Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Marcos camp determined to fight for poll protest until ‘fake VP ejected’

With the recount of votes still two months away, the camp of former Senator Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. on Wednesday expressed determination to go through the process of proving that he won last year’s vice presidential race against incumbent Leni Robredo.

“BBM is determined to see this through until the last ballot in the pilot provinces have been manually recounted with the real result reflected and the fake vice president ejected,” Marcos’ spokesperson Victor Rodriguez told GMA News Online.

Rodriguez’s reaction came after Robredo’s counsel, Romulo Macalintal, said Monday that not a single election protest since the start of automated polls in 2010 “involving local elective positions had been successful where the issue was merely recount of the ballots.”

Macalintal added there was no reason why the recount for a national position would be different considering that the ballots used for the local and national elective positions were the same and they were counted and tallied by the same vote counting machines (VCMs) and the consolidated canvassing system (CCS).

Rodriguez, however, said the reason why not a single election protest for president or vice president had been successful was because “no protest, in the era of automated election, ever reached nor have gone through past the preliminary conference.”

“It is only the protest of Sen. Marcos that have come this far, the conduct of manual recount and judicial revision,” the lawyer said.

Sought for comment, Macalintal said he was standing by his statements.

“And there is no such thing as ‘fake VP’ but there is such a thing as a ‘fake protest’ like that of Marcos which will be fully exposed once the recount is completed,” Macalintal said in a text message.

The Supreme Court (SC), sitting as the Presidential Electoral Tribunal (PET), will begin in February next year the recount of votes in connection with the election protest filed by Marcos.

The ballot recount covers the three pilot provinces of Camarines Sur, Iloilo and Negros Oriental which were chosen by Marcos as the best provinces where he could prove the irregularities alleged in his protest.

Macalintal said first to be reviewed are the ballots from the contested clustered precincts in Camarines Sur, the vice president’s home province, which will be retrieved on January 22, 2018 with the recount slated for second week of February.

This will be followed by the two other pilot provinces.

Macalintal said under the PET Rules, if Marcos could not prove any substantial recovery of votes from these three pilot provinces, the former senator’s protest will be dismissed for lack of merit.

For Camarines Sur alone, Macalintal said P9.6 million would be charged to Marcos’ cash deposit for the retrieval of ballots, salaries and allowances of employees, security, transportation, and other expenses.

Macalintal and Marcos’ lawyer, George Garcia, were at the SC on Monday for a
meeting on the regulations governing the recount of votes and a tour of the venue for the recount process.

Marcos lost to Robredo by 263,473 votes in the May 2016 election which the former senator claimed was marred by fraud. —KG, GMA News

http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/nation/635613/marcos-camp-determined-to-fight-for-poll-protest-until-lsquo-fake-vp-ejected-rsquo/story/

Who's delaying 'Build, build, build'?

We see a glass half full

Seeing a glass half full, we have no cause for complaint specially if we look at DPWH Secy. Villar's bulging portfolio. The C-5-CAVITEx link has started building. The last segment of TPLEx to Rosario, La Union has already cleared Pozzorubio. The Plaridel bypass, albeit downgraded to single carriageway, is inching north easterly to Baliuag. RROW acquisition for NLEx Segment 10 from Karuhatan to North Harbor has picked up resulting in 50% completion of the elevated roadway. Skyway Stage 3 has already settled the long delayed stacked Skyway river alignment and RROW of Section 2. Scores of wide river bridges, coastal highways and congested town bypasses have been completed all across the nation. Ground has broken for the Cebu-Cordova Bridge and Causeway, the CALAx down south and the CLEx expressway to Nueva Ecija from SCTEx Tarlac. And one of the best news was that DoF's Sonny Dominguez did away with the extortionate “franchise premium or fee” that was tacked on to what was already steeply priced PPP but confusingly specced projects. That fee was so steep that only conglomerates that want to wrap the flag on themselves would dare spend for it.

Sea change in funding and planning

Exasperated with delays caused by informal settlers blocking RROW clearing, PRRD has resorted to his tough-guy Davao Mayor ways by expanding the scope and powers of the still born legislation for Traffic solving emergency powers. Disappointed by the delays caused by litigation by losing bidders in PPP project awards, PRRD had reverted back to GA [Government Appropriation] for project construction contracts relegating PPP only for O&M. Hence the 5 southern airports that were bundled together by the Pnoy government as a PPP, were unbundled back to one project per airport. Deeply suspicious of rent-seeking oligarchs and the New World Order bullies of the West, PRRD declared that he preferred to fund our “Golden era of infrastructure” through soft loans and grants from his new found Oriental friends, Japan and China. He also wanted to do away with lowest bidder auctions as these invited corruption and substandard construction of projects even as O&M integrated specifications for PPP infrastructure projects were separated in order to make the construction part a GA initiative. Despite the sea change in the way infrastructure projects are to be implemented, the PRRD administration, to its credit, did not resort to the abrupt halt of all projects to instigate an Aquino style “ethnic cleansing” where all contracts and appointments dated after Cory Aquino stepped down as president are suspected to be “corrupt”. Also this time, unsolicited proposals were welcome and will always follow the law by going through a Swiss Challenge and vetting for relevant economic cost benefit analysis by the NEDA-ICC.

