More than 800K motorcycle plates distributed, over 400K still ‘in transit’ — LTO
MANILA, Philippines — The Land Transportation Office (LTO) on Friday said it has so far distributed more than 800,000 motorcycle plates to its regional offices, amid the beating it took from an irked Senator Richard Gordon over the supposed delayed distribution of motorcycle plates.
Based on LTO’s presentation at a Senate hearing, a total of 1,276,149 motorcycle plates have been produced at plate-manufacturing plants as of Feb. 2, 2020, of which 875,154 have been distributed to regional offices of the agency.
A total of 400,995 are still in transit, according to LTO.
Gordon, chair of the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee that was conducting the hearing on the implementation of the Republic Act No. 11235 or the Motorcycle Crime Prevention Act, however, seemed dissatisfied with the figures.
Article continues after this advertisement“Sounds like a very nice narrative but the bottomline is, nothing is moving. You have only distributed according to you 800,000 to the different regions and we don’t know whether these have been distributed to the people,” he said.
Article continues after this advertisement“It is now 2021 and now you report ngayon lang kayo nagbibigay, itong nakaraang buwan ng umaabot sa 800,000 na motorcycle plates,” he added. “I am steadfast on the fact na hindi pa umaabot sa mga tao ‘yan at huling-huli na kayo because dapat December pa natapos ‘yan [noong] 2019,” he added.
(It is now 2021 and its only now that you report that you have only distributed 800,000 motorcycle plates… I am steadfast on the fact that the plates have not reached their intended owners. Your distribution has been very much delayed because it should have been finished by 2019.)
In response, LTO chief Assistant Secretary Edgar Galvante said that there were factors that contributed to the delay of distribution of the plates.
He said that the LTO is in the process of delivering the remaining plates to motorcycle riders.
“We are in the process of delivering this kaya lang natigil ang produksyon dahil sa nangyaring kaso na disallowance at ‘yung naideliver na plate, for example ito po ay para sa four-wheel vehicle, ito ay na-TRO at pinahinto ang delivery,” he explained to Gordon.
(We are in the process of delivering this, but the production was tied up in the disallowance case, while the delivery of the plates for four-wheel vehicles were subjected to temporary restraining order.)
Gordon, however, pointed at the importance of providing the motorcycle plates, citing the number of riding-in-tandem crime incidents being recorded in the country.
“Each time you delay, may namamatay. January araw-araw may namamatay dahil hindi niyo binibigay ‘yung mga plate numbers. Walang maitatawag ang mga tao na plate number, wala silang matawagan na LTO control center,” he said, citing 20 deaths linked to riding-in-tandem cases in January.
(Each time you delay, there are people who getting killed. In January, people die everyday because you do not distribute the plates. People don’t have any plate number to report to LTO control centers.)
Lt. Gen. Guillermo Eleazar, deputy chief for administration of the Philippine National Police (PNP) who is present at the hearing, also agreed with Gordon that motorcycle plates that would be more visible especially in closed-circuit television cameras would be able to help the police solve riding-in-tandem crime incidents.
According to Gordon, the PNP has already recorded a total of 36,848 crime incidents related to riding-in-tandem since 2010, including 8,805 deaths as of 2018.