Tag: commuters

  • Commuters groan as fuel scarcity bites harder

    Commuters groan as fuel scarcity bites harder

    Transport fares yesterday hit an all-time high in Lagos.

    Many spent hours at bus stops in anticipation of likely reduction in the transport fares without luck; they were left with no choice other than to board the available buses when they discovered that the motorists were not ready to shift ground.

    Many workers trekked to their offices and businesses groaned under the rising costs of operations.

    Transport fares were jerked up between 300 and 500 per cent.

    Commuters paid N400 to board a bus from Ikotun to Cele Bus stops as against the usual N50 or N100, depending on time.

    A commuter simply identified as Jide described a development where commuters paid N500 from Agbado to Oshodi as “crazy.”

    Jide enjoined youths to stand for their rights, saying “this is becoming too much to bear.”

    The Nation also learnt that people paid N300 from Mile 2 to CMS and N500 from CMS to Ajah.

    “God has to intervene because tomorrow (today) transport fares will be really crazy,” said a commuter via Twitter.

    Another one tweeted that commuters paid N500 from Aseese to Berger.

    “When will these stops?” He asked.

    Bus conductors were seen urging passengers from Lawanson to CMS to enter with N500 against the usual N200, while N150 was charged from Lawanson to Ojuelegba instead of N50.

    Olatunde Fasanya, a student of the Lagos State University (LASU) decided not to go to school for lectures, saying N250 demanded by the motorists from Isheri to Iyana-Iba was outrageous.

    “I don’t understand why I had to pay N300 from Ejigbo to Iyana-Isolo which normally costs N150. This crisis doesn’t recognise anyone; even policemen begged to buy fuel on Saturday at N200 per litre,” said Segun, a motorist.

    There were long queues at various bus stops including Ilasamaja on Oshodi-Apapa Expressway; Oloosa on Agege Motor Road, Agboju on Badagry Expressway; Western Avenue, Orile, Mile 12 and Egbada among others, owing to fewer commercial vehicles on the roads.

    Toyeeb Adebayo, a Supervisor at Wheel Oil and Gas in Mushin, said: “I boarded a bus from Ikotun to Cele at N400 instead of N50 or N100 depending on time. If it’s early in the morning, it’s N50, but it increases to N100 around 7am. From Cele to Iyana-Itire, I paid N100 instead of N30. I don’t know what they would charge at closing time,” he said.

    Adebayo sought an immediate end to the scarcity, saying his salary would not meet up with the increased fares.

    A worried motorist, Olukayode Lasisi said the fuel scarcity has  demonstrated the visionless leadership of the President Goodluck Jonathan administration.

    Lasisi called for the diversification of the economy, overhauling of the oil sector, repairs and building of new refineries.

    He said that placement of camera on pipelines for effective monitoring would curb illegal bunkering

    “The incoming government needs to sideline the marketers and fast-track registration of new ones. It will force them to bring price down because the fuel is available. They are hoarding it to make price reduction impossible. Government should roll out short-term policies that will fast-track mass transit project. This can be done strategically and systematically to edge out the fat-fed marketers,” Lasisi submitted.

    Eni Olukotun, publisher of an online medium, www.completenewsng.com expressed deep concerns over the crisis, accusing the Jonathan administration of gross ineptitude and corruption.

    Recounting how the fuel crisis had crippled his activities, Olukotun lamented: “Nigeria has never had it this bad; not even under the military junta of despotic General Sani Abacha. I never imagined buying a litre of petrol for N1,000. I might be forced to suspend our operation if the situation persists.”

    The Managing Director, Bulk Chartering and Marine Logistics, George Porbeni said the impasse was having negative implications on his businesses. He said it had been challenging to move goods from the ports in Apapa to other parts of the country where they are needed.

    He said many of his clients, especially, importers of goods are not ready to incur additional costs on such activities.

    ‘’ There has been lull in business activities since four weeks ago, when the fuel scarcity started. Prior to this, firms engaging in clearing and forwarding business had been finding it pretty difficult to cope due to high duties which made many operators to use ports in Benin Republic and other neighbouring countries. But with the fuel crisis worsening by the day, the problems of the operators have been compounded,” he said.

    He said he had directed workers, whose services are not urgently needed to stay at home, pending when the fuel problems would abate.

    ‘’Why should one bother drivers to office every day, knowing well that there is no fuel to move goods or containers from Tincan Island or Wharf to their destinations, especially outside Lagos?

    Outgoing President Jonathan’s government has shut doors on further negotiations with marketers because he was not ready to pay the balance of N200billion subsidy arrears demanded by them.

    Amid this, marketers insist they were not going to resume importation until the Federal Government pay them the N209billion owed them.

    Added to this was the strike action embarked upon by oil-transporting bodies to force the government to reverse the transfer of operatorship of Oil Mining Lease (OML), 40 Evecrest Production and Exploration Limited.

    However, with the news of the suspension of the strike by the marketers last night, fuel users, especially commuters are expectant of imminent reprieve.

  • Stranded commuters

    Stranded commuters

    COMMUTERS STRUGGLING TO BOARD A TAXI AT ALEITA BUS STOP ON AIRPORT ROAD DUE TO DEARTH OF TAXIS AS PETROL SCARCITY PERSISTS IN ABUJA ON TUESDAY Photo NAN
    COMMUTERS STRUGGLING TO BOARD A TAXI AT ALEITA BUS STOP ON AIRPORT ROAD DUE TO DEARTH OF TAXIS AS PETROL SCARCITY PERSISTS IN ABUJA ON TUESDAY Photo NAN
  • Commuters enjoy stable fare

    Commuters enjoy stable fare

    It was a mixed grill for many inter-state commercial bus operators last Monday. While some drivers lamented the low turnout on some routes, others said they were finding it difficult to cope with the upsurge in demand by commuters who throng all available motor parks, in search of buses as they get set to celebrate the New Year with their families and loved ones.

