Category: Transportation

  • Fashola warns reckless drivers

    LAGOS State Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola has warned motorists against reckless driving.

    He said avoidable deaths caused by reckless articulated vehicle drivers would no longer be tolerated.

    At a meeting with truck and articulated vehicle owners and operators, Fashola expressed displeasure at the increasing rate of accidents involving trucks, trailers and tankers, urging drivers to be more careful.

    He said the increasing rate of accidents was making the government’s duty of protecting citizens’ lives and property difficult, noting that people that should contribute to nation building were being wasted by some careless articulated vehicle drivers.

    The government, he said, set up some agencies to improve the standard of driving and to promote safety on the road. These include the Lagos State Drivers Institute, urging them to avail themselves of its services.

    Earlier, in his presentation, titled: Articulated vehicle related incidences and accidents on Lagos roads in the last six months, Commissioner for Transportation, Comrade Kayode Opeifa said the state, apart from being the commercial nerve of the country and the West African sub-region, also has one of the world’s busiest road traffic vehicular density, with 90 per cent of the nation’s articulated vehicle traffic.

    The meeting was attended by representatives of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce & Industry (LCCI), Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas (NUPENG), Association of Maritime Truck Owners (AMATO), Union of Truck and Quarry Employers of Nigeria (UTQEN) and National Association of Road Transport Owners (NARTO), among others.

     

  • Court convicts 33  traffic offenders

    Court convicts 33 traffic offenders

    o fewer than 33 traffic offenders have been convicted by Mobile Court in Ota, Ogun State.

    Their conviction followed their trial, the first this year, by the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) RS2.22, Ota; RS2.26, Idiroko; RS2.27, Agbado and RS2.28, Itori Unit Commands.

    The court sits monthly to try traffic offenders.

    The offenders were convicted for offences ranging from driving with worn-out tyres (TYV), seat belt use violation (SUV) overloading violation (OVL), driver’s licence violation (DLV), vehicle windshield violation (VWV), caution sign violation (CAV), fire extinguishers violation (FEV), light and sign violation (LSV), among others.

    Some of the offenders were convicted and sentenced to various jail terms with options of fine, while others were cautioned and discharged, by magistrate Mrs A. O. Abimbola.

    The state Sector Command’s Legal Officer, Mr Uzoma Enwereuzo, said: “Utmost discipline is expected of drivers while on the road.

    “That obedience and compliance of traffic rules and regulations can only reduce number of crashes on the road.”

    He advised motorists, after reading out the 44 FRSC offences, to ensure that their vehicles were road worthy, adding that there is no ignorance in law.

    The lawyer warned motorists against fighting with marshals on patrol, or speeding to avoid arrest, noting these are capital offence, he said.

    He advised motorists to obtain the new national driver’s licence and vehicle number plates, saying the old ones would expire on June 30.

    The enforcement of the new number plates and driver’s licence starts from July 1, he said.

    The Ota Unit Commander, who is also the coordinating commander, Mr Sunday Omafu, said the number of crashes reduced as a result of the compliance by motorists in the last yuletide.

    He appealed to drivers to drive carefully to save lives, time and properties.They should also ensure that other road users are not endangered or threatened while driving.

  • Vandals threaten train service

    Vandals threaten train service

    Vandals have taken their illicit trade to the railways, where they are wrecking trains, tracks and properties. Their action is threatening the smooth operation of the Nigeria Railway Corporation (NRC),writes ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE.

    KAFANCHAN is a major economic hub in the southern part of Kaduna State.

    Notable for its agrarian economy, Kafanchan’s allure is its confluence of cultures, as the train has made it possible for people of all tribes to co-habit. It is home to many Nigerians who live in the agrarian but peaceful Sahelean community.

    The train does not only bring people to Kafanchan, its railway station is a convergence point and the hub of commerce, with people thronging the station to trade.

    But this is only one side of Kafanchan. The town has become home, too, to economic saboteurs, who exploit its sleepy nature to vandalise the train tracks.

    Seven of such vandals were caught early this month.

    Parading the suspects at the Railway Police Command Headquarters in Lagos, last week, the Commissioner of Police, Nyats Jatau, said they were caught following a tip-off, after cutting the train’s iron tracks.

