Category: Transportation

  • Legislator promises to develop Ekiti Central Constituency

    Legislator promises to develop Ekiti Central Constituency

    House of Representatives, member representing Ekiti Central Constituency II, comprising Ijero, Ekiti West and Efon Local Government Areas of Ekiti State, Hon. Olamide Oni has said that human and infrastructural development of the constituency will be his priority.

    He made this remark at a reception organised in his honour at Lapour Hotel, Abuja by his Committee of Friends.

    Oni, a lawyer, said: “We have to build our democracy on strong human capital in order to sustain all other achievements. Hence our youths and women should be equipped to become chief agents and stakeholders in our developmental strive.”

    He said the era of government of the elite has terminated, after 16 years of unbroken democracy, adding that what is now in place is “a government of the people by the people and for the people, which requires that the people must be well equipped to shoulder the responsibility for their actions and become partners in progress.”

     

  • Wanted: Safety roadmap against tanker accidents, fire

    Wanted: Safety roadmap against tanker accidents, fire

    No fewer than 80 persons have been killed and property worth millions of Naira destroyed in fuel tanker explosions in four states. Some state governments, transport experts and stakeholders are back to the drawing board for a solution to falling tankers and an end to the explosions, ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE reports.

    ANAMBRA STATE Governor Willy Obiano couldn’t hide   his grief penultimate Sunday. He wept on seeing the carnage and charred remains of 69 persons, including an expectant mother and children who were burnt, after a petrol tanker rammed into the Asaba Motor Park in Onitsha, the Southeast commercial hub.

    Barely 48 hours later, a similar incident occurred in Lagos when a petrol laden tanker fell off the Iyana-Ipaja Bridge and exploded around 2a.m.

    Though no lives were lost, many lost virtually everything they had laboured for. Traders who keep daily proceeds in their shops lost their goods and money.

    A victim, Mrs Bisi Idowu, said: “I am naked now, with nothing in the world.”

    That night, fuel tankers also caught fire in Magbon, Badagry and Ojo.

    On June 5, at Idimu in Alimoso Local Government Area of Lagos State, another tanker exploded, destroying about 34 houses, 70 shops and one tricycle.  At Oribawa, Bus Stop on Lekki-Epe Expressway, 48 hours later, a similar incident occured.

    On June 3, 10 persons died when a petrol tanker rammed into the roadside market on Ilesa-Akure Road, following a brake failure. A similar incident was recorded in front of the Ambrose Alli University, in Ekpoma, Edo State.

     

    Tragic routine

     

    Falling petrol laden tankers are becoming a routine.

    The Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) said petrol tankers and articulated vehicles constituted over 70 percent of the terror on the roads. It identified over-speeding, drink driving, poorly maintained vehicles and bad road networks as some of the causes of accidents.

    A recent statistics showed that 70 percent of about 358 accidents between 1999 and 2002, involved articulated trucks. The survey said about 32 per cent of truck drivers are negligent, immature and inexperienced to handle the vehicles as they are below age 30.

     

    How did we get here?

     

    Economic growth was stunted. Public infrastructure, especially road and railway, suffered when the Federal Government’s National Economic Development Plan was stopped in the 70s because of the 30-month civil war.

    The abandonment of the railway service resulted in the government providing an easier route to cargo and passenger transportation.

    The unregulated scenario left all manner of operators engaging in transportation of goods, including flammable items like petroleum and gas products.

    FRSC said about 100,000 petroleum tankers are operating on the nation roads as at today.

    The collapse of other NNPC depots  also made Lagos, with a forest of 45 private tank farms,  the supplier of all the products needed across the country.

    A source in FRSC said if all tankers and trailers lined up in a single file from Apapa,  they would almost reach the Ibadan, Oyo State capital’s defunct toll gate.

    Derelict depots and    unsafe pipelines

     

    To avert petrol tanker accidents, transport experts averred that all the depots across the country must work.

    “If all depots in Kano, Borno, Warri and elsewhere work optimally, the products would be supplied by the pipelines through the depots and tankers would not need to travel far distances to load for end-point supplies, an expert advised.

    He canvassed an urgent de-centralisation of the loading of petroleum products by the Federal Government to reduce pressure, especially on the Lagos roads.

    The Executive Secretary of the Major Oil Marketers Association (MOMAN), Mr Obafemi Olawore, who spoke in the same vein, flayed the situation where Lagos remains the only loading depots for all petroleum tankers in the country.

    He said the situation where 100,000 tankers come to Lagos to lift the product is not only cumbersome and unhealthy, but over-stretches the state’s road infrastructure.

    It also leads to weariness on the part of the drivers who are under pressure by their employers to deliver timely and on schedule.