    The trend follows what obtained during the Christmas.

    The Nation investigation showed that some parks at Ojota, Julius Berger, Ajegunle, Iyana Ipaja and Oshodi in Lagos and Sango in Ogun State recorded high turnout for Southwest commuters and most of the drivers are cashing in on the surge to increase the price.

    While some of the drivers were making a kill as a result of the surge, same cannot be said of fleet operators, who couldn’t increase their fares.

    A senior driver with one of such operators, Mufsuf Motors, Mr. Mohammed, who operates from a park in Ajegunle, a boundary town between Ogun and Lagos states, said the company recorded low turnout of passengers this season.

    He said: “Despite the poor passenger traffic, the company did not join in the arbitrary fare hike fray, because the company has standard transport rates for all its routes.”

    He said the fare to any of the Southwest states begins from N2,500, the Eastern route, N3,500 while Northern routes, especially Abuja, is N4,500 and Kano N6,000.

    Operators shuttling the Southeast routes said they enjoying the best passenger traffic during the yuletide. At the C.U.O. Motors and Young Shall Grow parks in Oshodi, a loader, who identified himself as Ikechukwu said: “People really traveled for Christmas and we are recording more patronage as more people are travelling to celebrate the new year with their family.

    “Some of the passengers, who could not travel on the day-time buses, booked for night buses.

    And fare was stable due to the standard set up. Fares from Lagos to any of the Eastern states ranges from N5,500 to N6,000,” he said. He, however, refused to state what the prices were before the Christmas.

    A passenger, who identified himself as Mr. Edward at Young Shall Grow Park, confirmed that the hike in fare was minimal, adding that he preferred to travel with the firm because the buses were in good condition and that comfort and safety were guaranteed.

    He expressed satisfaction at the fare stability, saying that in the past, festive periods were characterised by arbitrary increase in fares.

    Miss Anthonia, a University of Benin (UNIBEN) student thanked transporters for not exploiting the season to hike fares arbitrarily. She said the stable fares had enabled many people to travel home and re-unite with their loved ones.

    Mr. Uche another traveler said the price stability was as a result of the stability in fuel price. He commended the Federal Government for allowing stability of fuel price during the yuletide.

    At the local park in Oshodi, commuters groaned over the 70 per cent increment of transport fare on some southwest routes.

    A passenger, Adewunwi Adejoke, who was travelling to Ikere-Ekiti, Ekiti State, lamented the increment in the fare in the name of the yuletide, describing it as ungodly.

    Another passenger, Mrs Taibat Olapoju, who was travelling to Ibadan, also complained of the increment in the fare. He said: “Ibadan on a normal day is N700 now it’s N1, 820, describing the increment as crazy.

    An Ado-Ekiti driver, Lukman, said transport to Ado-Ekiti is N2, 800 instead of N1, 720 on ordinary days due to the yuletide.

    Lukman said passengers should stop complaining as it was a regular thing during the season.

    He said: “As you know, the economic situation in the country is harsh and people are eager to travel, so transport fares are expected, because it’s our harvest time.’’

    However, commercial taxi and bus operators at Matori Park, Mushin, Lagos, decried passengers’ low patronage during the Christmas season.

    “If you look around here, it does not seem as if anything is happening, everything is `dry’. This is not how this place used to be during festive periods. We did not feel the impact of the Christmas or the New Year here because only few people patronise taxis. It is just like regular days.

    “If it was before, all these buses and cars will no longer be here, they would all have travelled,” he said.

  • Commuters seek end to traffic snarl

    Commuters seek end to traffic snarl

    Those who reside at Jakande Estate, Ejigbo, Cele-Egbe, Ikotun, Ijegun, Abaranja, Okerube, Ijagemo, Ijeododo, Idimu, Igando and their environs, seem to have a unified prayer point daily. They pray that the rehabilitation work being carried out at Iyana-Ejigbo be completed in good time. The terrifically hard times they experience on daily basis while going or returning from their various places of work or businesses seem to necessitate this yearning as the stress they go through is quite excruciating.

    Anyone who passes this road to work or business outside of any of these towns ensures that he or she wakes up as early as 4:00 in the morning if he or she wishes to get to his or her working place early enough. This is so in order to beat the perennial gridlock that usually keeps both motorists and commuters unnecessarily anxious; more so this time there is serious road reconstruction between Jakande Gate and Ejigbo by the Ejigbo Local Council Development Area with assistance from the Lagos State Government.

    The rehabilitation work started early last year from Jakande Estate Gate. It took some time before the stretch between that point and NNPC Junction was completed. During that period, commuters and motorists went through piercingly agonising moment in time. There was some respite when that short stretch was completed. Then there was a lull.

    There was not full rehabilitation work between NNPC Junction and Iyana-Ejigbo as reconstruction work began in earnest from Iyana-Ejigbo Junction which usually has the semblance of a massive ocean any time there was down pour; whether heavy or mild. The road was and still so bad that cars get stuck. Pedestrians have no option than to walk through the dirty water with the risk of being contaminated. Before commercial motorcycle operators were banned, some and their passengers usually fall into this murky and malodorous stagnant water and they pull out smelling like pigs. Most times they would sustain various degrees of injuries. The nauseating situation could have informed the council’s decision to work on that spot before other areas.