First to stall

And yet, the first infrastructure projects to stall were the PPP's in the pipeline like the long delayed Kaliwa and Laiban dams and their integrated metropolitan water supply projects. Besides the delays for the 5 southern airports, NAIA and Clark expansion reverted to ODA funded BCDA project status. Tutuban-Malolos-Clark railway and Calamba-Naga-Legaspi-Sorsogon railways were withdrawn from PPP to become ODA funded government projects too. Much later, the Plaridel bypass nee Balagtas to Nueva Ecija tollway, dropped its PPP status to become a China ODA funded highway. The Trans-Mindanao Railway and the Davao circumferential highway was to be ODA funded too. Within a year, PRRD would ink Japanese ODA funding for the Metro Manila Subway and a BRT line on EDSA. Also China will fund at least 2 of all the eleven new bridges across the Pasig.

'Dead ma' file?

Meantime, unsolicited proposals, supposedly encouraged, were subsequently left in limbo. Solar group's proposal to turn Sangley point into a NAIA substitute built like the Kansai airport and attached to a giant container port remains just as a proposal even after it was presented at a Cabinet meeting early in the PRRD reign. Despite its JICA approved study and ease to get Japan Dev. Bank financing, it too has not moved forward. More advanced is San Miguel's 700B, 6-runway airport in Bulacan, Bulacan consisting of an aerotropolis on reclaimed land, expressway links to NLEx and MRT-7 which SMC has lined up for financing. Meantime, Metro Pacific and JGSummit-Filinvest offers to expand Clark into a 2-terminal airport along with multi-year O&M were slapped down by DoTr Secy. Tugade, while Vince Dizon of BCDA is only beginning to look at the ODA funded alternatives for expanding the existing Clark Terminal One. Metro Pacific continues to pursue its standing offer to take over MRT-3, pay its debtors and overhaul it totally to prevent the daily disruptions that it is bedeviling it today – yet still no decision.

Can't live without them

Despite PRRD ranting against and prosecuting oligarchs – suspending Bobby Ongpin's PhilWeb [now reinstated], threatening Mighty Tobacco with closure [now a Japan Tobacco owned company] and belittling MVP [Manuel Pangilinan] as just an employee of Indonesia's Anthony Salim's First Pacific, the “oligarchs” were determined to pursue PPP projects which prove their nationalist credentials. Metro Pacific Tollways launched the Cebu-Cordoba toll bridge and toll Causeway. It proposed CTBex or Cavite-Tagaytay-Batangas Expressway, the logical extension of CALAx from Silang to Tagaytay all the way to Nasugbu. Metro Pac also proposed extending their Harbor Link expressway to link to CAVITEx and the 3 major reclamation projects on Manila Bay in between. Not to be outdone and uniquely not on PRRD's oligarch hit list, San Miguel Infrastructure, building on the success of NAIAx, proposed plans to link NAIAx to BGC, Dr. A. Santos and Buendia. As San Miguel will be breaking ground on the C-6 Metro Manila Skyway from Bicutan to Batasan, it is now submitting plans to extend SLEx TR4 from Ayala Greenfield to Lucena City.

What investment incentive?

With DPWH and DoTr [LTO license plates, license cards, LTFRB Jeepney phase out, CAAP airport upgrades, various railways, BRT and subways] pressing ahead with their respective projects, mostly to be funded by ODA, there is actually a surfeit of project proposals because of the sudden about turns of government. The abrupt change preferring GA over PPP and the subsequent conflicting criteria issued by PRRD froze and stymied the early goodwill and eager interest in doing infrastructure in the country. How, indeed to do you satisfy the PRRD rant or negative list ? No to oligarchs. No to lowest bidder auctions. Yes to foreign contractors, which needs Congressional amendments to existing laws. Massive ODA borrowing which need massive tax increases that, in turn, still needs Congress and Senate approval. Yes, to smaller non-oligarch company bidders but what about track record? Where would an eager infra investor begin?

Deciphering the 80-year-old mayor-king

In understanding PRRD's announcements [and rants] one needs a sensible and “applied” approach a technique well-honed by ex-Press Secy. Abello in learning the euphemisms, nuances and separating the bombast from the intention. Unfortunately, Secy. Abello has been replaced by Secy. Roque whose style is more akin to “predictive text” than Abello's sanitized and politically-correct Berlitz translation of PRRD's language. Still, this may well be the way to deal with PRRD:Unless you really are one, pretend that the Oligarch label does not apply. Present and behave like the internationally known and respected conglomerate that you are whether you be Aboitiz, Ayala, Metro Pac, Megawide, DMConsunji, etc. Draw up your own plans and include your funding as an alternative to ODA.

Alternative to lowest bid auctions

So PRRD doesn't trust the lowest bid auction system? Not to worry, we can apply the Dutch or Scandinavian qualifying system that determines the winner as the one who can successfully optimize or surpass “performance parameters” over and above the passive specifications standard of infrastructure construction. Allow us to illustrate by the ff. Example:

Simulation exercise: Mariveles-Manila Bay-Marogondon expressway or MMBMex

The Philippines wants a toll expressway route from MEPZ [Mariveles Export Processing zone] in Mariveles, Bataan to CEPZ [Cavite Export Processing Zone] in Maragondon in Cavite, passing through Manila Bay. The winning PPP or BOM [Build, Operate and Maintain] bidder must prove that it can provide, perform and achieve performance parameters as follows ;

the road must be usable in all kinds of weather, even in gale force winds.

drivable even in heavy rain or fog [specify the minimum visibility limits]

Easy to maintain without massive shut downs or closures that throttle capacity below 50% max traffic capacity.

Allow or maintain unhampered passage of other forms of transport [water, air and rail] that abuts or intersects the MMBMex right of way.