    Similar view was canvassed by the FRSC Lagos Sector Commander Mr Hyginus Omeje, who urged the Federal Government to revisit all challenges inhibiting the effective functioning of all NNPC depots with the aim of finding a lasting solution to them.

    The pipelines, he said, must also be adequately utilised and policed for effective supply of the products to all the depots in the country.

     

    A panel and summit

     

    Because it remains the nation’s economic capital (hosting the busiest gateways either by air or sea), Lagos, which controls about 70 percent of Nigeria’s industrial and commercial activities has continued to attract articulated vehicles and trucks.

    Mr Ayo Ogunbiyi, a staff of the Lagos State government contends that a state housing 22 industrial estates, 2,000 industrial complexes, a Free Export Trade Zone (FETZ), 10,000 commercial complexes, representing 60 percent of the nation’s industrial and commercial ventures, 70 percent of national maritime cargo freight, and 50 percent of nation’s petroleum products consumption, needs to be proactive in preventing accidents.

    In his work; “Lagos fire, articulated vehicles and road accidents,” Ogunbiyi argued that since increased influx would bring more accidents and fire explosion government need to plan.

    That was exactly what the state Governor Mr Akinwumi Ambode decided to do when he set up a committee to probe the accidents.

    Those accidents, Ambode said,  must be tackled and those culpable prosecuted.

    Ambode urged strict compliance with the traffic law and directed total enforcement of the law.

    He asked the Secretary to the State Government Mr Tunji Bello’s 10-man panel to investigate the immediate and remote causes of tanker explosions.

    He charged the committee to prepare guidelines for the ethical conduct for tankers and articulated vehicles drivers and to task insurance operators to come up with new policies aimed at protecting the victims.

    The FRSC said it would also be organising a national summit for tanker drivers and owners at Abuja.

    The Lagos and Ogun Zonal Commander, Assistant Corps Marshal (ACM) Nse Obong Akpabio, who disclosed this said the crashes are worrisome, and the Corps Marshal Boboye Oyeyemi, has ordered full investigation and total enforcement.

    He said the summit with the theme: “Haulage operations for national development,” is to address the ugly trend of tanker crashes in the country.

    Akpabio urged tanker owners to train their employees and improve the maintenance of their vehicles.

    He said all old articulated vehicles must also be removed from the roads.

     

    Workable suggestions

     

    Besides the effective optimisation of the depots, Olawore challenged the Federal Government to fix all inter-state road networks, and ensure these roads have appropriate road infrastructure fittings such as reflective signs and markings.

    State governments should also complement this by fixing the inner roads, making movement easy for all motorists.

    He said all the three tiers of government must not relent, but increase their spend on the provision of safe, motorable roads across the country.

    He equally canvassed the return of  tank wagon train services, adding that the train ought to be optimised as it could carry more products out of the Ports from where it could be redistributed to other parts of the country.

    According to him, since two years ago when the Nigeria Railway Corporation (NRC) acquired 40 oil bearing tank wagons, they are yet to  be put to use.

    He said because each wagons carries 100,000 litres of petroleum products, it is evident that wagons would go a long way in resolving the carnage on the road.

    Olawore equally called on the Federal Government to address the concentration of tank farms in Lagos.

    According to him, since the standard global practice is to relocate the ports to more remote areas anytime communal activities are catching up with it, it would not be bad idea if federal government begin to consider the relocation of the ports and the tank farms from Apapa to deflood the area and reduce the exposure of residence along the axis to danger.

    He called for the strict enforcement of all traffic laws on errant drivers and owners of the vehicles by all state governments.

    Olawore called for the duplication of drivers institute such as it exist in Lagos across the country for the regular training and retraining of all professional drivers including  petroleum tanker drivers.

    He equally canvassed strict compliance to speed limit by tanker drivers, whether on intercity highways or intracity road network.

    The MOMAN chief, called for regular health checks, including eye tests for all drivers and their assistants, even as he challenged them to always observe rest to avoid fatigue on the road. The drivers must regularly be subjected to tolerance training.

    He said on no account should any driver hand the steering over to his assistant as this have been known to be reasons behind many accident cases in the past.

    Olawore called on vehicle owners to ensure regular maintenance of their vehicle. “The maintenance is not only about the engine, other aspects includes the electrical workings, new good tyres, good wipers, headlamps and rear lamps on the vehicles. Owners must also install a tracking device on all their vehicles,” he said.

    PTD spokesman Comrade  Adebayo Atanda said the PTD leadership has directed that no driver should henceforth drive at night.

    According to him, this is to further assist emergency responders as it is usually easier and quicker to respond to any emergency at daytime than if it happens at night.

    Secondly, he said “all drivers have been told to refuse to sit behind the wheel of a vehicle which is not fit for the roads.”