    Though of good intention, the condition of that road seems to worsen motorist’ and pedestrians’ plight. Apart from traffic jam at some points of the Ikotun-Ejigbo-Mushin Road, that of the intersection at Iyana-Ejigbo is grave. The reconstruction work is so slow so much so that it rendered the already bad road impenetrable as there is terrible gridlock at that point on a daily basis.

    The construction of drainage system seems to be the encumbrance because of the breadth. It is so wide and so deep that it encroached into the already tapered road making it narrower. Imagine how wide a drainage system is that the caterpillar would has to go inside it to hollow-out sand.

    The dangerous nature of Ikotun-Ejigbo axis of the road has become a source of unpleasant health hazards. For instance, a situation in which passengers are trapped in terrifically boring gridlock for more than four hours is grim. People get to their respective homes at 1:00 or 2:00 in the morning. They sleep for two hours then wake up at 4:00 a.m. to get set for another day’s work. The stress associated with this experience is nerve-racking. Majority of the people have developed either high blood pressure or some other stress-related ailments.

    Some of the people who spoke with our correspondent said that people who live at Ikotun and its environs go through grave stress on daily basis either while leaving or entering Ikotun because of the terrible gridlock; especially at Iyana-Ejigbo.

    For instance, Mr Sampson Ihuoma who lives at Igando and works on the Island disclosed said that on a very bad day, he spends between three and four hours from Ikotun to Cele Express from where he will board a bus to CMS. This, he said, is despite that he usually wakes up at 3:30 in the morning to prepare for work and hits the road at 4:15 in the morning.

    Mr Ihuoma is one among the millions of residents of Ikotun and its surrounding neighbourhoods whose route to their working places is the only road that leads to Ikotun and other towns that are contiguous to it.

    Mr Monday Akpan who has his shop at Mushin told our correspondent that he makes sure that his alarm clock is set at 3:00 a.m. to enable him to get to his shop in good time. He also said that any day he leaves his home at 5:30 or 6:00 in the morning; he would get to Mushin very late in the day.

    These residents experience this hardship due to what they termed lack of alternative route into or out of Ikotun, resulting in a situation where people have dubbed it “One Way to Ikotun.” This translates to the fact that millions who reside at Ikotun and other adjoining towns have no option than to pass through this only road.

    Residents of these areas contend that if there are alternative link roads out of or into Ikotun, the limitless stress and danger they experience daily would have been mitigated.

    In order to beat the traffic jam if one should get to one’s place of work or business on time, most commuters have resorted to boarding commercial motorcycles popularly known as okada even though the ban on them. They have to pay exorbitant prices in order to get the services of those who still operate. Most times, they risk not getting to their destinations on time as law enforcement agents arrest the operators and seize the motorcycles.

    The road to Ikotun is a narrow one, though with some points somewhat wide. It is a road whose greater part is riddled with pot holes. This, in the main, is the cause of this crazy logjam which commuters experience every morning and evening on daily basis.

    A critical study of the distinctive nature of Ikotun Road reveals that there are specific days of the week that commuters experience appalling situations. Mondays, Tuesdays (Aswani Market days) and Fridays are dreadful days for commuters.

    Again, there are some stretches on this road that Ikotun-bound commuters look out for to know how many hours they are to spend on traffic. Those returning from Mushin to Ikotun do experience peace of mind if, on getting to Daleko where the overhead bridge across Apapa-Oshodi Expressway starts, there is less traffic jam. After thanking God for a stress-free passage at Daleko, their prayers would be that they should experience the same situation at Limca Junction which is the beginning of the Isolo stretch of the road. Another dreadful area on this road is the Osolo Way Junction.

    Once the gridlock begins from the Osolo Way Junction, commuters would start giving their respective families what the traffic situation is like, even as one may hear “traffic is too much,” “I may come in late, don’t lock the gate,” or “I don’t know the time I will reach home because of the terrible traffic situation. We are still at Isolo and this is getting to eight even though I left office at 6:00 in the evening.”

    The unpalatable traffic situation from Osolo Way Junction stretches up to Iyana-Ejigbo. This is when the road starts getting a bit free, that is after passing the traffic hurdle at Kpako round-about where vehicles from both Mushin and Cele-Express get trapped in a senseless gridlock due to lack of patience and discipline in obeying traffic rules. Jakande Estate gate is another point where commuters dread because of the intersection. This is because those going into the estate find it difficult to negotiate into it as a result of motorists coming from Iyana-Ejigbo axis that do not obey traffic rules. This happens mostly when road traffic managers have closed for the day.

    Currently, the route between Jakande Estate Gate and NNPC Junction is a smooth ride. Then, on getting to NEPA after this junction, traffic builds to its peak. motorists prepare their minds to spend some hours on a stand-still form of traffic jam.

    At Iyana-Ejigbo intersection, the main quandary begins. Motorists spend another couple of hours before they would get across. This is as a result of the worsening state of the junction. The road to Ejigbo is quite impassable as there is what could pass as a mighty river has taken over the road.

    After what seems a two-lane road which intersects at Ori-Oke bus stop before the minuscule bridge at Cele-Egbe, commuters prepare their minds for a horridly hellish experience. Here, the logjam can last up to two hours just to cross the bridge that is less than 30 meters long.

    But should there be an accident on that bridge, then, some commuters would get home at 3:00 in the morning.

    Then, at the Ikotun end, the logjam extends from the bridge to after Cele-Egbe.

