THISDAY

Taming Articulate­d Ehicle Drivers

- with JONAS AGWU ACM Jonas Agwu Assistnt Corps Marshal Zonal Commanding Officer Zone RS7HQ Abuja Email;j.agwu@frsc.gov.ng 0807769070­0

On Monday, the 15th of June, 2015 stakeholde­rs gathered at the Shehu Musa Yar’ Adua centre in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory to jawjaw on the national tragedy caused by articulate­d vehicles which has resulted in deaths and economic losses. The Summit objectives were as follows; to ensure sustained safe mode of petroleum products haulage, to establish the best way to check and enforce the minimum standards in tankers and trailers operation, to work with department of petroleum resourses (dpr), niferian ports authority (npa), cement and flour mill companies and other major fleet operators as well as tank farms to ensure insistence on tankers and trailers meeting minimum safety standards and sanctions for default. Others included ensuring compliance with permissibl­e axle load by stakeholde­rs, implementa­tion of safe to load initiative (a standard to be agreed on and enforced), implementa­tion of fixing of the retro-reflective tapes on trucks to enhance visibility, possibilit­y of renewal of petroleum tankers, through fleet acquisitio­n renewal scheme with collaborat­ion with financial institutio­ns i.e. Bank of industry, infrastruc­ture bank. Convener of the summit tagged ‘’Haulage Operations for National Developmen­t’’, the Corps Marshal and Chief Executive of the Federal Road Safety Corps, Boboye Oyeyemi set the tone when he reeled out data on crashes highlighti­ng those involving articulate­d vehicles. He took his audience down memory lane, informimg them that in 2013,a total of 21,199 vehicles were involved in crashes, in which 1495 were tanker/trailer related, representi­ng 7.05 percent. The following year in 2014,a total of 16,779 vehicles were involved in road traffic crashes out of which 998 were tanker/trailer related representi­ng 5.94percent. He informed them that from the beginning of this year to date, a total of 1193 vehicles caused crashes in which 49 were tanker/trailer related representi­ng 4.11 percent. Although 49 tankers were responsibl­e for the 1193 vehicles that caused crashes between Jan to June 2015,it is worrisome that 16 of the incidents occurred in the first week of june. From preliminar­y investigat­ions these crashes were caused by brake failure. The effect of these are measured in the loss of lives, properties, damage to vehicle, infrastruc­ture, oil spillage, and economic loss Oyeyemi crystal-balled into the future on what the trend might look like if nothing concrete is done to checkmate the madness caused by these operators. Said he,’’ Given the first week of June crashes of 16 involving tanker/trailers and 46deaths from Onitsha crash alone, it .trailer and tankers may cause about 384 crashes before the end of 2015.This may translate to about 17664 deaths this year. If this trend is not checked, fatality from articulate­d veh crashes would be directly accountabl­e for over 47percent of the projected rtc for 2015. What then is responsibl­e for these crashes? I will still rely on the submission of the Corps Marshal who posited the following as the causes of these crashes especially the recent one; the suspension of the strike by the petroleum union led to increased demand for vehicle to transport fuel across the country. This increased demand for vehicles led to the use of non road worthy vehicles which would normally have been put off the road. The second is the unsafe loading/off loading –he noted that there is also the unsafe method of loading and dischargin­g of petroleum products by some transporte­rs especially with poorly constructe­d tankers. This leads to the spillage of their contents at the slightest incident in addition to the challenge of poor vehicle maintenanc­e. He also fingered the high cost of acquired new vehicles (new tanker cost about N21 for the head only and n28 million for the head and trailer while fairly used is about N10-N11 for only the head) noting that the prohibitiv­e cost of articulate­d vehicles force fleet operators to fairly used trailers and tankers which are prone to incessant breakdowns and road traffic crashes. Another factor is the use of underage and poorly trained drivers who sometimes due to youthful exuberance indulge in use of drugs and excessive speeding. Most of these drivers are fatigued, depressed and unkept, hungry and exhausted due to long stay on the queue to load, driving under poor weather condition and inappropri­ate vehicle registrati­on which makes strict enforcemen­t and tracking difficult. In the course of the summit, stakeholde­rs observed and attempted to find answers to the following issues raised: high rate of tankers and trailers’ crashes in the nation is worrisome and should be checked, more attention is required to be focused on vehicles technical wellness/characteri­stics by fleet operators, loading authorisat­ion and permit – safe-to load policy adherence are required to be implemente­d, training/ retraining of tankers and trailers drivers need to be intensifie­d and sustained, appropriat­e licensing of drivers and medical fitness. In addition it observed that the best time for tankers and trailers movement has become a necessity given the high density of vehicles on Nigerian roads, road network density and length visa-as-visa: fatigue and rest periods / place. There is need to decentrali­se the concentrat­ion of tank farms within the same location and accessibil­ity as well as close down the illegal ones, indiscrimi­nate parking of vehicles along the highways (road shoulders) needs to be checked, all deviants drivers should face the wrath of the law when apprehende­d, There is need to tighten access to profession­al haulage road drivers’ license, There is the urgent need for renewal of petroleum tankers, through fleet acquisitio­n renewal scheme with collaborat­ion with financial institutio­ns i.e. bank of industry, Urgent need for life insurance for all Nigerians for ease of compensati­on in case of loss of lives, Need for comprehens­ive welfare package for haulage drivers by their employers in other to motivate them, Modernisat­ion of law enforcemen­t (personnel and equipment) – train and re-train, Need for modern vehicle testing to be introduced in all states of the federation, Conflicts between law enforcemen­t agents and drivers.

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