Charge a toll of no more than XX.xx PHP per kilometer [to be determined by NEDA-ICC] subject to the usual TRB rate adjustment parameters.

Specify a maximum time of one hour and 30 minutes in order to complete an end to end journey at traffic levels 30% of highway max. capacity. This maximum journey time will also be the benchmark guide for O&M to target and build capacity expansion during the 30 year franchise.

BOM/PPP

The BOM/PPP proponent/bidder is also encouraged to design, build, plan the tollway in such a way that it shall be at least one step [or even more] ahead of the traffic demand for the duration of the franchise life of 30 years. So at the bidding stage, the proponent should already include and integrate plans for future lane additions, flyover additions, drainage enhancements, facilities forecourts and even by-passes and tunnels.

Wide range of choices/solutions

With a broad objective, the proponents/bidders can build anything they deem necessary to fulfill the mandate of the project, anything is possible under the sun. A 120km Mariveles to Maragondon coastal expressway along Manila Bay ? A combination bridge and under-Manila Bay tunnel like the Oresund Straits bridge ? Or a Tsing Ma style stacked highway bridge connection, including a railway component ? An all undersea tunnel set up, perhaps ?

ODA with forward cover

And if PRRD still insists on ODA? Insist that the government, for its own protection, provide forward exchange cover. If this be costly, then it should be factored into the costing of the project so the private sector can choose to finance it itself. Early on, choosing between private sector funding and ODA should be straightforward and not a source of delay. Warning: Vaughn Montes of PIDS [Philippine Institute for Development Studies] has warned that historically speaking, Chinese, Japanese and Korean ODA funding projects take 20% longer than PPP from signing ceremony, detailed studies then to the first shovel of earth moved.

Judging and approving authority

So now who decides on the winning proposal? First hurdle must be technical feasibility. For our MMBMex, why not tap the Hong Kong Highways Department or China's engineering road agency who approved the Tsing Ma bridge and the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau bridge. Or the Scandinavian agency that approved the Denmark to Malmo, Sweden Oresund Strait bridge. Or the French agency that approved the Milau viaduct over the Tarne Gorge. Or the Virginia Highways Dept. that approved the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel.

Litigation proofing

The next approving level will be for the PPP and NEDA-ICC to approve of the financing terms. At this stage, the PPP bidding procedures should be as conflict proof as possible, post-award to the winner to preclude losing bidders from filing a case that would delay project implementation. Perhaps even include in the bid qualification documents that in case of dispute, they promise to abide by decision of the PPP's conflict resolution or arbitration committee or the NEDA-ICC's arbitration committee.

Dealing with the oligarchs

Oligarchs? Well the PPP office or the Palace should be able to draw up a cursory list of oligarchs or oligarch characteristics to be avoided. Then bidders will then sign an undertaking that they are not a company that purposes oligarchic objectives, whatever whichever the PPP bids committee will define it to mean in order to pay lip service to PRRD's gripe.

Getting the newbies to qualify

So how about newbie companies with no track record? Easy. Besides minimum paid-in-capital requirements, Newbie [or new upcoming crony] can form a consortium. Former IDF paratrooper and LRT-1 project consultant Eli Levin, having cobbled together both LRT-1 and MRT-3 investor consortia, knows how, just like he eats breakfast. Hire the best known construction outfits. Project managers. Infra designers. Brand name architects like UK's Richard Rogers, Fosters and partners, Denmark's Ove Arup or Germany's Hochtief. Hire known local specialist contractors for laying tollway fiber optics and electronic surveillance. EasyTrip or Capstone [Ex E-Pass] for Electronic Toll Collection. GJB, the first of Norconsult's ADB approved EU standards traffic sign makers since 1977. Readycon pavement layers and menders. TPCP for high visibility and high wear resisting road markings. That consortium or consortia will now match the established conglomerates of the oligarchs.

Beyond the rhetoric

To infra investors who suddenly developed cold feet, they shouldn't be always taking every rant of PRRD as marching orders. They are more of a broad outline of the moral objective, yes, believe it or not, those shout-outs are moral objectives and intentions. And it is to PRRD and our country's loss that ex-Press Secy. Abello isn't around anymore to interpret the sound and fury of PRRD into orders that can be acted and built on immediately. But once the investors get wind of the true intention outside of the political bluster, follow our PPP bids and unsolicited proposal investor guide, there should be a lot more of them wanting to do “Build-build-build”, ASAP.

DOTr, DPWH opens TPLEX Binalonan-Pozzorubio segment

The Department of Transportation (DOTr) and the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) opened on Wednesday a segment of the Tarlac-Pangasinan-La Union Expressway (TPLEX) stretching from Binalonan to Pozzorubio, both in Pangasinan which will ensure ease of travel in the northern Luzon.

This as the Toll Regulatory Board (TRB) has granted a Toll Operation Permit (TOP) to the Philippine Infrastructure Development Corporation (PIDC) for the maintenance and operation of the new segment of the expressway last November 29.

“The TOP was issued after a joint inspection conducted by the DPWH, TRB Technical Staff, and representatives of PIDC, who confirmed that the particular portion of TPLEX is substantially complete and is safe to be operated commercially,” the DOTr said in a statement Wednesday.

The DPWH and representatives from DOTr and PIDC opened the 10.10-km TPLEX Segment 7, Section 3A-2 which stretches from Binalonan to Pozorrubio, Pangasinan.

This is the second to the last portion of the TPLEX project that would be constructed by PIDC. Segment 7, Section 3A-1 of TPLEX officially opened last July 28, 2016

DPWH Secretary Mark Villar said in an earlier statement that the additional 10 kilometer segment would ease traffic and significantly reduce travel time from Tarlac to Pozorrubio from two and a half hours to just 45 minutes.