    The suspects, whose ages range from 25 to 32, would leave Kafanchan and operate in the deserted and sleepy villages only to return to the town, where they sell their loot.

    Jatau said: “Luck ran against the seven men on February 9, when returning from Barkin Kogi in Jama’a Local Government Area of Kaduna State, where they had gone to vandalise new rail irons.

    “They were caught on their way back to Kafanchan following a tip-off, in an unregistered Fiat Bus, which was used to convey the irons, which have been cut to size.

    Items recovered from the suspects, Jatau said, were one unregistered Fiat bus, one Tiger TG 2700 Tiger Generator, a cutting machine, one spanner and two ark-saw with four blades.

    Others were one extension wire, two screw drivers and four filing stones.

    The leader of the vandals, who identified himself as Ibrahim, a bus driver, said they had borrowed the cutting machine and generator from his elder brother, who is a welder in Kafanchan.

    “Our intention is to bring the iron rods to town and look for buyers for them before we were caught by the police,” he told reporters.

    He, however, denied knowledge of the worth of the iron lines, as, according to him, it was his first time out.

    At the Enugu station of the corporation, a similar incident took place last November; a member of the staff of the corporation was allegdly involved.

    The staff member, Mr. John Chukwudi Otenyi, was accused by a suspect, Ifeanyi Onwudiegwu, as being the mastermind of a bust deal.

    Onwudiegwu, who denied the allegation, said he only bought vandalised rail items, which included steel sleepers and track irons.

    He said he was approached by Otenyi to buy 350 pieces of tracks for N400,000. He paid for them, but could not collect the receipt and the covering papers for the sold materials before the police foiled the deal.

    He said: “I was working at my scrap dump in Onitsha, Anambra State, when Otenyi contacted me. He said he was a senior railway official and wanted to sell some unwanted scraps; so he invited me to his office in Enugu.

    “On getting to Enugu, he told me the cost of 350 pieces was N400,000, so I paid him in cash and got a vehicle to transport the scraps back to Onitsha. We were loading the truck when I went to buy the gas the driver requested for. I had not gone far when Otenyi called to tell me not to come back to his office as policemen were around.

    “I was surprised because I thought the transaction was legal, but when he insisted, I ran back to Onitsha, where I reported the incident to members of my union. When they heard my story, they handed me over to the police,” Onwudiegwu said.

    Otenyi, however, denied being a criminal, saying he had masterminded the arrest of the thieves based on a tip-off by residents.

    Otenyi, 49, a tracks sectional officer, who said he has been working for the NRC for 24 years, denied ever knowing Onwudiegwu. He said his reports and regular alerts and briefings to his superiors up till the eve of the arrests can attest to his dedicated service to the corporation.

    Though he pleaded with the police not to believe the ‘criminals’, Otenyi could not say how the suspect knew his name and phone number.

    “That is what is still a shock to me,” he told reporters during the parade.

    This is not the first time the Enugu station in the Southeast will suffer from the activities of economic saboteurs. Four vandals were arrested in May, last year, by a vigilante group at Amaodu,Nkanu-West Local Government Area of Enugu State.

    The Eastern Regional District Manager (ERDM), Mr. Felix Njoku said: “Our tracks, weighing 80 pounds each, were vandalised at Amaodu in Nkanu. The culprits were arrested by the vigilante group in the community and handed over to the Nigeria Railway Police.

    ”The vehicles they used in the operation were a trailer and a pick-up van.”

    The four vandals are in police custody.

    In Lagos, a large quantity of railway irons, which was stolen in Apapa, was recovered at Orile by the police on February 12. The recovery, the police said, led to the arrest of four suspects.

    Stressing that the activities of the saboteurs, were thwarting the revamping agenda of the government for the railway, Jatau said the nipping of their nefarious activities was a result of the Railway Police Command’s strategies to provide adequate security for workers and properties of the corporation.

    One major strategy, Jatau said, is the cooperation and understanding between the police and stakeholders, especially residents of communities on the rail lines.

    “We have gone round all the communities, villages and towns where the railway has properties, whether rail line or physical properties, to help us police the facilities. In many places, there are vigilantes and we have urged such groups to help police the equipment and report any incident of theft to their village heads, or the police.