    In an ordinary day, when commuters get across the narrow bridge, their prayers would be that the Synagogue Church axis of the road should be free because the area has the notoriety of being another point where traffic can last over two hours. But if that spot is free, it is certain that passengers would spend between 30 and 40 minutes between the Synagogue Church and Ikotun Roundabout, an area one could describe as intolerably messy. People and vehicles compete for space like an exasperated multitude. It should be noted that Ikotun is the last bus stop that the passengers would disembark before heading towards their respective locations; that is to Ijegun, Abaranja, Okerube, Ijagemo, Ijeododo, Idimu, Igando and others towns that are contiguous to Ikotun.

    Residents of these areas have cried to the Chairman of Ejigbo Local Council Development Area and Lagos State government to quicken the rehabilitation work in order to help residents of these areas. They also pleaded with Governor Fashola to hasten the construction of Jakande-Bucknor-Ijegun Road which they believe would decongest the traffic on the notorious and stressful Ikotun Road.

    Mr Sunday Etuk, another resident of the area, told Southwest Report that “gone are the days when Ikotun is regarded as an obscure area. Now, Ikotun is developed as people enter Ikotun and other neighbouring areas in droves to reside in. Residents of Ikotun and its environs should be alleviated of the enormous suffering they experience daily.

    Another resident, Mr Okwuchukwu Okere, who works on the Island, would want the Ejigbo council and Lagos State government “to expedite action on the rehabilitation work on the Ejigbo axis of Ikotun-Mushin Road, even as he pleaded that the construction of Ijegun-Jakande Estate Road should be completed as an urgent alternative route for those going to either Mushin or Cele-Express en route to the Island. This, when completed, he said, would drastically reduce the frustrating traffic jam on the Ikotun Road.

  • Lagos commuters: No more suffering and smiling?

    Lagos commuters: No more suffering and smiling?

    Not a few Nigerians could recall that popular song ‘Suffering and smiling’ by the late Afrobeat legend, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, lamenting the agony of Lagos commuters as they move from one point to another in overloaded rickety buses. That was over two decades ago.

    Fela sang about 49 passengers sitting and 99 others standing in a bus that was probably meant for less than 100 passengers. He might have exaggerated, but the truth was that public transportation in Lagos was and probably still is chaotic and less than befitting the status of Lagos as an emerging mega city. It is driving some residents of the city state crazy, even as the Lagos State Government continues to make commuting easier, better and more comfortable for the over 20 million inhabitants of Nigeria’s centre of excellence.

    Patrick Omele is one of those fed up with the traffic gridlock that often grips Lagos for hours unending, and is considering relocating away from the emerging mega city.

    Last week was his happiest day and he shocked his friends when he threw a party in celebration of his transfer from Lagos to Benin, the Edo State capital. He was simply happy to leave.

    “None of them could understand me when I told them of the stress I go through getting to my office and coming back home daily,” he said; adding, “I had to wake up 4.30 am everyday and leave my Ikotun-Egbe home for office at Lekki, by 5.00am, or latest 5.30am daily, yet I wouldn’t get to Lekki until 8.00am.

    “If that was bearable, returning was usually hell. There was never a time I got back home earlier than 11.30pm, most of the time I ate dinner in the bus, as I wouldn’t be able to eat anything by the time I got home, I sleep about 12 midnight, invariably having not more than four hours of sleep daily. This was already taking its toll on my health and I was already considering resignation, when I got my transfer letter.”

    For Patrick, the greatest immediate impact of his transfer would be in the area of his health, and he had his employer to thank for giving him another opportunity.

    If he was that lucky to get a breather, so many workers living and sharing similar experience had no choice but to continue to cope.

    One of such people was Mrs. Agnes Akpodonor, who shared same seat with this correspondent on Oshodi-Agege route of the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT). Agnes, a mother of three, works as a marketer for a company at Ajah, after Lagos Island and goes to the office, from Matogun, an Ogun State community, one of the several, that shared same border with Lagos. “The earliest I get home daily is 11.00pm, leaving office 5.00pm,” she said.

    She doesn’t get to Oshodi till 8.00 or 9.00pm from where she connects the BRT to Agege. From Agege she would still take another bus to Ishaga, before she would board another to Matogun, where she lives. She would get home only to sleep as she has to wake up at 4.00am to prepare breakfast and break time food for her three children.

    By 5.00 am, she is already on the road, to beat traffic as she must resume at the office by 8.00am. Her schedule unlike Patrick includes Saturdays and her Sundays, she spends virtually in the church, moving from one meeting to the other after service, till evening.

    “My brother, I have been living like this since 2005, at times, I ask myself how I’ve been coping, but what would I do? Would I stop work to become a house wife? I have God to thank for still keeping me alive despite the stress. I board BRT all the time, because it affords me an opportunity to sleep. Its not easy, but life goes on,” she said.

    Living practically on the road has been part of the experience of many a resident of the state. A respondent told how she had lost a vital contract for her firm because of the mad traffic within the metropolis. It is usual in this part to build the traffic hiatus into one’s daily plan before setting out from home, such that you might have to leave your house by 7:00am to shuttle from the mainland to the Island in order to catch a 10am appointment.

    But that has not always been the case in Africa’s megacity and the world’s third fastest growing city after Tokyo and Bombay, in India.

    Up until the 1900s, Lagos Island, which covers a mere 1.55 sq. miles, was a rather small piece of land that provides accommodation for 65.4 per cent of the population that lived there then.

    The situation was not helped by the lack of adequate transport facilities which would have encouraged people to live on the mainland and shuttle to the island daily for business.

    For those living on the swampy Island, boats therefore became the means of transportation. The situation however changed with the commissioning of the Carter Bridge in 1901, which for the first time connected the mainland to the Island, thus encouraging the use of motor vehicles, the new status symbol of the era.