The completion of the new segment will make TPLEX a 78.39-km expressway connecting provinces of Tarlac and Pangasinan.

Its last section, the 10.92-km Pozorrubio, Pangasinan to Rosario, La Union segment is set for completion in June 2019.

Upon full completion, TPLEX would be able to reduce travel time from Tarlac to Rosario, La Union from 3.5 hours to just an hour benefiting an average of 20,000 vehicles per day.

https://www.update.ph/2017/12/dotr-dpwh-opens-tplex-binalonan-pozzorubio-segment/23158

DOTr-TRB Issues Toll Operation Permit for TPLEX Binalonan-Pozorrubio Segment

Pozorrubio, Pangasinan-- The Department of Transportation-Toll Regulatory Board (DOTr-TRB) issued last 29 November 2017 a Toll Operation Permit (TOP) to the Philippine Infrastructure Development Corporation (PIDC) for the maintenance and operation of the Binalonan-Pozorrubio Segment.

The TOP was issued after a joint inspection conducted by the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), TRB Technical Staff, and representatives of PIDC, who confirmed that the particular portion of TPLEX is “substantially complete and is safe to be operated commercially.”

In compliance with the Toll Concession Agreement, the DPWH, as well as representatives from concerned parties are set to open the TPLEX Segment 7, Section 3A-2 which stretches from Binalonan to Pozorrubio, Pangasinan.

Segment 7--approximately 10.10 kilometers-- is the second to the last portion of the TPLEX project that would be constructed by PIDC.

Segment 7, Section 3A-1 of TPLEX officially opened last 28 July 2016.

To date, almost 20,000 vehicles traverse the stretch of existing TPLEX segments daily, from La Paz, Tarlac to Urdaneta, Pangasinan (DOTr) 

Rival TV networks both claim ratings lead




ABS-CBN Corp. claimed a nationwide lead in television ratings for November while main rival GMA Network Inc. said it was ahead in key urban areas.

The two networks used data from separate third-party research firms, which showed both leading in mega Manila, including the National Capital Region.

In a statement, ABS-CBN said it was ahead of GMA in national TV ratings, with average audience share of 46 percent, above GMA’s 34 percent, citing data from Kantar Media.

ABS-CBN said it was also ahead in “all territories,” including mega Manila, with 37 percent of audience share against 34 percent for GMA and Metro Manila, where it claimed 41 percent against GMA’s 27 percent.

Kantar data showed ABS-CBN had an audience share of 51 percent during primetime, where most Filipinos watch TV, compared to GMA's 32 percent, the network said. ABS-CBN also took the lead in the morning (6 a.m to 12 p.m.), noontime (12 p.m. to 3 p.m.) and afternoon (3 p.m. to 6 p.m.).

Nine of the ten most watched programs in the country were produced by ABS-CBN, led by the long running police drama “FPJ’s Ang Probinsyano,” the network said.

The series topbilled by Coco Martin recorded a national TV rating of 41.1 percent, ABS-CBN said.

Other programs that made it to the list include “La Luna Sangre,” “The Good Son,” “Tonight with Boy Abunda,” “Bandila,” “TV Patrol,” “Little Big Shots,” “Wansapanataym,” “Maalaala Mo Kaya,” “I Can See Your Voice,” “Gandang Gabi Vice,” “Ikaw Lang ang Iibigin”, “It’s Showtime”, “ASAP,” “Banana Sundae,” “Pusong Ligaw,” “Hanggang Saan,” “Ipaglaban Mo,” “Wildflower,” “Home Sweetie Home,” and “Goin’ Bulilit.”

ABS-CBN said it led ratings in other parts of the country.

For “total Luzon,” ABS-CBN said it got an audience share of 44 percent for November while GMA got 35 percent. For total Visayas, ABS-CBN cornered 54 percent versus GMA’s 27 percent, and for total Mindanao, it secured 49 percent against GMA’s 34 percent.

Apart from television ratings, ABS-CBN cited gains it made in its digital TV initiative. As of last month, ABS-CBN TVplus has already sold four million boxes since its launch in 2015.

For its part, GMA said it was ahead in the National Urban Television Audience Measurement using data from Nielsen Philippines TV Audience Measurement. GMA said it had cornered an average total day people audience share of 43.2 percent, ahead of ABS-CBN’s 38.2 percent.

GMA said it led in all time blocks in urban Luzon and mega Manila, which accounted for over half of all viewers in the country.

GMA said it had cornered 48.8 percent of the market in urban Luzon, versus 32.6 percent of ABS-CBN, and 51.1 percent in mega Manila, against its ABS-CBN’s 28.5 percent.

More Kapuso shows also made it to the list of top programs in NUTAM with the award-winning weekly family sitcom “Pepito Manaloto still reigning as the most watched Kapuso program nationwide in November.

Included in the list as well were “Kapuso Mo, Jessica Soho,” “Daig Kayo ng Lola Ko
,” “Magpakailanman”, “24 Oras”, “Super Ma’am”, “All-Star Videoke”, “24 Oras Weekend, and “Alyas Robin Hood”, which concluded last November 24.

Newly launched primetime series “Kambal, Karibal” immediately made its way to the list of most watched Kapuso programs in NUTAM along with consistent ratings drivers “Ika-6 na Utos”, “Tadhana,” “Wowowin”, “My Korean Jagiya”, “Bubble Gang”, “Saksi”, “Imbestigador,” “Eat Bulaga,” “Sunday PinaSaya,” “Dear Uge,” “Celebrity Bluff,” “Haplos” and “Impostora”.

