Sunday, May 15, 2005

Disciplining bus crews

The private bus transport sector in Sri Lanka is not regulated and managed well. For example owners of private buses are mostly individual businessmen and others engaged in full time employment. Often they lease buses and run them as an additional source of income to them. On the other hand route permits to operate on specific bus routes are issued on a political basis by politicians to their supporters.
Bus conductors and drivers do not receive any training at all, and specially the job of being a bus conductor is open to any person without skills training as there are no training requirements.
On the other hand bus crews are paid daily wages as per the income they generate on a particular day. If the bus crew brings in Rs. 3,000 (after settling diesel bills etc.) for the owner at the end of the day the driver and the conductor would be paid around Rs. 300. If they bring more than that they will earn more. If they collect lesser amounts no wages will be paid in order to motivate them to bring more income to the owner.
Sri Lanka's bus conductors and drivers do not have a dress code and they wear any thing acceptable to them. Usually they wear sarongs, shorts, trousers, t-shirts, shirts etc. Sometimes they wear slippers and often are bare footed. Bus crews do not think seriously about pleasant appearance thus hardly can you see a bus conductor who is neatly shaven with a good haircut. Thus sometimes it is an eyesore.
It is time that the government of Sri Lanka take steps to administer and regulate private bus transport sector in a professional way. For an example it is important to give on the job training to both bus conductors and bus drivers. For private bus conductors a "Diploma" may be organized and conducted in Sinhala and Tamil mediums.
This diploma may cover areas like, ethics and communications with commuters, commuter relations, cash management, basic skills in English, Sinhala and Tamil languages, social responsibility, soft skills scheme, etc. Bus drivers may also be given additional training in same areas. Also it is important that either a dress code or a uniform is introduced for them.
The present wage compensation for them results in fierce competition to earn a bigger collection at the end of the day. The bus accident in Alawwa was caused due to competition and trying to overtake another bus.
A wage system linked to the income earned per day will work for sectors like marketing of tangible goods, manufacturing sector (to encourage high out put) etc. But when this is introduced in a service industry like the transport service it results in disregard to the quality of the service offered to the commuters. Also commuter safety and pedestrian safety are risked. Thus the service standards will be lowered.
It is time for the government to constitute a "Wages Board" for private bus crews, under the Wages Boards Ordinance. Wages boards are tripartite bodies. They are constituted for sectors where employees do not have bargaining power to demand higher wages/salaries from their employers. The state can intervene through a negotiating mechanism. Such wages boards are presently constituted for private security guards, plantation workers etc.
Bus crews should be paid a fixed salary, and also they should be made members of the ETF, EPF and other social security schemes for which they are not covered at present. The Government of Sri Lanka should put an end to the practice of issuing route permits on a politicized basis.
Instead route permits should be given after careful analysis of the number of commuters in a specific area and also the population. Other wise too many route permits for one route as it happens now will result in fierce competitions among the bus crews to grab the commuters. This will do more harm than any good.
The Government must also make gazetted laws requiring bus owning individuals to form limited liability companies for their transport business rather than own buses on an individual basis.
This will ensure that the individuals concerned operate their transport business in a systematic way with more focus than the present way of individual ownership of buses. Government must strengthen regulatory powers and functions of the National Transport Commission.
Love ends up in murder
Nerosha was a vivacious sixteen year old girl when she first met her boy friend in their native village of Mabola Wattala sometime ago. It was love at first sight for the man despite their age differences. He was a 26 years old without employment living at his parents residence. Despite being unemployed he was hell bent on pressing Nerosha for an affair.
He was attracted to her like a moth being attracted to a flame. The girl however was bit cautious and wondered how he was going to look after her after marriage. While these thoughts crossed her mind, the man constantly made amorous overtures with the idea of trapping her down.
The affair dragged on for a couple of years but the girl still was reluctant to marry him. How was he going to support her without a job she thought. They met very often in Wattala town and went about on errands together. They also quarrelled often on marriage as nothing seemed to work for him. He was frightened to loose her for someone else and was terribly a frustrated man. He often discussed his personnel matters with his buddies. They often advised him to elope with his beloved one.
The man took their advise seriously and decided to elope with her one fine day. He told his parents about the idea of bringing home his sweet heart. The parents vehemently opposed the idea but were helpless as theywere scared of him. So the man schemed and plotted to abduct her while she is out home.
The girl was unemployed and was confined to her home. He kept a constant vigil on her movements. Some where in January this year when Nerosha was on her way to Wattala town she was bundled into her a three wheeler taxi and whisked away to an annex which he had rented a week earlier.
She was kept in the annex but was not free to to go about as she pleased. He even threatened to kill her if she walked out of the annex to complain to her parents. Meanwhile the Wattala police launched an investigation four months ago into a complaint of abduction made by the girl's parents.
According to Wattala OIC Inspector Dharmasiri Fernando there was a case of abduction pending before in courts. While the couple continued to live in the annex at Wattala, the land lord allegedly raped the girl while her paramour was away from home.
The girl complained to Wattala police about the rape and the couple shifted to her man's parental house. The parents however left the house in disgust as they could not tolerate her presence. However when things became difficult for them to eke out a living, the girl found a job in a garment factory close by. But things changed quickly when he suspected the woman to have tryst with a three wheeler driver. One fine day he saw her talking to her in an intimate manner.
That evening when she came home after work he insisted her to reveal every thing about her affair with the three wheeler driver. This eventually led to a heated argument and the man stabbed his girl with a kitchen knife. The knife cut a deep wound on her back and blood was oozing off her body.
The man having grabbed her then put her in three wheeler and rushed her to Ragama hospital with the help of two friends. On the way to Ragama hospital the suspect alighted from the three wheeler and instructed his friends to admit her to hospital.
Meanwhile the two friends took her to hospital and the doctor who examined the patient told then that she was dead already. The two friends later told Wattala police what took place and the suspect was subsequently arrested hidding in a house at Dematagoda.
Further inquiries are being made by OIC Wattala IP, Dharmasiri Fernando.
Khalid

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