    He said PTD is ready to work with the VIOs in all states to weed out old tankers and ensure they are promptly removed from the road.

    Atanda who said the association is equally committed to reducing the carnage on the roads, challenged the government to fix the roads before taking their anger on the drivers for accidents which might have been prevented had the roads been good.

    NEMA’s Southwest Media Coordinator Mr Ibrahim Farinloye said there is need for massive citizenship education on how to react to emergencies.

    According to him, rather than helping the situation, the massing of people at scenes of incidents are drawbacks for emergency responders as it hinders evacuation and safety operations.

    “We need to begin to sensitise the people on what to do in case of emergencies. How do they respond, how can they help those in distress, and who to call. Most times getting to the scene of incident becomes hazardous even to emergency responders as such places would have been taken over by miscreants,” Farinloye said.

     

    Conclusion

     

    Even as the government also considers the role of the citizens in helping to minimise the trauma of tanker accident and attendant explosion, there is also the need to ensure harsh punishment is meted out to reckless drivers to serve as deterrent.

    Since issues of negligence such as reckless driving, driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol, fatigue, and inexperience among others are at the heart of over 80 percent of the crashes, stiff penalties ought to be meted out to drivers and their employers and owners whose costly mistakes have caused others untold hardship.

    ‘If all depots in Kano, Borno, Warri and elsewhere work optimally, the products would be supplied by the pipelines through the depots and tankers would not need to travel far distances to load for end-point supplies’

     

  • ‘Stop pleading for traffic offenders’

    The Ogun State Traffic Compliance and Enforcement Corps (TRACE) has urged monarchs, political leaders and other dignitaries to stop pleading for motorists and motorcyclists arrested for breaking traffic rules.

    According to Ota Zone II Commanding Officer Adekunle Ajibade, pleading for traffic offenders is like promoting indiscipline among road users.

    He was briefing reporters in his office on the crashes in Ado Odo/Ota Local Government Area of the state in which some lives were lost.

    Ajibade described those who drive against traffic as killers who are not worth pleading for, but should be made to face the law.

    “Pleading for traffic offenders gives them more confidence to continue flouting traffic laws. It gives them assurance that someone will plead for them after committing an offence, he said.”

    Such pleads, he said, made it difficult for the agency to curb reckless driving.

    Giving instances where reckless driving had resulted into fatal accident, Ajibade said one person was killed last Friday by a motorcyclist otherwise known as okada rider, who rode against the traffic at late hour. He said the two Okada riders had a head-on collision because one of them had no headlight and was over-speeding.

    Also at Abestos Bus Stop on Lagos/Abeokuta Expressway, he said a Peugeot 504 saloon car with registration number BG 719 BEN, also rammed into an abandoned blue Mercedes Benz Cabstar truck with registration number APP 345 XF, due to overloading and overspeeding.

    A girl believed to be about 10 years old, who sat in the front of the car died instantly while several others were injured.

    According to him, there was another accident on Owode-Ijako Road, after Sona Breweries also in Ota, involving a Ford bus marked FKJ 885 XF, which rammed into a damaged MAN Diesel truck parked on the road, killing a woman and injuring several others.

    Ajibade asked motorists to be safety conscious, urging them to stop parking indiscriminately on the road.

    According to him, any illegally parked vehicle will be impounded and the driver/owner prosecuted.

    He advised motorcyclists to use crash helmets and obey traffic rules.

    The Corps Director of Operations, Prince Olaseni Ogunyemi, also reiterated the need for road users to be safety conscious.

    He appealed to motorists and commercial cyclists to avoid speeding and to ensure they use safety helmets, avoid overloading and reckless driving.

    According to him, enough public campaigns and enlightenment had been done by the traffic managers. The next stage, Ogunyemi said, is enforcement, adding that the Corps will no longer tolerate indiscipline from riders and drivers.

    He said anyone flouting traffic rules would be prosecuted and undergo psychiatric test.

  • LASTMA launches 23 tow vehicles to tackle gridlock

    When the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) went on a road show with its 23 tow trucks, the intention was not to scare motorists, many of who dread the agency’s officials.

    Rather, it was to demonstrate its enhanced capacity to decongest traffic and get motorists moving in record time.

    The vehicles, which are of various capacities, will help reduce the 40 million manhour said to have been lost to accidents, traffic gridlocks and delays, last year.

    LASTMA’s Deputy Comptroller Mr. Philip Ogunlade told The Nation that the agency would key into the vision of Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, who on Wednesday, urged it to stop harassing motorists.

    He said the trucks would assist the agency to improve on traffic flow by the speedy removal of broken down vehicles, adding that this would enhance the implementation of traffic laws.

    According to Ogunlade, LASTMA has also embarked on reforms to reposition the agency.