GMA Network again dominated the list of top programs in Urban Luzon with 8 of the top 10; while sweeping Mega Manila’s top 10 list.

Further, GMA’s flagship AM radio station Super Radyo DZBB was also hailed as the listeners’ number one choice in Mega Manila proving GMA’s dominance both in TV and radio.

Based on the most recent data from Nielsen Radio Audience Measurement.

November ratings data show DZBB posting a total week average audience share of 33.3 percent in November, winning over DZMM’s 28.8 percent and DZRH’s 11.2 percent.

From Monday to Friday, DZBB’s ratings dominance was driven by its topnotch delivery of news and fearless commentaries through Saksi sa Dobol B hosted by Mike Enriquez; Sino? with Mike, Arnold Clavio, and Ali Sotto; Super Balita sa Umaga Nationwide with Mike and Joel Reyes Zobel; and Dobol B Balitang-Balita hosted by Melo del Prado.

Meanwhile, DZBB also kept listeners tuned to its weekend line-up through its public service program MMDA sa GMA hosted by Orly Trinidad in partnership with MMDA; Super Balita sa Umaga Saturday and Sunday Edition with Sam Nielsen and Cecil Villarosa; Super Radyo Nationwide with Francis Flores, and Buena Manong Balita presented by Rowena Salvacion.

Recognized as one of the most awarded radio stations in the country, DZBB recently won as the Radio Station of the Year in the 7th People Management Association of the Philippines (PMAP) Makatao Awards for Media Excellence.

Read more: https://business.inquirer.net/241997/rival-tv-networks-claim-ratings-lead#ixzz50RixEx5v
Follow us: @inquirerdotnet on Twitter | inquirerdotnet on Facebook

The Many Sins and Mysteries of MRT-3

By Rene S. Santiago

ONCE AGAIN, an old rickety train system mislabelled as MRT-3 is in the news, threatening our Christmas celebration like Grinch.

Troubles seem to be the twin brother of MRT-3.

Controversial at birth, it continues to be talked about nearly three decades after.

To understand its current predicament and recurring problems, one has to look at its sordid past that is shrouded in mystery and colored by money.

It is a saga that transcended six administrations — Corazon C. Aquino, Fidel V. Ramos, Joseph E. Estrada, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, Benigno S. C. Aquino III, and now, Rodrigo R. Duterte.

It began in 1989 as an unsolicited proposal to the Philippine National Railways (PNR), then evolved into a Build-Lease-Transfer Agreement in November 1991. How it became an official contract was a mystery by itself.

The construction of MRT-3 broke ground (in October 1996) during President Ramos’ watch, and only after forcing a change in investors line-up.

After 10 years in labor, the Edsa Rail line made its inaugural run in December 1999 and baptized by President Estrada as “Magandang Regalo sa Taongbayan.”

During Macapagal-Arroyo’s long reign, its future dimmed and became a victim in the battle between two malls. But its most dramatic, and visible, downhill slide to hell commenced during Aquino III’s time.

Will MRT-3’s fortune change in Duterte’s time?

ORIGINAL SIN

Back in 1989, a Manila-based Jewish businessman (who likes to brag he has yet to meet a Filipino he cannot bribe) submitted an unsolicited proposal to PNR.

It was received like the horse given to Troy by the Greeks — the first to ride on the newly-minted Build-Operate-Transfer Law (Republic Act 6957). The proposal snaked its way to the then-Department of Transport and Communications (DoTC), which promptly conducted a tender — where a Hongkong-registered company capitalized at $998 got anointed.

Four challengers with bigger pockets were knocked out, within a month of document submission.

A DoTC insider blew the whistle that got the Senate poring over its mysterious provenance.

Eventually, the issue landed on the court of last resort, which dismissed its legal infirmities on the ground that the same had been cured by a subsequent law (RA 7718 or the amended BOT law).

While MRT-3 proponents managed to hurdle the legal challenges, its shaky finances failed to impress the tight credit markets of the time.

With Palace prodding, a new group of investors “kicked out” the original sinner with a “pabaon” of about $33 million. Out with EDSA LRT Consortium, in with Metro Rail Transit Corporation (MRTC).

The contract underwent at least seven revisions — as some well-meaning bureaucrats tried to remedy the atrocious features of the project (e.g., changing the at-grade crossing on Quezon Avenue, thumbing down on the high-rise property developments on the middle of EDSA, improving the poor accessibility of stations, etc.). The project cost ballooned from $160 million to $675.5 million. The last amended contract was dated August 8, 1997, but I think it was not the last.

UNMASKING THE PPP MODALITY

The Build-Lease-Transfer (BLT) contract shielded MRTC from commercial or market risk. It would make money regardless of ridership, a guaranteed 15 percent return after tax, sweetened with the sovereign guarantee of the Philippine republic.

In the current parlance of Public-Private Partnership (PPP) project practitioners, it was structured as a capacity-fee payment, a more appealing name for “take-or-pay” modality. The capacity is a minimum of 22 trains (three-car/train) per hour in exchange for the fixed lease payments.

To deliver on its commitment, MRTC took responsibilities for maintenance and spare parts via its affiliate. It had the features of a ‘wet lease’ arrangement, except that operations personnel would be hired by the lessee (which was DoTC). More than 600 employees were hired by DoTC on a contractual or casual basis. It is a wonder that after 10 years of employment, more than two-thirds of these personnel remained as “casuals” — the kind of “Endo” arrangement this current administration wants to abolish.

