The Motorcycle Development Program Participants Association, Inc. (MDPPA) is putting in the work to make roads safer, reaching more than 1,000 Filipinos through its Road Safety Seminars in just the first half of 2025.
Kicking things off in February, MDPPA held two major events at the University of Makati. The first session, held on the 13th, welcomed 65 students from the College of Business and Financial Science and the Institute of Imaging Health Sciences. The format was simple but effective — real talk on road safety, hands-on learning, and takeaway materials.
Two weeks later, on 27 February, MDPPA returned with an even bigger session attended by 345 students from seven colleges and institutes. The large turnout showed how deeply the message of responsible road use is starting to resonate with the younger crowd.
The reach didn’t stop at schools. On 25 April, MDPPA collaborated with the Dualtech Training Center Foundation Inc., bringing safety lessons to 155 technical-vocational students, many of whom will soon be on the road themselves as part of their future jobs.
By May, the focus shifted to enforcers. A total of 139 traffic personnel from Quezon City’s Traffic and Transport Management Department got a refresher on proper road discipline and accident prevention. The training aimed to sharpen their ability to manage traffic safely and responsibly.
Then came Road Safety Week on 20 May, when MDPPA partnered with the Land Transportation Office (LTO) for a focused session with 77 motorcycle riders. Topics ranged from interpreting road signs to managing emotions while riding — small things that make a big difference in real-world traffic.
Two days later, MDPPA was back in Quezon City, this time engaging 232 local government employees and riders. It was another solid step toward building a culture of safety in one of the country’s busiest cities.
Rounding out the semester was a 12 June seminar in Tanay, Rizal, done in collaboration with the local government. Seventy-five residents took part in the session, which focused on basic but essential riding habits and road awareness.
All in all, MDPPA has trained 1,088 people so far this year. And they’re not slowing down.
“Through these seminars, we are not just imparting knowledge,” said Michael Lopez, Road Safety Committee Chairperson. “We are shaping a safety-first mindset that resonates with every generation of riders.”
More events are lined up for the second half of 2025, keeping MDPPA’s mission on track: to help make the Philippines’ roads safer, one rider at a time.