Poe panel launches inquiry on child car seat law, vehicle inspection issues
The Senate Committee on Public Services will begin tackling next week issues in the transportation sector, particularly in the implementation of the Child Safety in Motor Vehicles Act, and the complaints against Private Motor Vehicle Inspection Centers (PMVICs).
Senator Grace Poe, committee chairperson, said on Twitter Friday that a public hearing is set on Tuesday morning, February 9.

(Senate of the Philippines / FILE PHOTO / MANILA BULLETIN)
Officials of implementing agencies Department of Transportation and Land Transportation Office are expected to be invited by the Senate panel to shed light on the two issues.
Six senators earlier filed a resolution calling for the suspension of the implementation of the Child Safety in Motor Vehicles Act, "until the necessary guidelines are put in place and agency mandates are fulfilled."
The law, signed in 2019, requires private vehicles to install appropriate car seats for child passengers aged 12 and below and shorter than 4'11".
While lauding the intention of the law, Sens. Poe, Sonny Angara, Joel Villanueva, Juan Miguel Zubiri, Nancy Binay, and Sherwin Gatchalian questioned the timing of its implementation since the country continues to grapple the COVID-19 pandemic and the recession it caused.
Buying the car seats will "undoubtably add to the financial burden of motorists," they said in filing Senate Resolution No. 633 last February 2.
The DoTr decided last Tuesday, February 2, to defer the rollout of the child restraint requirement considering the COVID-19 pandemic and pending the information campaign that it will conduct.
LTO also assured that there will be no apprehensions yet for the violations of the RA 11229.
On Wednesday, February 3, Poe filed Resolution No. 634, which seeks to look into the operations of PMVICs amid complaints from motorists about their high inspection fees.
She said the fees "cannot come at a worse time in the middle of a pandemic where people are barely getting by and now have to add another item in their list of expenses".
She also cited the "unreliability" of inspection results and the alleged lack of transparency and consultation with stakeholders, which, she said, could provide "an avenue for corruption".
Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph Recto, for his part, called for the suspension of the operations of all PMVICs "until a comprehensive public consultation is conducted".
"At this time of the pandemic when the people are facing a health crisis and an economic downturn that is causing suffering, fear and anxiety, our people should not be further burdened by regulatory measures with questionable procedures, imposing exorbitant fees with doubtful effectiveness, and implemented without proper public consultation," said Recto, who filed a separate resolution on the matter Thursday, February 4.