCEMENT. A traffic enforcer of the Philippine National Police (PNP) flagged down a public utility jeepney along Kalaw Street in Manila on April 11, 2024. Traffic enforcers of the Land Transportation Office, Metropolitan Manila Development Authority, and the PNP began their crackdown on unconsolidated public utility vehicles on Thursday (May 16, 2024), 15 days after the end of the consolidation deadline of the Public Transport Modernization Program. (PNA photo by Yancy Lim)

MANILA – Traffic enforcers will begin their crackdown against unconsolidated public utility vehicles (PUV) on Thursday following a 15-day grace period since the deadline of the consolidation deadline on April 30.

The Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) said enforcers from the Land Transportation Office (LTO), Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA), and the Philippine National Police (PNP) would flag down PUVs to check for their compliance.

“Authorities will check the serial number on the document issued by the LTFRB displayed on their jeepneys,” the LTFRB said in a statement.

Reconsolidated jeepneys are reminded to display their franchise documents on their dashboard or windshield to avoid apprehension.

“Apprehended PUVs may result in a one-year suspension for the driver, a PHP50,000 fine for the operator, and the vehicle will be impounded for 30 days,” it said.

Following the end of the consolidation period for PUVs in April, the Department of Transportation said around 80 percent of PUVs were estimated to have complied with the consolidation requirement of the Public Transport Modernization Program (PTMP).

The final data for consolidated PUVs are still being processed by the LTFRB.

Consolidation is one of the stages of the government’s PTMP that seeks to overhaul the country’s transport sector.

The next stages in the PTMP are route rationalization or the assignment of transport routes, fleet management or controlling the number of operational PUVs at any given time, and the replacement of old PUVs with modern counterparts equipped with Euro 4-compliant engines, modern amenities, and safety features. (PNA)

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