    “This is paying off across the country as we swoop on vandals, as soon as they were suspected to be on ground, before carrying out their nefarious activity, even before they could think up an escape route,” Jatau said.

    This was restated by Njoku, who admitted that the strategy worked the magic wand that led to the arrest of the Enugu suspects. “The success recorded in apprehending the culprits is attributable to the visit we made to the heads of the communities early this year, calling on them to help us in protecting Railway materials that pass through their communities,” he said.

     

     

    The corporation’s Managing Director Mr. Adeseyi Sijuwade lamented the high rate of vandalism in the country.

    Sijuwade, who was represented by the Director of Administration and Human Resources of the corporation, Mr. Aminu Gusau, said the growing rate of vandalism of rails equipment across the country is becoming worrisome as it can reverse the good intentions of the government to make the trains the backbone of mass transportation of goods and passengers, especially on long distances.

    Gusau said rail vandalism could cause trains to derail and lead to the deaths of passengers.

    He urged the public to report illegal activities on the railways, saying this was the only way to reduce the crime.

    He said: “Vandalism occurs daily and we can hardly quantify the loss to the government and the country, especially now that everyone would want to see results of the huge investment the government has made in recent time on the corporation.”

    On the consequences of vandalism, he said: “One basic reality is that we would have to go back to areas where our materials have been vandalised to replace them. Money that could have been budgeted on other things would be spent on repairs and this is would affect our efficiency and draw back our economy. It would also ultimately slow down our response ability.”

  • BRT drivers, conductors connive to extort commuters

    The operation of the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT), is being threatened by the antics of some of the operators’ workers.

    Some drivers (pilots) and conductors (ticketers) seemed to have devised way to maximise profit, thereby denying commuters an affordable means of transportation as designed by the government.

    Investigation on some major roads indicated that these drivers and ticketers have been fleecing commuters for long.

    The practice is rampant on the Ikorodu to Oshodi and Ikorodu/CMS/Obalende routes.

    Those involved in the practice are the drivers and conductors of the Bus Franchise Scheme (BFS) comprising Nationwide, Adonis and Mutual Benefits.

    Instead of collecting the approved fares, the drivers and their conductors have impose their own fares on commuters.

    They call passengers willing to pay the approved fare for the full trip, not withstanding where they wish to drop.

    Commuters who refuse to buy such tickets are not picked.

    Passengers are forced to buy N150 ticket from Ikorodu to Ajegunle, Owode-Onirin, Mile 12 and Ketu. The approved fares for such those routes is N100.

    Passengers who insisted on paying the approved fares are prevented from boarding, until all seats in the bus have been filled by those who buy the N150 ticket.

    “What they usually do, is to call for Ojota-Oshodi passengers. When the seats are full, they would start calling for passengers for Owode-Mile 12-Ketu-Oshodi route,” said a passenger.

    Similarly, buses plying the CMS/Obalende routes, have not been picking Ketu-bound passengers from Ikorodu except where they are prepared to buy the N200 tickets.

    The situation has often caused skirmishes between conductors and passengers, with the drivers taking sides with their conductors.

     

  • ‘We are committed to provision of street lights’

    The Lagos State government has assured that it remains committed to the provision of street lights, which he described, as necessary road furniture.

    The Commissioner of Transportation Comrade Kayode Opeifa who made this known to The Nation in his office, said the street lights, like other road furniture like drainages, pedestrian walkways, medians and kerbs, service ducts and bus lay-bys, are part of the agenda of the Fashola government as it transforms Lagos into a “model mega city.”

    He said the Lagos State Electricity Board has been saddled with installing street lights all over major streets and high ways for the safety and security of motorists.

    He said: “The street lights also have dedicated power generating set Alternative source of power to ensure the provision of continuous illumination of the streets especially at night.”

    Opeifa said the state has moved way out of what obtains in the past, where virtually all parts are enveloped by darkness, a development that promotes crime and criminality.

    He noted that the street lights has provided accelerated economic development and encouraged social integration across communities and localities.

    “That informs why all road contracts, which were awarded in the last seven years have as major components the street lights, and they are what the state has accepted as the basic minimum in road designs,” Opeifa added.

    The Commissioner for Transportation said the state, since 2000, has embarked on the development of a strategic transportation master plan which is anchored on road rehabilitation, junction improvement, one way system and lane marking, all of which has helped in maximising existing road space, reduce vehicle operation cost and promote road safety facilities.

