Chiz Escudero wants DPWH to standardize road signs, streetlights, sidewalks
Senator Francis Escudero wants the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) to ensure road safety in the Philippines by setting specific standards and measurements for all road infrastructure such as streetlights, road signs, waiting sheds, sidewalks, pavement markings and speed bumps across the country.
Escudero filed Senate Bill No. 2886 which aims to regulate road infrastructures to provide reliable road instructions to motorists and improve road safety in the Philippines.
“There is a need to put in place regulations that will promote a uniform and consistent standard for the design and installation of road signs, waiting sheds, streetlights, speed bumps and other road infrastructures not only to promote safety but also to advance aesthetics throughout the country’s thoroughfares,” Escudero said.
According to the World Health Organization, about 7,000 Filipinos die each year, and thousands more are injured due to road mishaps. Out of this number, 79 percent are due to driver’s errors, 11 percent due to defective vehicles, and 10 percent due to bad road conditions and ill-maintained roads.
The latest data from the Department of Transportation and Communication (DOTC) show that death toll due to road mishaps rises by almost 14.6 percent every year. It is projected that by 2020, without any intervention, around 300,000 people will die due to road crashes, the DOTC said.
“Our roads have become safety hazards in themselves. The government should step up in securing the well-being of motorists and the riding public by upgrading and regulating the country’s road infrastructures, which have been neglected for so long,” Escudero said.
In the senator’s proposal, the DPWH is tasked with setting and defining the specifications and measurements of all national, provincial, city, municipal and barangay road and street signs, sidewalks, streetlights and other similar road infrastructures, which shall be in accordance with the universally accepted designs and installations suitable to the country’s standards.
Escudero emphasized that the DPWH should have no problem with this additional mandate as it has the second largest allocation in the 2015 national budget at P290.5 billion.
The DPWH will also coordinate with the Department of the Interior and Local Government in order to promulgate the implementing rules and regulations once the proposal in approved.
Under the bill, any person or local government unit who will not abide by the set standards will pay a fine not exceeding P100,000.