Six months since it was first implemented at the start of the Enhanced Community Quarantine (ECQ) in March, San Miguel Corporation’s (SMC) free toll assistance to medical frontliners has already reached P72.4 million in free toll and has served over 10,000 medical frontliners in Metro Manila and in nearby provinces.
The program, which is in effect at the STAR tollway, South Luzon Expressway (SLEX), Skyway system, NAIA Expressway, and the Tarlac-Pangasinan-La Union Expressway (TPLEX), regularly benefits medical frontliners—among them doctors, nurses, medical and laboratory technicians. The program will continue for those who availed of it until the pandemic passes.
“There is still much we have to be grateful for, thanks to the continued service, dedication, and sacrifices of our medical frontliners.”
“It has been six months since we started the free toll program for medical frontliners. Despite the worst and longest health and economic crisis we have experienced as a country, there is still much we have to be grateful for, thanks to the continued service, dedication, and sacrifices of our medical frontliners,” said SMC president Ramon S. Ang.
“Through this program, and others we’ve implemented in the last six months, I hope we are able to show our continuing gratitude and support for the medical sector. We have covered almost all critical medical facilities. We will continue to provide them free toll indefinitely at all our expressways, and come up with other ways to extend assistance to our brave frontliners nationwide,” Ang said.
With most crucial medical frontliners now covered by the privilege, SMC subsidiary SMC Infrastructure has ended processing new applications for free toll for medical frontliners.
The amount of qualified applications the company has received had already gone down significantly, as most medical frontliners using the expressways have already secured their special RFID stickers by now.
With this, the infrastructure subsidiary is focusing on processing the increased number of new applications for free RFID toll collection stickers from regular motorists, prior to the full implementation on November 2 of 100% cashless, electronic toll collection at all expressways, as required by government.
Since the start of the pandemic, SMC’s assistance package of P500 million for medical frontliners has resulted in donations to hospitals nationwide of capacity-building and life-saving equipment.
These include personal protective equipment; RT-PCR Test machines, fully-automated RNA Extraction machines and PCR test kits that raised the country’s testing capacity by 15,000 tests daily, 55 adult nasal high-flow machines, construction of temporary quarantine facilities nationwide, among others.
Aside from waiving toll fees for medical frontliners at all its expressways, SMC has for many months also donated fuel for the government’s free shuttle service for medical workers.
Aside from waiving toll fees for medical frontliners at all its expressways, SMC has for many months also continued to donate free fuel for the government’s free shuttle service for medical workers.
Recently, it committed to provide free life insurance worth P2 million each for a target 5,000 medical workers in hospitals all over Cebu. As of early September, 4,188 were already provided coverage, with the remainder in process.