New public transport routes expected to change how matatus run in the city will take effect in April.
Designated
routes mirror those used in the 1980s when there was scheduled public
transport before the system collapsed, leading to the chaos that reigns
today.
Transport Principal Secretary Nduva Muli
yesterday said licences would be renewed on the basis of new routes
designed to decongest the Nairobi central business district and ease the
movement of vehicles between suburbs.
He was speaking
in Nairobi at the launch of matatu routes that have been designed using
information developed through collaboration between civic data design
lab, MIT Centre for Sustainable Urban Development, Colombia University,
School of Computing Studies, University of Nairobi.
STRUCTURED SYSTEM
“By
April when we are issuing new licences, we want the Nairobi County
government to give us routes that make sense. Every day new routes are
coming up —some starting and terminating in the central business
district — causing congestion in the city,” said Mr Muli.
National
Transport and Safety Authority chairman Lee Kinyanjui said the new
research would enable them to plan. He said increased studies on
transport would also enable them to know the impact of some of the
policies being implemented.
“In the 1980s, there was a
structured transport system but over time this collapsed and we now have
a chaos. This is not sustainable,” said Mr Kinyanjui.
Mr
Muli said the county government was partly to blame because of its
failure to implement its by-laws that state that a public service
vehicle should not stop for more that two minutes at a bus stage and 20
minutes at the terminus.
“As we implement new PSV rules, matatus that do not obey the by-laws will face the full force of the law,” he said.
Nairobi
county executive committee member for public works, roads and
transport, Mr Evans Ondieki, said the new routes announced yesterday
would be used to assist in planning movement of vehicles in the city.
“The routes are based on scientific research and will be used to inform the planning of public transport in the city,” he said
.
.
Mr
Ondieki said Nairobi would reclaim public land that was grabbed by
individuals to expand parking space in the city, while an automated
system of billing vehicles for parking space per hour would be
introduced to end the congestion.
Kenya Bus Management
Services managing director, Mr Edwin Mukabana, said the routes should be
categorised into urban, peri-urban and intra-urban if they are to
adequately cope with the transport needs of Nairobi.
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