    The pressure shifted from canoe, which conveyed commuters on the waterways, to road, the new mode of transportation, promoted by the Europeans and the growing elite, which used it as a means of commuting.

    As a result of the pressure on Carter Bridge, due to the share number of automobiles, and the need to deepen the infrastructure base of the city, which operated as the nation’s federal capital, fresh constructions were embarked upon, with the taking off of Eko bridge, which opened in 1975, and the Third Mainland bridge, which was inaugurated in 1991, by then President General Ibrahim Babangida.

    The third Mainland bridge was again borne out of the need to resolve the growing challenge of managing the vehicular traffic, occasioned by the rush by residents to purchase their vehicles due to the oil boom and the emergence of the nation’s rich middle class as road transport gained primacy as the most important means of transport in Lagos for its immediacy.

    In the beginning

    Prior to the formal establishment of commercial road transport services however, Lagosians could ride on the Lagos Steam Tramway which ran from 1902 to 1913.

    In 1895 the Lagos Government Railway began to force its way from Iddo, on the mainland to Ibadan and was opened six years later on March 4, 1901. Carter Bridge was completed the same year, construction having commenced in 1896, to connect Lagos Island with the mainland.

    The tramway was informed by the erroneous termination of the railway at Iddo. Lagos, the administrative capital and the only seaport of the Colony of Nigeria, was without any public (or indeed, at that time,wheeled) transport to connect it with the railhead.

    That this had been in the minds of the administration is evidenced by mention of a tramway in the Colonial Report for 1899. By 1901, it decided to build a 2ft.-6in gauge line over Carter Bridge and construction began. The opening of the Lagos Steam Tramway took place on May 23, 1902.

    The original line ran north-west along the waterfront, from a point near Government House and the European residential area around the Race course, to Customs Wharf, where it turned north-east towards Ereko Market and Idumota. A 95ft. radius curve took the line north-westwards again, through Ebute Ero and over Carter bridge to the railway station at Iddo.

    In spite of the success of the improved services and after much track laying and a deficit of £248 in 1913, the government took a very short-sighted view and decided to close down the passenger service, principally because the original rolling stock needed renewal. The closure which signaled the first neglect of the train service was effected on January 1, 1914, but not until 1933 did Lagos lose the service of the tram service completely, with the closure of the sanitary Tramway, built in 1906.

    What the railway lost in patronage became gains for the road transport and by the time the Federal Government moved the federal capital away from Lagos to Abuja in 1992, road transport has supplanted all other modes as answer to passengers and goods mobility across the metropolis.

    The absence of an early intervention by the government in developing a mass transportation policy, informed the emergence of private owners who provided mammy wagon fleets locally known as Bolekaja (come down let’s fight), which mushroomed and provided the essential mass transit service, all through to the early 70s.

    With Bolekaja off the road, came the Molue, which covered a large swathe of the city, and very popular for its cheap, and reliable operations. The ubiquitous Molue gained notoriety for the manner it packed commuters and for providing itinerant hawkers an avenue to ply their trades.

    Perhaps a more defined measure by the government to seize the mass transit space was in the second republic when the government of Alhaji Lateef Jakande established the Lagos Metropolitan Transport Service, (LMTS), which took the first bold attempt to develop the road and water modes of transportation, while similar attempt was made to initiate the light rail. An ambitious Metroline was initiated but was abandoned when the military took power in 1984.

    Successive governments since then have tried to initiate a mass transit blueprint that would address the growing intractable transportation sector whose growth remains dominated by the unorganised private sector. But each attempt had been met with limited successes as the vehicles in no time were often run down.

    Perhaps government’s most successful efforts at solving the intractable transport problem was initiated by the administration of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu in 2003 when it approached the World Bank for assistance for the development of a transportation master plan for Lagos mega city. The World Bank intervention gave birth to the Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority, a special purpose vehicle to drive the new initiative, which was to develop the infrastructure backbone, which was the dedicated lanes for the buses, and to procure and manage the buses, unlike the case in the past.

    The LAMATA initiative ultimately gave birth to Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) scheme, the first phase of which was flagged off by Governor Babatunde Fashola on March 24, 2008. It goes from Mile 12 to CMS through the Funso Williams Avenue (formerly Western Avenue).

    The service being run by two operators: the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) Cooperative and LAGBUS, an Asset Management Company owned by the Lagos State government thus began a new initiative to frontally address the transportation menace in the state.

    The agency also provided 26-bus shelters along the Mile 12-CMS route; three bus terminals are also placed along the corridor (at Mile 12, Moshalashi and CMS), with the bus terminal at CMS designed to integrate with transport modes of rail and ferry services. Since its launch five years ago, more than 100 million passengers have commuted in it.

    Before the coming of BRT, Lagos recorded an average of 224 vehicles per kilometre contrary to the national average put at 30 vehicles per kilometre. Research further showed that over three million cars, 100, 000 commercial vehicles and over two million commercial motorcycles move on the over 900 road network in the state daily.

    The concentration of movement on the roads which runs contrary to what obtains in other cities of the world which depend on more than one mode of transportation, makes it imperative for government to pursue alternative modes of transportation such as rail and water.

    The commitment of the Fashola government to promote these two modes of transportation led to the increase of the water operational routes from one in 2007 to 12 routes. These are the Ikorodu-Marina/CMS; Marina to Mile 2; Ikorodu-Adax/Falomo; Ikorodu- Ebute Ero; Marina-Ijegun Egba-Ebute-Ojo; Mile 2- Marina/CMS-Mekwen-Falomo; Badore-Ijede; and Badore to Five Cowries. Others are; Marina-Oworonsoki; Ebute Ojo-Ijegun Egba; Oworonsoki-Five Cowries and Baiyeku-Langbasa.

