Hindustan Times (East UP)

₹10k fine for bus, truck not staying in lane

- Sweta Goswami sweta.goswami@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Buses and goods carriage vehicles will be assigned lanes on at least 15 road stretches in the capital, and heavy vehicles breaking lane discipline will be fined ₹10,000, the Delhi government said on Wednesday.

Delhi transport minister Kailash Gahlot said dedicated bus lanes will be marked like the ones demarcated during the Commonweal­th Games 2010, and an intensive enforcemen­t drive will be conducted to ensure adherence to lane driving by heavy vehicles drivers.

“Safety of citizens on Delhi roads is of paramount importance to us. By assigning dedicated lanes to buses and enforcemen­t of the safety measures, we are further committing to make Delhi roads safe for our citizens, motorists, non-motorised transport and pedestrian­s. It would also help reduce traffic congestion. I also urge the bus commuters to wait only at the bus stops/ bus queue shelters and not step onto the bus box which is marked on the roads. This will help us ensure maximum compliance. We hope to receive maximum cooperatio­n from the citizens for the initiative,” Gahlot said.

Transport commission­er Ashish Kundra explained that initially cars and two-wheelers found using the bus lane will not be prosecuted. “In the first phase, our intention is to bring discipline among our own fleet of buses and our drivers, apart from those driving good vehicles. Once they are discipline­d, then we will move to private vehicles,” he said. However, if light vehicles were found parked on the bus lane, they will be towed away and the owner will have to pay the towing charge, he said.

“Public bus operators -- Delhi Transport Corporatio­n and DIMTS, which runs cluster buses -- have been directed to sensitise their drivers to strictly follow the earmarked bus lanes only to avoid challan prosecutio­n,” Kundra added.

The transport department, in consultati­on with Delhi Traffic Police and other stakeholde­rs, has identified 46 major corridors where dedicated bus lanes will be marked on the roads. In the first phase, the drive will be conducted on 15 identified corridors including stretches such as Ashram Chowk to Badarpur Border, ISBT Kashmere Gate to Sarai Kale Khan, Aurobindo Marg to Andheria Mod, Britannia Chowk to Dhaula Kuan, ITO to Dr. Ambedkar Nagar (Via BRT corridor), Nehru Place to Subroto Park (via Rao Tula Ram Bank), Gandhi Nagar to Noida Border among others, transport department officials said.

They said that the transport department will deploy two enforcemen­t teams in two shifts. In addition, cranes will also be deployed for impounding and removal of vehicles which are found parked/obstructin­g the bus lanes. A video recording/ photograph of vehicles found parked in bus lanes or the heavy and goods vehicles found plying outside bus lanes will be made as the evidence of violation.

As part of the drive, Public Works Department (PWD) has been directed to mark and properly identify the selected corridors by placing warning signage and boards at suitable places.

In later stages, no other vehicles will be allowed to ply in the bus lanes between 8am and 10pm. However, they may use the bus lane between 10pm and 8am, the officials said.

“However, buses and goods vehicles will have to follow the lane at all times,” they added.

Currently, Delhi has a fleet of 7,001 public buses under the DTC and DIMT. This is the highest number of buses the city has ever had. Apart from public transport buses, Delhi in total has at least 10 million registered vehicles, the highest of all cities across India.

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