During construction, MRTC officials went to town — boasting about the “first mass transit project” to be build at no cost to the government. Earnings from the lucrative “development rights” would cover losses on the rail side of the business.

By 2003, this no-subsidy myth crumbled, and government had to scramble for the rental payments that were non-existent in DoTC’s budget. This omission became the seed for the third sin. But that will come later.

The MRT-3 project intrigued me as a development researcher, a perennial student, and a transport professional. I had a ringside view of its putative years. In July 1993, I published a paper entitled “Heresies of the BOT Kind: Lessons from Manila’s LRT”, which was presented at the 1st Annual Conference of the Transport Science Society of the Philippines.

Its takeaway: MRT-3 would be a very big problem. Nobody believed me at that time.

I had another opportunity to revisit the project, when the UP National Center for Transportation Studies conducted a short course for senior transport officials in the ASEAN region in 2000 and 2001.

As the resource person on PPP, I used the MRT-3 as my case study.

At that time, private sector participation was quite novel for many of our neighboring countries. The officials returned to their home countries with invaluable lessons on how not to do a PPP. Or perhaps, a subliminal lesson on how to steal legally.

I still remember one participant’s effusive reaction: “If it happened in my country, the deal-makers would have been shot.” There was no need to riposte, that indeed, the Philippines was (and still is) different.

WHERE HAVE ALL THE MONIES GONE?
Revenues from property developments underpinned the no-subsidy myth. These revenue streams evaporated — quicker than David Copperfield could do it.

By 2017, the government share from “development rights” should have amounted to more than P500 million, based on Annex A-2 of the BLT contract.

But where did the money go? No one could tell me.

In the last decade, I recall occasional outbursts from DoTC officials about the missing billions. It is a mystery wrapped in enigma. How could billions disappear without a quizzical note from COA? One could only deduce that another amendment to the 1997 contract transpired between 2002 and 2010 as to cut off or divert the incomes from Trinoma and other station-related commercial developments. This to me is the second mortal sin committed in the name of MRT-3.

From the get-go, MRT-3 started its transit life on a fragmented set up — a business model that guaranteed future headaches. Rail revenues goes to the national treasury, rather than flowed back to the operating entity. Expenses need an annual allowance from Congress, dominated by persons who cannot dissociate a “coupler” from salacity. Maintenance is outsourced to another entity. Non-rail revenues is nowhere to be found.

After construction, MRTC had no more incentive to take care of the assets, except sit back, collect rental payments, and re-channel them to creditors and equity holders. Nobody was left to look after sustaining the economic life of the system.

MULTI-LAYERED DEBTS

The third sin committed in the name of MRT-3 was the securitization of the future lease payments or the equity rental payments (ERP) — with the tacit consent of DoTC. It involved 77.7% of the ERP.

The complex web of debts becoming another form of debts and/or sliced into several tranches, cannot easily be explained in a few paragraphs even by financial experts.

Cast of characters multiply from MRTC to MRT Holdings (MRTH), MRTH II, MRTC Limited (MRTCL), and so on.

A simple analogy might help.

Instead of waiting for your measly retirement checks from Social Security System, you go to your friendly pawn shop who pays you a lump sum amount, and takes your place on the monthly queue.

On the surface, it is nothing more than a textbook case of receivables financing — except done to the second and third order derivatives. The tricky part of the deal was retention of residual rights; like selling your house but still retaining some rights over who gets to occupy the building.

There were payment hiccups on the ERP, caused in part by a government that initially swallowed the no-subsidy myth. This was a breach of material obligation that gave rise to arbitration proceedings in Singapore, and for the ERP bonds to suffer value downgrades.

The financial crisis of 2008 also forced holders of those bonds to hold a fire sale. A large portion of those bonds were in the hands of the vultures of Wall Street.

For purposes of simplicity, they were in possession of a bond with a face value of $100, but could be sold only at $20.

The vulture funds — who, among others, specialized in making money out of the misfortunes of poor countries — saw an opportunity. Losing the case in Singapore could trigger a cross default in other Philippine loans totally unrelated to MRT-3. The government panicked. And the vultures’ $20-worth of paper rose in value, say $40.

Not to be outdone, our local vultures joined the party. After all, they are disciples of Wall Street, if not trained in the USA to do the same financial wizardry. Their dummy firms in the British Virgin Islands became the buyer for $40, with credit provided by Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP) and the Land Bank of the Philippines (LBP). The latter two government financial institutions (GFIs) then purchased the same bonds for $80, in the hope of getting $100 at maturity.

By participating in the financial merry-go-round, the GFIs exceeded the limits of their own charters. An Executive Order had to be issued to provide a legal cover for a transaction that has the appearance of propriety.

With his Wharton credentials, it was no wonder that then DoTC Secretary Mar Roxas found and push aggressively for the Equity Value Buyout (EVBO) of MRTC. But the Senate smelled something fishy, and threw a monkey wrench that stopped the greasy wheels of EVBO — albeit, temporarily.

Everybody made money — from the vultures of Wall Street and their local versions, to the two GFIs, including some powerful individuals who recouped their losses of hidden wealth parked in some esoteric papers in New York City. The government also managed to evade a bad judgment from an arbitration court, or has it?

The paradox, however, is this.