    He said the agency has continued to improve its human and institutional capacity for an accident-free and unimpeded flow of traffic in the state.

    The agency had been incapacitated in the past in this area because of its relevance on privately owned tow trucks which were often ineffective and inadequate.

    That was why former Governor Mr Babatunde Fashola invested in the rehabilitation of the vehicles which had been grounded for years.

    The LASTMA chief said the agency has embarked on human capacity training to ensure seamless traffic flow.

    He said: “Our personnel have undergone local and overseas trainings in order to improve traffic management efficiency and service delivery. This is coupled with other trainings on good conduct; inter-personal relationship, quick response to road safety and emergency and having a knowledge of the law.”

    These trainings were responsible for the new found relationship between the agency, stakeholders and motoring public and an improved motorists’ voluntary compliance with traffic laws.

    LASTMA’s Provost Marshal Mr Biliamin Apena said many departments have been re-organised, repackaged, upgraded and equipped with state- of- the- art facilities to improve their efficiency.

    Apena, who confirmed that the agency’s image is still being soiled by some of its officers, said LASTMA has sufficient rules to deal with bad eggs.

    He said: “At all our trainings or seminars, the attention of our men are drawn to the state traffic laws, the criminal code and the Nigerian Constitution. We have also being sanctioning our men and between 2003 and last year, over 400 LASTMA officers were either disciplined, sanctioned or prosecuted.”

    Apena said adequate provisions are in place to take care of the welfare of all its officers adding that they now work in a serene work environment to boost officers’ morale.

    The government, he said, have also placed premium on traffic officers’ safety and security through the provision of insurance and welfare package while an annual award was instituted to appreciate dedicated staff.    He said many were dismissed for various acts that were at variance with the state Civil Service rules and regulations.

    The Head of Recovery Department Mr Henry Akintomide said the refurbished tow vehicles would boost the agency‘s capacity to remove broken down vehicles from the roads, help ensure safety, free flow of and improve service delivery.

    He urged public to respect traffic law and cooperate with traffic officers.

    He also urged aggrieved motorists to make use of LASTMA’s feedback mechanism to lodge complaints against any infraction against any LASTMA officers. “Such would be treated with despatch and without fear or favour,”Akintomide said.

  • Wanted: Road map for transportation

    Wanted: Road map for transportation

    What will President Muhammadu Buhari do about the transport sector? Will his administration midwife a sustainable transport policy and deliver on an intermodal system? These are some of the posers by experts who set a transportation agenda for  the government, writes Adeyinka Aderibigbe

    FOR many Nigerians,  transportation begins and ends with road.

    This has put too much pressure on the roads, which are carrying more than their fair share of the burden of movement.

    The other less exploited modes of transportation are rail, sea and air.

    The pressure and neglect of the roads have turned them into death traps, making them one of the most unsafe in the world.

     

    State of roads

    The road asset is put at N8 trillion. It accounts for over 90 percent of Nigeria’s passenger and cargo traffic.

    While the yearly national auto-density is 10 percent, with most states averaging 2.5 to eight percent, Lagos’ auto density is 30 percent.

    With a total road network of 193,198 km (120, 048 mi), most Nigerians travel by bus or taxi.          In 1970s and 1980s, the Federal Government built and upgraded many expressways and trans-regional trunk roads; the states upgraded smaller roads which opened up the rural areas. This intervention stopped in the last 20 years.

    The immediate past Jonathan administration said 71 per cent of federal roads across the six geo-political zones were amended.

    Former Minister of Works Mike Onolememen, said over N2 trillion was spent on them.

    According to him, from about 5,000km of “fair roads” in 2011, Nigeria now has about 25,000km out of about 35,000km federal roads in good and motorable condition with alignments that can compete favorably with similar roads anywhere in the world.

    Critics however said road contracts have become a bazaar for  slush funds. Over N7 trillion may have been spent in the last 30 years on the nation’s roads.

    Human rights groups said the nation’s roads construction, remain one of the most expensive in the world, (going by the World Bank estimates).

    Experts enjoined the nation would do well to begin to de-emphasise road transportation for a shift to multimodal system to resolve the nation’s transportation challenges.

    Besides many other outstanding road projects Nigerians expect the government to finally lay the ghost of the second Niger Bridge to rest.

    The rail, road, water and air modes they argued, must be reinvented and returned to the path of efficiency.

     

    Demand for new railway

    The Nigeria Railway Corporation (NRC), a colonial creation, got its most remarkable support ever under President Goodluck Jonathan. He believed the railway is the backbone of mass transit.

    In 2011, government drew a 25-year master plan for the development of the railway, and began a push that would see much of its needs met through Public Private Partnership (PPP) platform.