    With government planning to further expand the routes, there are more investors running the ferry services with the government limiting its intervention to the provision of the basic backbone – jetties.

    The plan is to connect the BRT network to these existing ferries for the purposes of moving ferry passengers from the jetties to the terminals in different parts of the metropolis, the ferries would equally be linked to the light rail terminals while the BRT buses will also service the light rail stations and terminals.

    Rail service

    The Lagos Rail Mass Transit, the first modern rail-based public transport in Sub-Saharan Africa outside of South Africa, is envisioned to consist eventually of seven lines. The railway equipment including electric power, signalling, rolling stock, and fare collection equipment will be provided by the private sector under a Concession Contract, while LAMATA is responsible for policy direction, regulation, and infrastructure for the network.

    With the ambitious blue line light rail project which has reached an advanced stage along the Badagry Expressway, government said another one million passengers would be using the blue and the proposed red line light rails when it finally flags off.

    Speaking on the public transport activities of the state government, the Commissioner for Transportation, Mr Kayode Opeifa said, the intention of the government is to provide a reliable, safe and affordable means of transportation to residents as part of the dividends of democracy.

    He said part of the plans of the government is to completely phase out the use of commercial motorcycles or tricycles as means of transportation in the state, stressing that when its plans fully matures, residents would have the Fashola government to thank for its forward looking plans that sought to put commuters at the centre of its transformation plans for the transport sector.

    He said not only would the BRT buses continue to be re-fleeted in line with the desire to provide safer means of commuting for the people, government would also continue to develop new route network as it continues to expand the shuttle service.

    He disclosed that other plans aimed at ensuring safer transportation and making public transportation available is the planned resuscitation of the defunct Lagos Mass Transit Service (LMTS), reform of the Lagos mini-bus (danfo) operations; reforming and restructuring the Bus Franchise Scheme (BFS).

    “By the time all these are in place, more and more Lagosians would be encouraged to put their vehicles in their homes while they make use of public transport scheme, because we are going to ensure that all alternatives are provided, from buses, to mini buses, to cars/taxis all in an attempt to ensure that you keep that extra car off the road, thereby reducing the green house gasses emissions etc, and improving the health and wellbeing of the people,” Opeifa said.

    Cable car

    To further address the issue of congestion, he disclosed that the state is also planning to, and has already signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) and a franchise agreement with Ropeways Transport Company for the purpose of providing cable car services (Cable propeller transit line) in the state. The project is another public, private partnership initiative of the state government, that would cost it nothing.

    The company, Opeifa disclosed, would build the system on two selected corridors which will serve as crucial links to Apapa, Lagos Island, Obalende/Ikoyi and Victoria Island.

    The commissioner said government is committed to making the road safer for Lagosians and ensure the security of roads, improve traffic management and control the free flow of traffic anywhere in the state and would continue to improve public transportation with the intention of making it attractive to more commuters.

    He said the restriction of the Molue operators from all bridges, especially the total restriction from plying Lagos Island is part of efforts to further deepen public transportation services, even as he assures that with the plan currently in place, public transportation would no longer suffer neglect.

    Ferries to the rescue

    In spite of the success of the BRT and other road transport service, more and more Lagosians are discovering the new alternative and relieving experience of the Lagos waterways, the third leg of the intermodal options to mass transit being made available by the state government.

    Residents, especially those living around Ikorodu and adjoining communities have come to appreciate that plying the waterways through ferries have become an easier way to commute around the coastal metropolis.

    A bank executive, Mr. Seyi Thomas, who lives in Odongunyan have since realised the beauty of ferry service, which he has been using in the past seven months to and from his office.

    He said: “Until April, I used to get to office late, at times getting to work around 10am, despite leaving home at 4am. Then in May, I decided to try the ferry. I parked my car at their parking lot and bought a ticket for N600. In 20-minutes, we were at Marina and I just took a stroll down to my office. Since then, I’ve been patronising the ferry. I leave home at 6am and get to work by 7.30am. I have stopped agonising over the terrible traffic in which I usually spend six or seven hours before.”

    Mr. Thomas is not the only one enjoying the new found bliss of shorter routing time. Mr. Bukola Amusan, who lives in Ikorodu is another, and he almost swore he would never go to Lagos Island by road again. He is a regular face at the Igbogbo jetty, where he boards the ferry and though there are usually a crowd he said, particularly in the morning, the terminal is so comfortable you’ll almost forget your troubles.

    “I found the ferry a very good alternative especially now that the Lagos State Metropolitan Area Transport Authority (LAMATA) is expanding the Ikorodu expressway. The ferry is fast and so many people are patronising it,” he said.

    To make the ferries safer, the state government has purchased no fewer than 5,000 life jackets it intends to distribute to all ferry operators for the use of their passengers.

    Opeifa said the jackets further underscore the commitment of the state government to safety on its waterways and to boost the confidence of passengers who patronise the operators.

    He said from 300,000 passengers, the ferry operators now cater for 1.8 million passengers weekly, adding that government will continue to put in place measures to boost the waterways transportation and make it more attractive for investors and passengers. He said more than 20 other new routes are already penciled down and these would be opened as soon as enough capacities are developed along such routes.

    Opeifa said only a vibrant waterways and rail system could soak away the pressure on the roads and make the roads last longer than they hitherto are.