    On pedestrian bridges, Opeifa said the government introduced the millennium bridges since year 2000, which took into consideration to the comfort and convenience of pedestrians as they were built with features that make them complement the various modern road projects being handled by the government.

  • BRT: Going the Molue way?

    BRT: Going the Molue way?

    Though molues are banned from major roads and bridges in Lagos, the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT), which replaced them, seem not to be better. According to commuters, BRT buses are fast becoming a contraption on wheels, writes Adeyinka Aderibigbe

    Anthony Adebisi was angry last Friday night. The itinerant trader in men’s shoes and accessories was incensed like other passengers at the insensitivity of the driver and conductor of the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT), who preferred to ‘do their thing’ at that time of the night.

    It was 9.20 p.m. and Adebisi, after waiting for about two hours on queue for the Agege-bound BRT bus at the Oshodi station, thought it would load its passengers and move on, but the driver and his mate had another idea. With the bus filled, the conductor began to holler for passengers to stand on the gangway.

    Adebisi, who observed that such has been the practice every night, began to fume. Despite his annoyance, the ticketer went on with his business. He packed the passengers tightly, ensuring that they filled every space in the bus, till there was no leg room left.

    Yet, the driver was reluctant to move, thereby incuring the anger of more passengers, who joined Adebisi in shouting at him and the ticketer. When he eventually moved, the ticketer was still screaming and beckoning on commuters on all bus stops on the route.

    “That has been their usual practice,” Adebisi told The Nation. Every night, these guys would stay at the loading point and wouldn’t allow another bus to load, until they carried those who will stand. No matter how many buses were on the queue, at Cappa, where the buses are temporarily parked to avoid congesting the road, the one loading wouldn’t move until it carried those would stand, it is as if the returns on standing is for drivers and conductors to share,” he said.

    He said he was always infuriated because the people carried on with so much impunity, as if they were above the law.

    “I will make sure I report you guys,” Adebisi threatened. “If this is how you guys will run this BRT with 45 sitting and 100 standing, then there is no point taking molue off the road,”he said.

    Packing passengers like sardine, like the old Bolekaja (come down let’s fight) and molue before it, which made the late inimitable Fela Anikulapo Kuti come up with the song: Suffering and Smiling; is not a peculiar commuting experience on the Oshodi/Agege route.

    The BRT, which is run by the Lagos Bus Assets Management Company (LAGBUS), an all- purpose assets management vehicle by the government has become a glorified contraption that provides mass shuttle services to the bustling population of commuters around the state.

    The Na tion’s investigation last week showed that commuters stand in the BRT buses the way they did in the old decrepit molue buses, which the Lagos State government has banned from major roads within the metropolis.

    From Ikorodu to Oshodi, Oshodi to Mile 2; Oshodi to Ikotun, and Agege to Ishaga, or Agege to Secretariat, or CMS to Oshodi, or Ojota to Eko-Idumota, it is fashionable for commuters to stand in these maxi buses.

    But the practice is not limited to the BRT buses alone. Under the scheme, other franchisees, such as the Trade Union Congress (TUC), which was given about four routes, among other transportation firms, and the NURTW Cooperative Ltd., which runs the dedicated blue buses along with other Bus Franchise Scheme (BFS) operators, who are under the Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authourity’s (LAMATA) supervision do same with impunity on all the routes they plied.

    A ticketer, on the Sango-Ota-Oshodi route, who simply identified himself as Mike, said the practice to overload the vehicle might not be unconnected with targets set for them by their management.

    He said many of the franchisees were still battling to recoup their investments, which came from bank loans.

    There is also the angle of the huge demand for the mass transit buses by Lagosians.

    He said his route, which is being handled by the TUC buses, which put more vehicles the route, has begun to experience the pressure because “the demand for our buses gradually outstripping supply.”

    Mike, who said he witnessed such pressures only during the rush hours in the mornings and at night, said the solution lies in increasing the numbers of vehicles on the roads.

    A driver on the Agege-Oshodi road, who preferred anonymity, said drivers on the route were acting on directive from above. Though he would not volunteer more details, the driver said the directive might have come due to the market research that indicated that many may not really mind opting to stand inside the buses.