    This is coming from the realisation that the government cannot solely fund the nation’s railway. That was after spending N2 trillion on the relaying of the old narrow gauge tracks, and the purchase of new rolling stock over the past five years. The revamp has yielded result. Passenger traffic is projected to hit five million by year end, while over 400,000 metric tons of goods are being freighted from the Apapa Ports to Kano monthly.

    Nigeria has 3,557 km (2,210 mi) of railway track. The main line, a colonial heritage completed in 1911, linked Lagos to Kano.

    Transport expert Mr. Kayode Oyesiku, however said spending on the railway had been wrong headed. He called on government to invest more on standard gauge, adding that the narrow gauge has outlived its relevance and necessity.

    Oyesiku, a Professor of Transport Studies and deputy national President of the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport (CILT), said the present trains won’t bring return on investment. He added that even at the ports, the standard gauge would increase efficiency.  “For as long as the government continues to rehabilitate the narrow gauge, so long would it continue to be a wasted effort,” Oyesiku said.

     

    Water Transportation

    A major arm of international trade, water transportation is seen as a major route for the shipping of goods.

    However, though the nation has seven ocean ports, only two, (Apapa and Tin Can Island), in Lagos, were connected to the rail, a development which has restricted the optimisation of the railway’s freight services’ capacity. For efficiency, ports must be connected by rails.

    On the local scene, the Nigeria Inland Waterways Authority (NIWA) which was to drive local investment in the water transportation sector had made but little impact until lately.While the agency continues to navigate the harsh environment for investors in the sector, it remained encumbered by challenges such as very dirty channels, and the dreaded water hyacinth that made navigation a major issue.

    Experts believed the way out remain strengthening of the laws safeguarding the waterways, encouraging the local investors and direct investment of the government in the procurement of wide bodied ferries which would not only force down commuting prices but also serve as the bench mark for investors.

     

    Conducive air mode

    From four international airports in Lagos, Kano, Port Harcourt and Abuja about a decade ago, Nigeria now has international airports in each of the six geopolitical zones of the country. But beyond the structures that make accessibility to airline services possible, are more fundamental infractions.

    Over the last two decades, fatal crashes involving commercial passenger airlines had made mockery of attempts by regulatory agencies to restore sanity to the nation’s airspace. Though this tide has ebbed, activities of some of the airlines have continued to draw attention as they are yet to imbibe right practices that would promote safety in the air.

    But the major slap remains the continued absence of a national carrier servicing the air travel needs of Nigerians, a development that has left the sector in the hands of foreign private airlines.

    Experts want more proactive investment in which Nigerians would effectively drive the process.

     

    The intermodal dream

    With 170 million population, growing at about three percent yearly, experts said road transportation alone cannot serve the needs of Nigerians.

    In the Transportation Masterplan in Vision 20:2020, a former Minister for Transportation Mallam Yusuff Sulaiman said the intermodal dream by 2020 is imperative if Nigeria is to become one of the 20 biggest economies in the world by 2020.

    At the 14th session of National Council on Transport (NCT) last year in Enugu, the then Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Transport, Alhaji Mohammed Bashar, said it is a catalyst for a sustained, safe and secure transport sector.

    Bashar said the top priority accorded the transportation sector by the former administration underscored its crucial role in the sustenance of the economy.

    He canvassed a multimodal system of transportation that would be anchored on the private sector for prompt service delivery.

     

    Transport Policy revisited

    Stakeholders believe even the multimodal system would fail if there is no transport policy.

    The National President and Chairman of Council of Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport (CILT), Maj-Gen. Umar Tundunwada Usman, (rtd), said there is the need for a policy which would drive the economy.

    He said: “Roads are carrying what are by far above their carrying capacity. The railway has not improved on efficiency and this is resulting in the rate of damage to the roads.”

    He bemoaned the lack of professionalism in the sector which according to him is traceable to the fact that the sector has no governing laws as the National Assembly is yet to pass the bill packaged by the Institute for the purpose.

     

    Sharper policies

    Stakeholders said with about 36 states interpreting transport laws and more than a dozen federal agencies doing same, there would be nothing but confusion in its implementation.

    These, they said, is responsible for the lack of articulation of an enduring policy by the government and its agencies.

    The Registrar/CEO Council for the Regulation of Freight Forwarding in Nigeria (CRFFN), Sir Mike Jukwe, said: “Transport is one of the greatest economic growth areas of the 20th century and a key signature to the modern society.”

    Jukwe looked forward to the government doing everything to give the nation a good transportation image, a decision he said begins with planning.

  • N29b Mile 12-Ikorodu Road excites Lagos govt, residents

    N29b Mile 12-Ikorodu Road excites Lagos govt, residents

    THESE days, Mr. Olawunmi Solomon, a marketer with a firm in Mushin, is one of the first to get to work.

