Tapatan sa Aristocrat Special Edition on Biking Advocacy |
During the
weekly Tapatan sa Aristocrat, representatives from both the government and the private sector came together to discuss how biking can be safer and more
sustainable transport means. It was attended by the Department of Transportation
Assistant Secretary, Engr. Bert Suansing; Dr. Antonio Dans of the Philippine
General Hospital and the Health Professionals Alliance Against COVID-19
(HPAAC); Allianz PNB Life Chief Marketing Officer Gino Riola; Metropolitan
Manila Development Authority Traffic Discipline Office Director Noemi Recio;
and Mia Bunao of Kalyetista.
According to
Dr. Dans, biking meets the recommendations on transportation safety of the
HPAAC, which includes adequate ventilation, physical distancing, shortened
interaction, and personal protection.
“Bikes can satisfy all four criteria. In fact, some of the oldest companies making bikes in the United States began in 1918 and continued to make bikes today because it really helped people travel safely. Biking is really protective. At MMDA, we fully support biking. In fact, kahit wala pang pandemic, nagkaroon na ng protected bike lanes ang MMDA. Lahat na ginawa naming bike lanes are all protected (In fact, even when there was no pandemic, the MMDA already put up protected bike lanes. All the bike lanes we put up are protected).” ~Dr. Antonio Dans of the Philippine General Hospital and the Health Professionals Alliance Against COVID-19 (HPAAC)
He added that
bicycles were being promoted during the 1918 pandemic as an alternative to
trains, buses, and other forms of public transportation.
Dr. Dans
underlined the importance of future-proofing the country’s bike lanes as it
could help lower the risk of future pandemics; reduce traffic and traffic
accidents; reduce pollution and cancer; increase physical activity; control
obesity; and diabetes, hypertension, stroke, and heart attack.
She added that
the MMDA currently has bike repair stations along EDSA that are mostly located
underneath flyovers.
Allianz PNB
Life, meanwhile, recently launched a Ride Safe campaign, which seeks to promote
biking as a healthy and sustainable means of transport. Last week, it signed a
partnership with San Juan, which made it the Official Life Insurance Partner of
the city’s own Bike Safety campaign.
“Sa Allianz, nais naming palawakin ang pagbibisikleta. Doon nagsimula ‘yung insipirasyon na makisali kami sa mga local government units na ayun din ang pakay. Kaya nagsimula ang partnership kasama ng San Juan at ninanais namin na magpatuloy ito (At Allianz, we want to promote biking. That’s how the inspiration started to work with local government units that have the same goal. This is also how our partnership with San Juan started, and we hope that we could continue this). Madalas nakikita natin sa ating lipunan, hindi nangyayari kasi nagiisa ang isang grupo. Pero pag sama-sama nangyayari. (Oftentimes, we see that ideas don’t materialize because there is only one group working. If we work together, we can make things happen.” ~Gino Riola, Allianz PNB Life Chief Marketing Officer
Gino Riola, Chief Marketing Officer, Allianz PNB Life |
In line with
this partnership, Allianz has provided safety bollards and other infrastructure
for San Juan’s bike lanes. It is also putting up a solar-powered bike pit stop,
a first in the Philippines, which will have a parking area, bikers’ resting
area, and a small footprint bike repair station.
Bunao of the
bikers’ group, Kalyetista, pointed out that the pandemic ushered in something
that they have been asking and fighting for.
For people who
don’t have bikes but would like to take up biking, the government has rolled
out a Bike-Sharing Program, where people could borrow bikes equipped with GPS
for a certain fee.
“We have to do it the right way the first time. Anything infrastructure is really expensive, and if you don’t do it the right way, sayang po siya (Anything infrastructure is really expensive, and if you don’t do it the right way, it would just be a waste).” ~Mia Bunao of KalyetistaBuano recommended that government agencies come up with bicycle commuting programs and set up bicycle parking systems.
“Para sa mga taong gustong magbisikleta, under the Bayanihan 2, actually isang bilyon ang nilaan natin diyan, ‘yung bike lanes at bike-sharing. Hindi lang ‘yan sa Metro Manila. Tatlong lugar. Meron din sa Cebu at sa Davao. Isang parte niyan tungkol sa bike-sharing na station to station ‘yan, pwede mong hiramin yung bisikleta. Of course, may bayad yan. We still have to compute the absolute figure, pero siguradong mas mura yan kesa magko-commute ka using the bus or jeepney per kilometer (For those who would like to bike, under the Bayanihan 2, we have allotted PhP1 billion for bike lanes and bike-sharing. It’s not only in Metro Manila, but in Cebu and Davao as well. A part of that is for bike-sharing. You can borrow bikes from station to station. It has a payment. We still have to compute the absolute figure, but it would be much cheaper than jeepney or bus fares per kilometer).” ~Engr. Bert Suansing, Department of Transportation Assistant SecretaryConcluding, Riola said that in order to further promote biking as an alternative means of transport, awareness, education, and partnership are needed.
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