Karmayog.com - Free platform linking individuals and corporates with Indian nonprofits for concerned citizens
 Get involved in YOUR city and locality  english Translate Karmayog.org in German Translate Karmayog.org in Japanese Translate Karmayog.org in Korean Translate Karmayog.org in French Italian Translate Karmayog.org in Portuguese Translate Karmayog.org in Spanish Translate Karmayog.org in Chinese Translate Karmayog.org in Dutch Translate Karmayog.org in Greek  
    Kaho, Karo, ya Karwao Home | In Hindi| About Us | Sitemap | Search | Contact Us 
Home > Traffic : News Articles > Newspaper Articles


Please help us in making this a comprehensive resource section for those directly connected or affected by this issue e.g. citizens, NGOs, government officers, students, teachers, researchers. Please directly upload or email us relevant content. This can include lists, articles, photographs, research papers, links to websites, etc. Please volunteer as an expert panelist to whom we can direct queries from our website visitors.

Also see :Police & Traffic Police   Roads   Roads : News Articles


 
Search NGO

Your Banner Here

1. Rs 5,000 per month on 80000 pages

OR

2. Free on Reciprocal link basis

IE : 3 city schools show way to beat traffic chaos : Nov 1,2007

3 city schools show way to beat traffic chaos

 Model School Bus Service will be pitched as a possible solution to snarls around schools
 UPNEET PANSARE
OCTOBER 31

I T has proven to be an effective way to ease traffic congestion caused by private vehicles dropping off students in South Mumbai. Now, the ‘Model School Bus Service for City Schools', implemented in three south Mumbai schools, will be pitched to the city's traffic police as a possible solution for similar traffic pile-ups in the vicinity of schools across the city.

So, at a function on road safety on Thursday, Director General of Police Dr P S Pasricha will hear activist Indrani Malkani recount how the Malabar Hill Residents Association-Malkani is president of the association-and the traffic police created the model in 2002 and supervised its implementation at the Cathedral & John Connon School, Fort, in 2002.

The premises around Cathedral & John Connon School had such massive traffic problems that Meera Isaacs, the principal, had begun to receive angry letters complaining about the vehicles crowding the busy Fort area twice a day-once when the school began and then when it got over. Isaacs got in touch with Malkani to sort out the problem.

A meeting with the then DCP (Traffic) Himanshu Roy followed and they decided on car pools as an effective way to ferry the students to and fro. However, car pools could give rise to parking problems. "To provide an efficient, safe and secure bus service to students by eliminating the use of private vehicles as much as possible was the main aim of this model. We thought about school buses as an ideal option. The school already had 11 buses. But often, the buses would take long winding routes. Besides, there were no proper timings. So parents used their own vehicles to leave and pick up their children," said Malkani.

The school enforced a rule, which disallowed cars in to the approach road of the school. After surveying the routes, shortlisting bus operators, inspecting the buses and completing all other logistics, 52 buses were flagged off in June 2002. As many as 94 per cent of the total number of students started using the bus service.

The success was replicated soon: Bombay International and Bombay Scottish implemented a similar system soon. At the Cathedral & John Connon School, the buses take three minutes for departure. The school has appointed bus administrators who are regularly in touch with Malkani. "Everyone would like the bus to halt at their doorstep but that is not possible. The bus cannot reach every nook and corner. But we have tried to cater to all the students," Malkani explained.

Joint Commissioner of Police (Traffic) Vijay Kamble agrees that the model has shown some success, but may face some challenges in being replicated. "The model cannot be implemented uniformly all over Mumbai. Depending on the area in which the schools are located, the implementation will vary. We will discuss this model with school principals at the function on Thursday and try to come up with a feasible solution."

Malkani added that one school made certain exceptions that caused it to be less effective. "For this model to work successfully, the onus is on schools to act as facilitators and to maintain strict discipline." Isaacs says the model has been fairly successful. "There are two advantages of the bus service-it helps to reduce the traffic and the students get to interact with each other in the bus," she said.

Publication : IE; Section : MN; Pg : 3; Date : 1/11/07

Your Comment

      

 

  


   ;

 


Understand