    He said: “We weren’t packing passengers like this before. But, sometimes last year, a directive came from the office that we should be carrying those standing and if you look at it, we do this only during rush hours, when there are many passengers. At any other time when traffic is calm, we just carry our normal seating capacity and move.”

    He, however, said it is even the passengers that often beg us to come on board the buses and stand, especially those of them who are running behind a deadline or running out of time.

    Though the driver might be right, some Lagosians said the standing option, which ordinarily, ought to be a last resort is fast becoming the fad.

    A resident Mrs Ronke Oladimeji said the distortion to the BRT masterplan, which the standing option represents, is fast eroding the gains of the state’s public sector transportation.

    Mrs. Oladimeji, an Advert executive, recalled that when it came on board on March 17, 2008, the BRT buses were designed to be the government’s response to the nagging issues of mass transportation in the metropolis.

    Kicking off the project six years ago, Governor Babatunde Fashola had dreamt up an initiative that would provide the needed elixir to the nightmare that mass commuting has become in the state.

    Fashola envisaged that in some few years, the BRT would have become a needed means of transportation for the upwardly mobile middle class, such that the executives would prefer to park their vehicles at home, especially on week days and opt for the BRT.

    And it seem the BRT was up to fill that vacuum and occupy its pride of place in public sector transportation management in the first few years of its introduction when the government claimed its records showed the BRT now takes over seventeen million people across the state every month.

    Invariably, by the state’s record, 204 million passengers patronised the BRT yearly. The development encouraged the government to delineate more routes, and add more buses to the existing fleet to ensure that more areas around the state are covered.

    The Commissioner for Transportation Comrade Kayode Opeifa, who made this known the re-fleeting initiative known said about 250 new vehicles are being expected to be added to further strengthen the public transportation system in the state.

    Though the government would want Lagosians to believe the BRT brand as an effective public sector transportation option is still on course and getting stronger, available facts are showing that the state’s mass shuttle buses are losing the steam and its allure especially among the middle class.

    Though the staate has further strengthened the BRT scheme by ensuring that no one uses the dedicated lanes meant for the buses, the bulk of the middle class are yet to fully buy into the dream of the public transportation scheme.

    Transportation experts say the cold shoulders from the economically active segment of the state’s economy remains the way the scheme is still being run.

    The absence of professionals in the discharge of transportation services in the BRT services remains a major drawback, Mr. Tunde Ojuola said.

    According to him, a business executive with an early morning appointment to catch up with would not see the BRT as an option where his personal car provides not only the solution, but the comfort. To address the comfort of this class of residents, the government’s initial policy was to introduce air-conditioned buses.

    These set of buses, however, couldn’t operate for more than six months before it was abandoned.

    Though the governor would admit that getting the rich and the active middle class on the public transportation remains a work in progress, he has in the meantime ensured that the poor and average income, at the grassroots, which the BRT presently accommodates, have unfettered access on the road.

    Jam packed buses, dirty interior, thorn seat covers, and buses in different stages of disrepair, are few of the challenges besetting the six- year initiative leaving a negative impact on the passenger traffic and patronage.

    A LAGBUS official, who preferred anonymity, said even with the challenges, the BRT is still a major cash cow.

    The official, who preferred not to be named, said LAGBUS makes allocates N10 million weekly to service and fuel the vehicles, adding that it is baffling that many of the vehicles were still an eyesore despite the money deplored to keep them.

    He said: “Though the initial problem the agency confronted was sourcing spare parts for the vehicles, it has since gone pass that stage as some of the parts are already being produced in the country.”

    Ojuola, who, however, believes service delivery in the sector remains very poor, called for the training and retraining of all the drivers and conductors (ticketers), to arm them with appropriate skills that would make them offer services that could rank at par with what obtains anywhere in the world.

    It is only by taking charge of the structure, he continued, that the government would make the sector more attractive and rolls the carpet off the feet of thugs parading as ticketers, drivers and other allied workers on public sector transportation.

     

  • Union seeks more investments in transport

    The Lagos State Chairman of the Tricycle Workers Association of Nigeria (TWAN), Mr. Olumuyiwa Odesanya, has demanded more investments in the transport sector.

    Odesanya, who observed that the sector is too capital intensive to be left to the private sector, said more private sector involvement would improve efficiency and safety in the transportation system.