    He disclosed that when the blue and red light rails being developed around Mile 2 is ready, it would further boost rail transportation and relieve travelling experience within the metropolis.

    Before such begins however, the Nigeria Railway Corporation (NRC), has been filling the gaping need for a safe, reliable and affordable means of transportation that the rail exemplified.

    At a forum recently, NRC’s Managing Director Mr. Adeseyi Sijuwade said the Corporation is presently running eight shuttles to and from Iddo to Ijoko-Lemode, in Ogun State, daily. Though this according to him translates to 16,000 passengers daily, the mere fact that many passengers still hang or sit on moving trains are signals that the shuttles need to be increased.

    Sijuwade, an engineer, said the NRC has placed order for new rolling stock which would be delivered before year end.

    He said passengers are going to enjoy more comfort as these locomotives would further boost the mass transit service of the corporation.

    An Ijoko resident, Mrs. Omolewa Adamson, said she has been patronising the corporation since her family moved to Ijoko three years ago. “The train would make Oshodi from Ijoko under 40 minutes, and this is what can take three hours or more by road. With N150, you can ride to Iddo, whereas, the same destination by road would cost not less than N500. That is why so many people, especially the youth, artisans and labourers who work at Isale-Eko and other areas prefer to patronise train because it is cheaper,” she said.

    Alhassan Jibril, who sells handkerchiefs and sundry items, and lives at Agbado Station, in Ogun State, said the train and molue are his best forms of transportation because of their affordability and opportunity to hawk his trade.

    “In the morning I ride in the train to Oshodi and from Oshodi, I follow the Molue round. Until they were banned, I used to follow it to Ebute-Ero, but these days, we merely run from Oshodi to Agege and at times Iyana Ipaja to Sango-Ota,” he said.

  • Commuters bemoan new transport policy

    The new FCT transport policy which took off on June 3 came with many challenges, but one very common to all, was that many commuters were stranded at various bus stops.

    Residents of Gwagwa-Karmo, Dutse and parts of Kubwa were left stranded and stood for long at their respective bus-stops owing to a shortfall in high capacity buses to move them to their destinations obviously due to the underestimation of the population in these areas.

    Also, many commuters who work in the city but live in the suburbs of the satellite towns such as Masaka, Ado and Maraba Nyanya axis were not left out following the dearth of buses.

    For many, the rates increased as the restricted mini-buses charged higher fare from their bus-stops to the designated points where the high capacity buses are supposed to pick passengers, thereby increasing their cost of transportation.

    Many residents agreed that the new policy, if well implemented, will reduce the usual traffic logjam in town but others doubt its effectiveness.

    According to Miss Blessing Ogbonna, a resident of Mararaba, the buses that the administration claims to be plying most routes are not yet available and residents like herself, paid about N200 coming into town compared to a fare of N70 she used to pay.

    Despite the challenges, the Federal Capital Territory Administration, (FCTA) has enjoined residents to embrace the new policy aimed at improving the transport operations in the Federal Capital City, (FCC).

    This was made known by the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory Administration, Senator Bala Mohammed through his Senior Special Assistant on Political Matters and National Assembly, Sen. Usman Jibril Wowo.

    Wowo said the new transport policy was part of the welfare package by the administration for the residents and it would improve on the man-hour of the workers and business men alike as the city centre would be plied by the certified high capacity buses running scheduled services.

    He pointed out that when new policies take off, there are some minor challenges which are fine-tuned over time, assuring the residents that the new policy will meet public aspiration in the shortest possible time.

    “This policy will make people move from the satellite towns to the city with ease and at a cheaper rate as the highest fare is N150 for people from Gwagwalada, Kuje and Zuba and as low as N50 for movements within the business district.

    “Besides, the vehicles are to take off at an interval of between three and 10 minutes whether they are filled or not because they are subsidised and would help to build a culture of timeliness to catch in the long run” wowo stated.

    He noted that even though the policy had attracted a lot of criticisms initially from the public leading to delay in its implementation such vent of public view reflected the right of the citizens to seek clarification on any issue that they do not understand from the administration.

    The Special Assistant added that given the respect the administration has for the FCT resident’s implementation of the policy was shifted twice to accommodate useful public views which have helped to sharpen the policy for general acceptability.

    He said “I recall that the FCT chapter of National Union of Road Transport Workers, (NURTW) Self Employed Commercial Drivers Association, (SECDA) Road Transport Employers Association of Nigeria, (RTEAN) and Painted Abuja Taxi, (PAT) were amongst those who took it upon themselves to educate their membership for a successful implementation of the policy when they were convinced it is a good policy for their business and the commuters.

    According to him the various groups represented by their leaders in the series of meetings endorsed the new policy and pledge support for the programme which would reduce the heavy

    traffic often witnessed in the city centre while man-hour for businesses is gained for higher productivity both in the public and private sector for the overall benefit of the FCT and the country.

    He charged the various groups to contain erring members of their associations especially the touts who carry out illegal arrest on the roads in the guise of representing the union to desist from the action as security men will not hesitate to enforce the relevant laws.

     

  • Thousands of commuters stranded on Abuja-Lokoja highway

    For more than six hours yesterday, thousands of commuters were stranded on the Abuja-Lokoja highway following heavy security against the Boko Haram insurgency.

    The army mounted an unusual blockade in Abaji, homestead of a Boko Haram coordinator, Kabiru Sokoto, who is detained by the State Security Service (SSS) after his arrest in Taraba State early this year.

    Commuters pleaded with President Goodluck Jonathan to prevail on the army to give the checkpoint in Abaji a human face and fast track the screening of passengers.

