Politics and policy
National Transport Safety Authority director general Francis Meja said
the authority is preparing regulations to guide costing of the
inspection which could be outsourced to the private sector. PHOTO |
SALATON NJAU
By KIARIE NJOROGE
In Summary
All vehicles more than four years old will be
required to undergo mandatory inspections as the government races to
remove unroadworthy cars from roads.
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The National Transport Safety Authority (NTSA) Thursday said
it plans to start inspections in January in line with the new Traffic
Act’s requirements.
The authority is preparing regulations to guide costing of the inspection which could be outsourced to the private sector.
“We are putting in necessary structures to support
the inspection but the law is already in place,” NTSA director general
Francis Meja said Thursday.
“Our 18 centres are not adequate if we are to
inspect all vehicles. So, we are toying with the idea of outsourcing
some of these functions to private institutions. But we need to gazette
their standards and the minimum requirements that they’ll need to
maintain.”
Inspection will be done annually. The move is among
stringent safety regulations, including the crackdown on drink-driving,
meant to reduce road accidents and deaths by more than 20 per cent this
year.
It is the first time motorists face such inspections which are subjected to commercial and public transport vehicles.
Kenya Motor Repairers Association chairman Bernard
Ngore said that they had launched a standards manual on evaluation of
inspection centres which will be important for those setting up
inspection units.
“In other countries where they do motor vehicle
inspection such as the UK it is garages that carry out the inspections,”
he said. Motorists will foot the bill for the inspections
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