Why allocate $1 billion in the national budget for EVBO that would give windfall to the GFIs, but not a single cent going into badly-needed improvements of the MRT-3 system? At the current exchange rate, that would be more than enough to rebuild the MRT-3 system from scratch — new railcars, new signaling, new tracks, renovated stations, new power systems, etc. And yet, at the end of the financial exercise, control over MRTC remained elusive.

When the dust cleared, who ended up paying for all these? Everybody made money, except poor Juan dela Cruz.

COMMERCIAL INTEREST OVER PUBLIC AND TRANSIT NEEDS

The depot of MRT-3 got built on the property of the National Housing Authority (NHA). NHA management would be at a loss on how several hectares of land on North Triangle ended with the MRT-3 sinners. But that is another story.

A rail system needs a good maintenance facility. That took a back seat to the demands of Mammon.

Occupying a cramped quarter on the basement of Trinoma, the depot can only support 120 railcars, of the double-articulated tram-car type. Not the kind of rail cars you can see on LRT 1 or LRT-2. It is adequate for its current fleet of 72 railcars. But not for system’s ultimate capacity of 145 railcars and passenger volume of 850,000 thousand per day.

To accommodate future expansion and extension, it would need a second depot. That option has been taken away with the construction of the North Loop and the ‘uncommon’ common station.

To begin with, the 1938-model tramcar of MRT-3 were designed for the cities of the former Soviet republics, where passenger demand is light. They got deployed in a high-demand corridor — like tricycles forced to carry daily loads of jeepney passengers.

To deliver the same volume of passengers, MRT would require more railcars than the other two lines.

With the extension to Malabon foreclosed, and the earlier mistake of grade-elevation on EDSA/Tramo, there is very little elbow room left for MRT-3 expansion. Replacing the old cars with more modern light rail vehicles (LRVs) is out of the question.

HOW DID DOTC DOOM THE FUTURE OF MRT-3?

Sometime in 2004, the DoTC proposed to build an entirely new line from North Avenue to Malabon, at twice the cost of extending MRT-3. An exasperated President, who was also desperate for some accomplishments in rail — decided to transfer the extension project to LRTA.

Thus, the MRT-3 extension to Monumento became the North Loop of LRT-1. This has the unintended effect of truncating the future expansion of MRT-3 depriving it of possible a satellite depot.

Before the construction of the North Loop ended, LRTA issued a variation order — to build a “common” station for MRT-3, LRT-1, and MRT-7 nearer to SM North, rather than at North Avenue closer to Trinoma. SM paid LRTA P200 million for the privilege. Board piles and other civil works got erected on the new station location. But the budget for this enlarged station got caught in the transition from the old to new administration. Thus, begun the protracted “war” between the two malls.

To railway engineers, the common station had legal and technical issues. Inter-station distance should not be less than one kilometer so that trains could gain enough speed before decelerating and could be given enough space for turn backs. Locating it nearer SM would meant a short distance from the Roosevelt Station, a downside for LRT-1 operations. Locating it nearer to Trinoma would constrain operations of MRT-3 (and the forthcoming MRT-7). The battle of the malls stretched for more than seven years. 

GAME OF MAINTENANCE CHAIRS

To its credit, MRTC managed to make available 22 trains in service continuously.

By the 10th year of operation, the system needed major rehabilitation and called for a re-pricing of the maintenance contract between MRTC and Sumitomo-TES Philippines. The acolytes of Daang Matuwid saw gold at the darkened shop floors of the depot; so they took out MRTC from the equation and booted out Sumitomo.

When I joined a maintenance review team in 2011, five Japanese engineers of Sumitomo answered all my probing questions — with data. In the case of the other rail lines, I was met by lawyers who blurted out arguments on why they were the chosen people.

What was the DoTC’s excuse for the unilateral abrogation of the maintenance contract?

Since DoTC was paying for the maintenance work as a separate item (rather than bundled into the ERP), it resorted to the golden rule: he who has the gold rules. The overt explanation was that the Sumitomo contract had expired, and something had to be done. Mysteriously, it omitted the fact that the contracts for LRT-1 and LRT-2 were also on extended runs.

With a stroke of the pen, then DOTC Secretary Joseph Emilio A. Abaya launched a game of musical chairs — starting with an interim contractor that had yellow lineage, replaced by another outfit that has the DNA of the first one.

The maintenance responsibilities were sliced into several packages — the better to spread the crumbs on the maintenance table. Then came a third interloper, the progeny of another mysterious negotiation. Busan Universal Railways Inc., emerged with its agricultural credentials hiding behind the facade of a Korean rail operator.

By intervening in the maintenance aspect of MRT-3, DoTC unilaterally changed the Build-Lease-Transfer contract and absolved MRTC of its continuing responsibility to provide 22 trains/hour until termination.

Not only did it upend the capacity-fee modality of the contract, DoTC also handed MRTC a big favor: a valid ground for evading its end-of-contract obligation to turnover full ownership of a rail system in good working conditions. Handing over a carcass in 2025 has become legal.

Given what happened to MRT-3 in the last six years, it is illogical for a new railway maintenance outfit with true credentials to step up on a fixed-price basis. It needs to be omniscient as to discern what had been cannibalized, and make sense of fuzzy maintenance records of the last six years.

In contrast, Sumitomo had a fully functioning computerized system for maintenance management. And since it was the first contractor, its mechanics also got trained on the particulars of the Czech-made railcars and has amassed a detailed history of every item of the system — down to the last screw. Data analytics can then guide the mechanics on the floor on which part to change and when.

Should MRT-3 go back ex-ante, i.e., before the bright boys of Roxas and Abaya ran the system down? Another round of a game of maintenance chairs?