    Investigation by our correspondent revealed that there was easy passage of commuters between 5am and noon but a sudden heavy security was mounted as from 1pm.

    As at 6pm, there was no hope for the stranded commuters, most of whom might sleep in their vehicles in Abaji.

    An official of the Federal Roads Safety Commission(FRSC), who spoke in confidence with our correspondent, said: “We are helpless; the soldiers told us that they decided to strengthen security based on orders from above.

    “We have done our best to put structures in place for easy passage, but if it has to do with security issues, we have our own limitations.

    “We will make representation to the government on the traffic gridlock in this axis; it is now left to the appropriate authorities to liaise with the Army on how to improve the situation at the checkpoint in Abaji.”

    The source added: “As it is, we should have more than 200,000 commuters stranded because at a random count, we have about 5,000 to 6,000 vehicles on queue with no hope of leaving Abaji. Most of these commuters in Abaji are Muslims going for Sallah celebration.

    “We are certainly trying to resolve the traffic challenge caused by this sudden security build-up. We have always had the checkpoint but today’s (Thursday) has been standstill. We cannot talk about the information at the disposal of the authorities.”

    Some of the commuters spoke with our correspondent in Abaji.

    Hajiya Zainab Malik said: “This experience is just harrowing. I got to Abaji at about 12.15pm and here I am at 5.29pm on the same spot. Yet, I am not sure of when I will get home on the eve of Sallah.

    “They told us that the tight security has to do with Boko Haram scare. But we have not noticed any threat at all.”

    Alhaji Musa Yabagi, said: “I am carrying my ailing aged mother home for treatment but you can see the helpless woman gasping for breath. I feel so disappointed.

    “I want to appeal to the President to intervene, especially during festive period like this. If we cannot have good roads, we should be allowed to move about freely. It is this kind of situation that makes some of us to lose faith in the system. Who can be this callous to give this kind of order.

    “Yet, when we got to the checkpoint, they were only doing sight and pass method. They were not checking anything than to look at faces. Why should we wait for five hours for soldiers to look at our faces?”

  • Travel insurance: How motorists’ rip off commuters

    Travel insurance: How motorists’ rip off commuters

    Most premiums paid by commuters are not remitted by motorists to underwriting firms, The Nation has gathered.

    Investigation revealed that most commuters are ignorant of the fact that insurance premium is fused into the travel fares they pay at inter-city motor terminals, hence, they are swindled by motorists.

    Commuters are expected to fill travel manifest, which is backed with a premium recharge card motorists are required to buy from insurance firms. But, often times, most motorists make commuters to fill manifest without procuring the cards.

    At a major bus terminal, this reporter was offered a manifest without a card to fill; this led him to enquire about the premium card. He was told by one of the motorists that they often fail to buy the card to save cost. The motorist noted that having settled the park dues and fuel, they are left with little margin.

    He noted that one of the ways to enhance their revenue is to avoid the purchase of the cards which amount is incorporated into the fare.

    Most commuters interviewed claimed they were not aware that premium cost is fused into the fare they pay to the motorists. To them, the manifest is to trace their contact in case of mishap.

    An underwriter with one of the companies selling such products said the company did not engage in monitoring the activities of motorists. He said the company only pays claims to individuals with genuine claims, adding that before a claim is paid, there must be an evidence of payment of premium which is done through the purchase of the cards.

    He noted that motorists who do not pay their premium subject commuters to risks, as they would not be entitled to any claims in the event of any mishap.

    He urged commuters to ensure that motorists they patronise have adequate insurance cover which can be ascertained by ensuring that a premium card is attached to the manifest they are asked to fill before embarking on a journey.

     

  • Ibadan, Osogbo commuters groan as fuel sells for N100, N110 per litre

    Commuters in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, and Osogbo, the Osun State capital, and their environs were yesterday paying more on fares, following the hike in the pump price of petrol form N97 to N100 and N120 per litre.

    The fare hike came on the heels of Saturday’s fuel scarcity in most of the filling stations in Ibadan.
    The cause of the scarcity was unknown, which caused panic buying and queues,which unknown.
    At many filling stations selling fuel, touts collected about N200 for what they called “toll fee” from motorists.
    In Osogbo and other major towns, most filling stations were under lock and key.
    Many commercial drivers parked their vehicles as they could not get petrol.
    The filling stations our correspondent visited in Osogbo, including Oando, Mobil, Total and others owned by independent petroleum marketers, were not selling.
    The few that were open in Osogbo sold a litre of petrol for between N100 and N120. There were long queues at such filling stations.
    Many drivers condemned the price hike. They called for the intervention of the Petroleum Products Prices Regulatory Agency (PPPRA).
    There was a heavy presence of security personnel at filling stations to prevent a breakdown of law and order.
    Petrol attendants at the stations complained of non-availability of the product at the Ibadan depot, where they get their supplies.
    It was learnt that the situation was the same in Ilesa, Ikirun, Ile-Ife, Ede and other major towns.
    Traders have increased the prices of their goods, especially those of foodstuffs by 80 per cent in most markets in the city.
    Most filling stations in Ibadan, which earlier said they had no fuel and shut their gates to customers, opened after increasing the pump price.

    In Ido Local Government Area, most filling stations in Apete community were selling between N100 and N110 per litre.
    Some of the attendants claimed that their managers told them that the lifting price of the product had gone up.
    It was also learnt that the filling stations had sold the product at N120 per litre.
    However, following public condemnation, they reportedly reduced the price to N100 and N120.
    Some residents said the fuel scarcity and fare hike were having spiral effects on the prices of food items.