A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, August 25, 2018
Private bus drivers Ignored but important
First ever strike called for August 15 last by private bus drivers’ union did not make much of an impact on daily commuters.
Yet, these bus drivers were condemned as Errant Drivers who should be severely punished and disciplined.
The outburst against them made all other drivers, saintly users of
public roads. There are nearly 5,000 private buses plying on the roads.
The bus drivers’ union claim that there are 1.8 million vans (?)
transporting office staff and another 4,300 plus vans operating as
school service.
If these numbers are right, the total employed as drivers in public
commuter sector excluding the SLTB would count around one million.
That’s no small number in our economy to be blamed and ignored.
Both, office staff transport and school service vans are direct results
of a very poor and badly managed or rather, never managed public
commuter service.
The major reason for 4,300 school service vans is the eroding education
system that creates, vast disparities between much fancied and heavily
patronised national schools in major cities like Colombo, with rampant
corruption for Grade I admission and other less privileged provincial
schools.
Public road transport was the total responsibility of the State-owned
CTB until 1978. It was accepted as a service the State should bear
responsibility.
The CTB at its peak with over 7,000 buses and around 50,000 or more
employees, has its own repair and maintenance shops and fuel sheds,
provided a regular bus service almost 24 hours a day, for a very minimal
fare, though without much comfort.
It was efficient to the extent; people could generally depend on their
fixed timetables. This needed more State investment, restructuring of
fares and better planning to provide an improved, efficient, comfortable
and an affordable service. Instead, the then President J.R. Jayewardene
opened up public commuter transport for private investment, making
public transport a commodity in his fashionably ‘Liberalised Market
Economy.’
His privatising of public transport had no clear vision. Left as an
unorganised private sector, this unplanned privatisation allowed for
large-scale self-employment opportunities creating an informal sector
that should have been organised as a formal economic sector.
With no planning to draw in large-scale private investment that could
own and maintain large fleets of buses with modern management
capability, private bus sector mushroomed with small time investment.
It lacked investments that could afford to train and employ staff with
decent wages, EPF and ETF contributions and overtime payment when
necessary.
It could not provide a better competitive service to what was offered by the CTB then.
What President Jayewardene allowed in privatising public commuter
transport was for small-time local businessmen who could only manage to
lease a vehicle, who would otherwise have gone into groceries,
communication centres, local delivery services and the like.
With heavy lease payments on their shoulders, these small-time bus
owners, who came to make a profit, are compelled to have their buses on
roads from early morning till late evening. They pull their buses off
the roads when crowds deplete at late evenings and incomes deplete too,
leaving late commuters stranded.
Very much different to CTB employees who were on an eight-hour shift
duty with overtime pay for extra hours, these private bus drivers and
conductors had to start early morning and continue till whatever time in
the night they could make money.
Except for long distance buses, they are on roads for well over 14 hours
a day at a stretch. They don’t have an eight hour working day, no lunch
hour break, no overtime payment and no public holidays too.
In fact, they are not in wage employment. They have no job security and are not self-employed either.
Bus owners have over the years worked out a scheme of their own, where
they give out buses to a driver or a conductor on a fixed daily rent
without any contract or written agreement.
The driver and the conductor are promised a share of what they earn
during the 12 to 14 hours or more, they keep the bus running.
On our heavily jammed roads, it is a ruthless competition for income that makes this a hard and a rough life to survive.
- Increasing of fines will not discipline road users
- Private bus drivers’ issues should be taken seriously
- It is all about people wanting to get to their destinations
It is, therefore, no surprise that the service provided by these private
bus employees is often rusty and crude. It is in such a sorry context
that they are labelled as errant drivers and held responsible for road
accidents.
In Sri Lanka, road accidents account for around 3,000 deaths annually.
During the first six months of 2017, on Police records, lorry drivers
accounted for 182 fatal accidents, while private buses were responsible
for 85 and the SLTB for 25 fatal accidents.
During the same period this year, lorries accounted for 155 fatal
accidents while private buses for 103 and SLTB for 31 fatal accidents.
These numbers don’t pin a major blame on private bus drivers. Road rule
violations including speeding are also not by private bus drivers alone.
There are large unaccounted-for numbers of road rule violations
committed daily by others who often get away with unofficial payments.
It is all about people wanting to get to their destinations on time.
It is about people compelled to have their own individual mode of
transport to get from one place to another, where public commuter
transport has failed with no Government giving it serious thought.
This gives way to a very lucrative vehicle import industry that now
dictates terms to every Government and no doubt finance political
parties and their election campaigns.
With a mad scramble to have one’s own vehicle, jam-packed roads in major
cities, especially in Colombo and its peripherals, keep the traffic
Police overburdened and stressed out in organising traffic to help
vehicles move at a comfortable pace.
The morning drive and evening drive time on FM radio stations and the
advertising companies promoting commercials and jingles for captive
listeners in traffic jams, is more than enough proof of a miserably
ignored public commuter service.
We, therefore, have to be reasonably honest and sincere in how we react
and respond to this private bus drivers’ strike, though ineffective it
was.
It is only the demand for reduced traffic fines that have been picked up
for easy blame. They had many other demands that were reasonable and
need public discussion.
The private bus drivers’ union highlighted a total lack of restrooms and
toilet facilities for them in at least the main bus stands and lack of
shift duty, which certainly would add to a satisfactory service. The
total absence of a proper regulatory mechanism for private bus operation
highlighted, has led to a violation of Wages Board Rules and
Regulations applicable for transport service and bus owners playing the
role of absent employer avoid contributing to EPF, ETF and other
benefits due to private sector employees.
The National Transport Commission Act No.37 of 1991 amended thrice
thereafter is one piece of law that is conveniently ignored by the
State. The provincial Road Passenger Transport Authorities are
dysfunctional for all necessary monitoring and regulation and is alleged
to be corrupt as well.
On their demand for reduced fines, private bus drivers’ union has
clearly said they were not against traffic fines for violation of road
rules. They stress on the need to have improved roadways with pavements
for pedestrians and efficient traffic management using CCTV cameras for
charge-sheeting actual offenders.
Let’s not dispute the fact that charge-sheeting for road offences are
not always right and are used as an alternate income source by law
enforcers. It is with that and the fact that they have no employer
responsibility for employment that makes them demand for lesser fines.
It is a fact, that increasing of fines will not discipline road users,
as long as heavy competition to get to one’s destination without wasting
time in roadblocks and stagnant traffic remains an unavoidable daily
hassle on city roads.
Leaving aside their demand for lesser fines, other issues raised by
these private bus drivers are all valid in organising a much needed,
better commuter bus service.
They would together make private bus service a more humane public service with drivers and conductors treated with decency in their work. It is absurd to demand a decent service from those who are not treated decently as employees.
They would together make private bus service a more humane public service with drivers and conductors treated with decency in their work. It is absurd to demand a decent service from those who are not treated decently as employees.
It is, therefore, time to take up these issues within a discourse on how
an efficient, comfortable, affordable and a dependable public commuter
service should be planned and organised. That remains the only answer to
the ever-increasing unmoving traffic jams on our roads. Let us,
therefore, begin this discourse with the private bus drivers’ strike,
instead of having an easy way out blaming them and, in the process,
refusing to find answers to all the chaos on roads.
