Ever saw someone having trouble parking and immediately assumed the driver was female? How about assuming the same about slow drivers?
Republic Act No. 10586 or the Anti-Drunk and Drugged Driving Act was enacted into law on May 27, 2013.
If you’re among the thousands of commuters who brave long terminal lines and hour’s worth of traffic just to travel from home to work and vice versa, chances are, for you, buying a car is impractical and quite expensive.
New Russian road safety regulations bar transsexuals, transvestites and others with sexual "disorders" from driving, ostensibly for medical reasons.
When I became separated and started living alone, the household hand I sorely missed was the family driver. Ours could do many things beyond his job description, even type lease contracts. But driving being the immediate need, I was forced to buy an automatic car—I couldn’t drive a conventional one.
Two new laws may not untangle gridlocks on Edsa, but they will help make commuters in public utility vehicles (PUVs) feel safer.
The Anti-Distracted Driving Act (ADDA) or Republic Act (RA) No. 10913 was implemented last week (May 18). As with all things new, however, there were some who chafed at the rules that prohibit motorists from using electronic gadgets while driving. This includes texting and making calls (with some exceptions), reading e-books, surfing the internet and watching movies.
For me, the greatest entitlement that women should avail of, aside from working and having a bank account, is the freedom to drive motor vehicles.
You don’t decline an endorsement deal worth millions, right? But Heart Evangelista did — all because she doesn’t know how to drive.
Connie Sison tried driving once again recently, but soon enough she was reminded of why she doesn’t even like to take the wheel anymore.