    He spoke at the inauguration of a 21-member executive committee of the association in Lagos.

    Describing the private sector as very crucial to the development of transportation, Odesanya said it is very clear that government alone can no longer shoulder the transportation needs of Nigerians.

    He explained that a partnership between the government and the private sector is needed to make transportation more readily available in the country.

    “There is the need for the private sector to inverst more in thr country’s transportation system. Goernment alone cannot develop all the infrastructure or the funds for the sector.

    He said all modes of transportation enjoy massive private sector participation in Europe and the United States.

    Odesanya, therefore, called on the government to put in place favourable policies aimed at encouraging more private participation in the transport system.

    While extolling the virtues of members of the committee, Odesanya urged the leaders to ensure they train their members and encourage them to continue to observe road safety regulations at all times.

  • Agencies still work on Saturdays

    All transportation agencies in Lagos comprising the Vehicle Inspection Service (VIS), the State Drivers Institute (LASDRI) and the Motor Vehicle Administration Agency (MVAA), still operate on Saturdays, the government has said. They, however, do not work on the last Saturday of each month which is dedicated to environmental sanitation.

    Commissioner of Transport Comrade Kayode Opeifa said the clarification was necessary to enable those who could not transact business with these agencies on week days to do so on Saturdays between 10am and 2pm.

    Opeifa spoke in his office while reviewing the strategies for the enforcement of the new Public Transport Management System, which involves the accreditation of commercial passenger vehicle owners and operators.

    He said though enforcement had begun, the accreditation is still on.

    The centre for the VIS and Drivers Institute on Saturdays are Lagos Island, Ikorodu, Isheri, PWD and Mile 2.

    Commercial vehicle owners, he said, should visit the VIS centres, while drivers and conductors should visit the Drivers Institute for their accreditation.

  • ‘No plan to sell ANAMMCO’

    The Chairman, Anambra Motor Manufacturing Company (ANAMMCO) Mr. Godwin Okeke has said there is no plan to sell the firm.

    There have been speculations that ANAMMCO, which produces wide bodied luxury buses, will be sold.

    Okeke, in a statement, described the report as false. According to him, the report that some auto manufacturers and investors are jostling for the purchase of the firm is “malicious and deceptive.”

    He said rather than being sold, ANAMMCO is being positioned to maximise the opportunities in the new automotive policy, which he described as the right step in the right direction for the country.

    He said ANAMMCO remains a committed auto firm with a functioning production infrastructure, adding that the firm would eventually be a major player in the industrial revolution policy of the Federal Government.

    ANAMMCO, he added, would unveil its plan for the automotive industry, adding that steps are being taken to ensure the firm regains its pride of place.

  • FRSC may sanction erring driving schools

    Driving schools that award certificates recklessly may, henceforth, be sanctioned, the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) has said.

    This, the Corps said, has become necessary to reduce road mishaps and deaths.

    The FRSC Zonal Commander, RS 9 Enugu, Mr. Kehinde Adeleye, said at a stakeholders meeting in Owerri, the Imo State capital, that it is now mandatory for professional drivers and other classes of road users to pass through government approved driving schools before getting a driver’s licence.

    The decision, he said, is part of efforts aimed at improving road safety consciousness so that drivers have an understanding of road signs and markings.

    Adeleye said reducing road accidents was not exclusive to the FRSC, adding that adequate awareness should be in place to ensure that everyone sees road safety as a shared responsibility.

    The commander said professional or commercial vehicle drivers need a much more rigorous training. He also advised drivers who still operate with the old drivers licence to stop forthwith and obtain new ones. He said the corps is opening up more processing centres for licence renewal in order to give room for more Nigerians to enjoy the benefit of the deadline extension from October 2013 to June 2014.

    He disclosed that the corps will soon begin a massive enlightenment programme for members of transport unions and managers of driving schools and would also begin to re-inspect drivers who had gone through some form of formal training for the purposes of re-certification.

    He, therefore, urged all members of the driving school association in Imo State to improve the integrity of their various schools and work with greater partnership with the FRSC in the state.

    Adeleye, who said road safety is the responsibility of all, appealed to motorists, commuters and pedestrians to always be safety conscious whenever they are on the road.