    For Solomon, who has been living in Ikorodu, Lagos, for over two decades, this is a refreshing experience. But it was not so a few months ago, during construction of the road. Then, he not only got to work late, he usually agonised over the nightmare that awaited him on the road.

    But with the road compeleted, his efficiency has improved. He now relishes the road and prays for the government that made it possible.

    Solomon is not alone. Each time she drives on the smooth road, Mrs. Angela Audu feels she’s in some foreign land. She found it difficult to believe that she’s in Lagos. She has lost count of the number of times she lost her car’s shock absorber to the poor state of road.

    However, all that is over, as the state government, through the Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority (LAMATA), has transformed the road.

    These are experiences of people on the  new Mile 12-Ikorodu Expressway, which reconstruction came 50 years after the road was first built by the Federal Government. The last time respite came for the people was when the Military Administrator of Lagos, Lt.-Col. Mohammed Buba Marwa (rtd), expanded the road to a dual carriage way about 18 years ago. But the road soon fell into a deplorable state with craters and bumps, leading to intractable sufferings as a result of the gridlock that could take one eight hours to get to Ketu, a journey that could be made in 45 minutes. It was so much that the state government had to wade in to; it would be handing it over to the people soon.

    Work began on the road in August 2012, with the China Civil Engineering Construction Company (CCECC), given the N29 billion to fix the road.

    The road, a World Bank project, was supervised by LAMATA. It was designed to accommodate a BRT route for mass transportation of commuters. The Mile 12-Ikorodu town BRT Extension is conceived to extend BRT service from Mile 12 to Ikorodu while also improving the Ikorodu road network infrastructure.

    Earlier, the road was a two-lane dual carriageway linking Mile 12 to the fast growing Ikorodu Town. The project includes expanding the road and provision of complementary BRT infrastructure. The corridor covers a distance of about 13.5km.The width is 7.5 metres, with median 2m width. The BRT is designed to be implemented as median running with bilateral bus stations’ configurations linked to bridges for pedestrian access. Two new lanes were constructed to accommodate the BRT system. The Mile 12-Ikorodu Town BRT Extension is tagged BRT Classic with the lanes running in the middle without any interference from other traffic except at designated U-turn points.

    The road is about 98 per cent completed and will be inaugurated any moment, maybe, before the government of Governor Babatunde Fashola winds up. The road has about 15 bus stations – seven on either side with one at Mile 12. The stations are integrated with pedestrian foot bridges. The bus stations/shelters are at Mile 12, Owode Onirin, Owode, Irawo, Majidun, Ogolonto, Agric and Aruna. The road comes with 12 new u-turn points to and from Ikorodu Town and also three terminals located at Mile 12, Agric and Ikorodu.

    The smoothness of the road is second to none in the state. The pedestrian bridges are the best in Lagos and in the country with their aesthetics. Motorists can heave sigh of relief that the road has been completed with travelling time reduced.

    Managing Director, LAMATA, Dr. Dayo Moberola, said the road has lots of benefits, which include provision of affordable transport, better road network, faster and reliable journey times, clean and better quality buses, reduction in waiting time for buses with limited queues through improved bus frequencies and the provision of a safe and secured transportation system.

    Others, he said, were the provision of a regulated transport system where queries and complaints could be addressed, reduction in unregulated public transport vehicles on the corridor while road side activities which slows down traffic would be prevented, adding that there would also be improved lifestyles of people and businesses along the corridor with good linkage to major activity and recreation centres. He added that the project created over 2,000 direct jobs and 5, 000 indirect jobs.

    To ensure that the road is not abused, LAMATA held a stakeholders’ meeting with some residents and motorists. During the event, it allocated market spaces to about 500 traders displaced during the construction.

    Director, Transport Services, LAMATA, Gbenga Dairo, said the bus stands for the BRT are ready and the entire project is nearing completion. He disclosed that about 400 buses would be deployed for the take-off of the BRT scheme around June and July, this year. It is expected that over 160,000 passengers will commute daily through the BRT on the route.

    At the meeting, traders, transporters and others were told to keep the walkways free by not parking, hawking or selling on them, as well as desist from displaying merchandise and repairing vehicles, motorcycles and furniture on the walkways.

    Stakeholders were warned not to cut the road on the BRT corridor while commercial motor cyclists should  not ply the route in line with the Lagos Road Traffic law.

    Specifically, they were warned that the bus shelters, terminals and lay-byes were for picking and dropping passengers and not sleeping areas while loading and unloading of goods were not allowed on the main carriageway. The stakeholders were also told that hawking and selling are prohibited around the bus shelters and the BRT terminals.