Let’s not forget that maintenance as a business sucks.

To make a profit under a regime of fixed payments, a maintenance contractor can either scrimp on salaries of specialists, or on parts procurement, or both. Both are bad choices. In addition, the client has no full control of his funding — as it is dependent on the caprice of Congress.

Inherently, splitting maintenance from operations is a flawed policy. It precludes the balancing of the conflicting goals of two vital organizational cogs of an efficient urban transit system.

This was the lesson from an operations audit of LRT1 in 1997; it became the basis for my paper “Designing Sustainability into Mass Transit” presented during the 2nd Annual Conference of the Eastern Asia Society for Transportation Studies held in Seoul.

With no rail industry to speak of, the Philippines has a shallow bench to tap. Our railway sector is very small and the technical expertise grew out of the three railway lines — which, unfortunately, had very little parts or system commonalities. Thus, a public tender would be akin to scouring for someone who can repair a Lamborghini in a sea of jeepney mechanics.

MOVING FORWARD

With so many sins committed in the name of MRT-3, the gods must really be very angry. Running after the sinners, however, will be a fool’s errand; the perpetrators are guarded by the best lawyers that money can buy.

Nevertheless, putting one or two of the sinners behind bars will be a better salve than presidential apologies.

It appears that the current administration has not learned from history. It is embarking on the same game of revolving maintenance contractors.

No matter who gets chosen and how transparent the selection process has become, the outcome will be the same. As someone else once said: “Insanity is repeating the same mistakes and expecting different results.”

Privatization of the entire MRT-3 system is the only sensible way forward. This is the path already blazed on LRT-1 and its extension to Niog, Bacoor.

However, privatization is not the same as handing over the system back to a collector company. That is akin to rewarding the sinner. It will be the litmus test whether the administration will make good on its hybrid PPP strategy, or make powerpoint presentation as the conclusion.

A new concessionaire can be granted a long-term contract, say 25 years, to rehabilitate the system and double its capacity in two years. It may take around $400 million to do this.

Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC) has submitted an unsolicited proposal — in September 2011 and in September 2017. That can be a jump off point — for an eventual Swiss Challenge, or a Solicitation Proposal.

The PPP-track will not be a walk in the park. Expect a turbulent ride, more severe than what MRT-3 riders now experience.

Firstly, the bearded landlord could be pesky, as he is wont to do when the smell of money wakes him from stupor. The President could shame him into exile, or throw him into the hands of the millions of parents who saw their dreams for collegiate education of their children vanished. He can checkmated by expropriation. It will not be as bad as the NAIA-3 expropriation, as long as the ERP schedule is honored to re-assure the remaining 22.3% holders of the ERP Bonds.

Secondly, the new PPP contract should avoid the onerous provisions of the 1997 BLT agreement, shield it from future administrative expropriation that the 2015 concession for LRT-1 is vulnerable to, and cut it some slack in setting fares.

A third wrinkle is the Metro Manila Subway.

If it gets completed in 2025, the concessionaire would face a precipitous market share reduction. There are ways to mitigate this.

A journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step. Re-brand MRT-3 into LRT-3, if not the “Yellow Line”, to end the deception.

Besides being more technically honest, it avoids confusing the elevated railway from the forthcoming subway — which is the true MRT.

Rene S. Santiago is a Transport Engineer, a Fellow of the Foundation for Economic Freedom, past president of the Transportation Science Society of the Philippines, and the President of Bellwether Advisory Inc.

AboitizLand to open The Outlets discount mall in Batangas next year



The Outlets will offer premium brands at reduced prices. Phase 1 is targeted for launch by April 2018.

AboitizLand, the new property arm of Aboitiz Equity Ventures Incorporated, will kick-start its commercial interests in Luzon by launching an outlet mall in Batangas.

Called The Outlets, the mall will feature discount shopping all year round on a 9.3-hectare development within the Lima Technology Center in the City of Lipa-Malvar area of Batangas.

The Outlets will have close to 30,000 square meters (sqm) of gross leasable area.

Its general manager, Eduardo Aboitiz, said they hope to open Phase 1 by April 2018.

"We want to offer something different to the Batangas public. We're trying to deviate from the traditional box-type mall and offer open spaces and something for everybody to appreciate. We're also going to have a multi-sport field as well as events on weekends," he said in a recent event.

Aboitiz added that both international and local brands will be offered.

"It's a mix, yes, we will have international brands but we also want local brands because this is for the local catchment area, this is for Batangas, so we also want to showcase what Batangas has to offer. We feel that this specific area is an underserved market considering that the catchment area only has 2 or 3 malls and no mall with this type of configuration," he explained.

Phase 1, according to Aboitiz, will offer 140 leasable spaces which will house restaurants and premium brands at reduced price points.

The firm said it positioned The Outlets to complement its existing mixed-use development project in the area which so far has an economic zone, as well as a multi-sport field and a hotel.

The project, it added, is also expected to generate at least 700 jobs on top of the existing 60,000 workforce inside the economic zone.

Majority of AboitizLand's projects are in Cebu but it has made headway in Luzon through its properties in Batangas in recent years.

Aside from the Lima Technology Center, AboitizLand launched its first Luzon-based residential venture, the 43-hectare Seafront Residences in San Juan, Batangas, last March.

Batangas, along with neighboring provinces Cavite and Laguna, is one of the high-growth areas outside Manila. It is expected to benefit from infrastructure projects such as the Cavite-Laguna Expressway (CALAX) and the South line of the Philippine National Railways (PNR) extension.