Lawmaker pushes underride rear guards for trucks
MANILA, Philippines - An administration lawmaker called for the enactment of a new safety law that requires the compulsory installation of underride rear guards for trucks, trailers, and other heavy motor vehicles to prevent fatal accidents arising from collisions between heavy and light motor vehicles.
Quezon City Rep. Winston Castelo has filed House Bill 5930, or the Truck Rear Underride Safety Act of 2012, which prescribes motor vehicle safety standards by requiring heavy motor vehicle manufacturers to install cheap underride rear guards to protect smaller vehicles from adverse effects of at least 40 kilometer per hour crashes.
The bill seeks to mandate the Department of Transportation and Communications (DOTC) to provide the implementing technical guidelines for the design of what the bill has described as “cheap, lightweight, and economical” underride rear guards for heavy motor vehicles.
Justifying his bill, Castelo said these vehicular accidents could have been avoided had manufacturers installed those “effective, economical, and lightweight” underride rear guards on heavier vehicles. “New regulations should consider as permissible guard height above the ground to be within 16 to 18 inches to prevent smaller vehicles from decapitation,” he said.
The guard’s strength requirement should be beyond the minimum collision rate of at least 40 kilometers per hour, he said, adding that the point of impact should prevent light vehicles from going underneath a heavy motor vehicle.
Castelo said the compulsory installation of rear underride guards is urgent – from about 3,000 road accidents in 1998 the number rose to over 10,000 in 2003.
At least 72 percent of those road accidents happened in Metro Manila, he said, adding the enactment of the proposed safety standard law could reduce the number of such road accidents.