    Also, motorists were urged to obey traffic signs and stop changing lanes recklessly. They were urged to allow pedestrians to cross at designated crossing points without harassing them and that they should desist from carrying out repairs on the carriageway as oil spillage on the asphalt could damage the road surface and reduce its lifespan, among others.

    Speaking at the meeting, Governor Fashola said before the road was approved at the State Executive Council meeting, it was rejected on three occasions so that more input could be put into it before the execution, saying that the road project was massive and it must be maintained.

    The governor, who was represented by Otunba Fatai Olukoga, Special Adviser on Education, said: “It is pertinent to have this kind of discussion so that when the road is opened, there will be no problem. This road can only be compared with roads in Dubai and it is built with taxpayers’ money. We need to obey the traffic rules on this road. Don’t sell on the walkways or display spare parts on it.

    ”One-way drive is prohibited on this road and you have to obey all traffic signs and pedestrian crossing. Okada riders should not ply this road. We have many roads which they could ply in Lagos State. LAMATA will soon put signs on this road to help people obey the law. We don’t expect traders to trade on this road.”

    On the displaced traders, Fashola said they would be allocated shops in the newly constructed market. According to him, “They were displaced during the construction of the road and that was why we have decided to construct Oluwo-Idikan market to relocate the traders. This is in fulfilment of the promises made during the demolition of the market. Our aim in Lagos is to ensure that everyone has a source of income.”

    Bisi Yusuf, a member of the Lagos State House of Assembly, said when the idea of rebuilding the road was first conceived, many people thought it would be impossible, noting that the rebuilding of the road had become a reality.

    “What you are seeing on this road today is a replica of what is happening in Dubai. With this road, the value of property has gone up. This is what APC government is capable of doing because anywhere you have an APC government, this kind of road is what you get. We have just started. Most of our market men and women displaced during the construction of this project have now been relocated to a new market.

    ”We have not repealed the Road Traffic law; so we don’t want okada to ply this road. All forms of driving against traffic must not happen on this road. If you drive against traffic, it is either that you are a murderer, on a suicide mission or you are a drunkard,” he said.

    Administrator of the Kick Against Indiscipline (KAI)  Deji Badejo said the brigade would ensure that traders are kept out of the road and that it does become like Oshodi and Ketu where traders have converted the roads to marketplaces.

    He said the state government has purchased 100 new vehicles for the agency to carry out its enforcement on the Mile 12-Ikorodu corridor.

  • Rail vital to mass transit, says Jonathan

    Rail vital to mass transit, says Jonathan

    WITHOUT a functional rail network, there cannot be an effective mass transit scheme, President Goodluck Jonathan has said.

    Speaking during a tour of the Kubwa Outer Northern Expressway (ONEX) and Abuja light rail in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Jonathan said recommendations on a viable rail system would be part of his hand over notes to the President-elect Muhammadu Buhari.

    The train, he said, is important to mass transit, adding that the scheme won’t succeed without a train backbone.

    His administration, he said, made some progress in the rail sector, which he urged the incoming administration to sustain.

    The rail, the President noted, remains the only way to reduce the cost of transportation in the country, saying: “We cannot continue to emphasise the need to develop an effective mass transit system that is built around the railway. We cannot talk about mass transit using taxis, small cars, small buses and large capacity luxury buses, because they are usually expensive on the long run.

    “That was why we started the move to connect all state capitals by rail.The inter-city rail network is critical as it would reduce the cost of intercity transportation by other modes of road transportation. This we intend would be complemented by a viable intra-city light rail system that would take care of commuting within our cities. This should continue to be the primary focus of government, until we eventually get it, transportation may continue to be expensive for the masses.”

    Jonathan said efficient, reliable and affordable rail transportation would promote even distribution of population and further stimulate the economy.

    He praised the FCT Minister, Mr. Bala Mohammed and the Federal Capital Territory Authourity (FCTA), for the work done by the contractor, China Civil Engineering and Construction Company (CCECC), adding that he is satisfied with the pace of the project.

    The President said when completed, the projects would ease the movement of Nigerians, particularly those living in Abuja.

    “I must congratulate Nigerians on these projects. I have seen the level of work and the determination of the contractor to complete the projects on schedule. We awarded the contract knowing their usefulness to our national life and soon Nigerians would be the happier for it,” he added.

  • ‘Stop pleading for traffic offenders’

    ‘Stop pleading for traffic offenders’

    The Ogun State Traffic Compliance and Enforcement Corps (TRACE) has urged monarchs, political leaders and other dignitaries to stop pleading for motorists and motorcyclists arrested for breaking traffic rules.

    According to Ota Zone II Commanding Officer Adekunle Ajibade, pleading for traffic offenders is like promoting indiscipline among road users.

    He was briefing reporters in his office on the crashes in Ado Odo/Ota Local Government Area of the state in which some lives were lost.

    Ajibade described those who drive against traffic as killers who are not worth pleading for, but should be made to face the law.

    “Pleading for traffic offenders gives them more confidence to continue flouting traffic laws. It gives them assurance that someone will plead for them after committing an offence, he said.”

    Such pleads, he said, made it difficult for the agency to curb reckless driving.

    Giving instances where reckless driving had resulted into fatal accident, Ajibade said one person was killed last Friday by a motorcyclist otherwise known as okada rider, who rode against the traffic at late hour. He said the two Okada riders had a head-on collision because one of them had no headlight and was over-speeding.

    Also at Abestos Bus Stop on Lagos/Abeokuta Expressway, he said a Peugeot 504 saloon car with registration number BG 719 BEN, also rammed into an abandoned blue Mercedes Benz Cabstar truck with registration number APP 345 XF, due to overloading and overspeeding.

    A girl believed to be about 10 years old, who sat in the front of the car died instantly while several others were injured.

    According to him, there was another accident on Owode-Ijako Road, after Sona Breweries also in Ota, involving a Ford bus marked FKJ 885 XF, which rammed into a damaged MAN Diesel truck parked on the road, killing a woman and injuring several others.

    Ajibade asked motorists to be safety conscious, urging them to stop parking indiscriminately on the road.

    According to him, any illegally parked vehicle will be impounded and the driver/owner prosecuted.

    He advised motorcyclists to use crash helmets and obey traffic rules.

    The Corps Director of Operations, Prince Olaseni Ogunyemi, also reiterated the need for road users to be safety conscious.

    He appealed to motorists and commercial cyclists to avoid speeding and to ensure they use safety helmets, avoid overloading and reckless driving.

    According to him, enough public campaigns and enlightenment had been done by the traffic managers. The next stage, Ogunyemi said, is enforcement, adding that the Corps will no longer tolerate indiscipline from riders and drivers.

    He said anyone flouting traffic rules would be prosecuted and undergo psychiatric test.

     

  • Govt to promote water transportation

    Govt to promote water transportation

    THE Lagos State Government has established a passenger carriage company, LAGFERRY, to promote water transportation.

    The company will drive the government’s investments in the sector, lead its private sector participation campaign and set standards for other operators.

    Commissioner for Transportation Kayode Opeifa said in his office that with over 70 per cent of its land mass covered with water, its waterway is a potentially big economy that has not been fully tapped.

    He said from a paltry 500,000 monthly patronage in 2012, commuters have improved to about 1.8 million monthly, with the state targeting two million before the end of the year.

    This, Opeifa said, would have long been attained if the government had succeeded last year in adding five big ferries into the waterways.

    “This is to signal to investors that the waterways are open for them and to assure that the sector is viable for business. Investors should invest more in bigger ferries because three modern jetties for bigger ferry operation located at Ikorodu, Mile 2 and Badore would soon be opened,” Opeifa said.

    Listing the advantages of the big ferries, the commissioner said, they would accommodate more passengers and force down fares which will stimulate interest and attract more patronage.

    “Many people, who ordinarily should use the ferry are shunning it due to the high cost of transportation, but when the wider  ferries are injected it would become more affordable as prices would come down relatively,” he said.

    Acknowledging that last year was the worst in the history of water transportation in the state because of the fatal accidents on some routes, Opeifa advised operators to be guided by global safety standards.

    “We will continue to advise patrons and operators to always operate by the rules, wear life jackets, avoid over-loading, over-speeding and should not operate outside the safe time period,” he said.

    He said the government has distributed no fewer than 3, 500 free life jackets to boat operators in riverine communities, adding that it would continue to do more to promote safety on its waterways.

     

  • Lagos orders arrest of illegal taxi operators

    Lagos orders arrest of illegal taxi operators

    Do you have a car which serves as a stream of income in Lagos? Chances that you may be arrested are high, if you have not complied with the rule guiding taxi and cab operation.

    Last Friday, the Commissioner for Transportation Kayode Opeifa directed enforcement agencies to start arresting illegal taxi operators.

    According to him, all those who refuse to be accredited by the Vehicle Inspection Service (VIS) and have not been captured on the database of the Lagos State Public Transport Management System (LSPTMS), should be arrested and prosecuted.

    Opeifa said only accredited operators, who have complied with the law and have collected their provisional licence, are authorised to operate.

    He also urged all estates to stop allowing unpainted taxis to operate in their domain, adding that such a system is fraught with a lot of insecurity and risk. He said they should patronise only licensed operators as they have their data properly documented with the government.

    The taxi policy, he said, was meant to protect the public, improve service delivery and create jobs in the taxi sub-sector.

    Governor Babatunde Fashola kicked off the scheme last month after meetings with the operators to make them accept the guidelines.