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Wednesday, June 21, 2017

Road accidents: Can Liow Tiong Lai and SPAD buck up?

We must act urgently beyond blaming drivers’ attitudes and building expensive infrastructure.
COMMENT
liew-chin-tong-accident
By Liew Chin Tong
Yesterday, Bloomberg reported that Malaysia has the third highest road death rate among emerging markets, with 23 deaths per 100,000 population (per annum), according to the World Health Organisation.
It is worth mentioning that according to the report, the average road death rate is 9.3, 18.4 and 24.1 deaths for developed, middle-income and low-income countries respectively.
Unfortunately, we have become numb to such statistics. Usually, when the road death figures are announced, ministers or ministry heads will start to talk about “Ops Sikap”-type campaigns and wax lyrical about road safety, as if the only party to blame for road accidents are the road users.
I disagree. Road deaths are due to policy failure, in particular the failure to present a comprehensive and reliable public transportation system.
Preventing road deaths must be the main goal of the transport ministry
Road deaths, especially among motorcyclists, is an issue which is very close to my heart. I have been speaking on the subject since becoming MP nearly a decade ago. It should be a major political and policy issue but sadly, it is not.
Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai announced last year that road accidents had cost the nation RM9.2 billion in terms of medical cost, productivity loss and other payouts in 2016. Behind that figure is great human cost and suffering, which I have witnessed first-hand.
Liow, the Land Public Transport Commission (SPAD) and the entire government should be taken to task for not doing much in drastically changing the way we commute and thus reducing the number of road deaths and related losses.
Each year, nearly 7,000 Malaysians die on the road and two-thirds of them are motorcyclists. Many of the deaths are avoidable if we have an affordable, accessible and effective public transport system nationwide.
Malaysia’s road death rate comparable to low-income nations
Malaysia’s road death rate is in the range of low-income countries despite the economy being a middle-income one. The graph below is from the Bloomberg report.
road-death
One of the main reasons why high-income nations are associated with a lower road death rate is the quality and availability of public transportation. In Malaysia, we have a public transportation system that is never comprehensive.
The government is only interested in building “big toys” infrastructure in Kuala Lumpur such as LRT extensions and the MRT, which cost tens of billions of ringgit but with limited success in effecting modal shift from the usage of private vehicles to public transport.
The recent and costly LRT extension project has added 24 new stations and 35km of new tracks, but for all the billions spent, ridership does not show significant increase.
In fact, Pemandu’s Annual Report released earlier this month showed that daily public transport ridership in greater KL during morning peak hours actually reduced from 447,195 (2015) to 435,439 in 2016.
Fundamentally, the “big toys” infrastructure without a strong feeder bus service means nothing as commuters will find it cheaper and easier to commute via motorcycles.
Government more interested in spending on ‘big toys’ infrastructure than improving the bus system
The most effective way to promote the usage of public transport nationwide is not to wait for the government to have money to build “big toys” infrastructure in towns and cities outside Kuala Lumpur, but to deploy massive numbers of buses nationally to make bus-based public transport affordable, accessible and effective.
In Malaysia, there is a correlation between the number of car drivers, motorcyclists and public transport users. Generally, those who do not wish to commute by cars due to economic reasons will choose either motorcycles or public transport. Especially under the current economic difficulties for the low- and middle-income groups, where petrol prices are volatile and disposable income has not improved, many have given up the choice to commute by cars or have no choice but to commute by motorcycles.
This contributes to the fact that motorcyclists account for two-thirds of road deaths in Malaysia. If we look at the increasing number of motorcyclists involved in road accidents, we know that the plan to combat road accidents via public transportation has not taken off.
Institutional changes needed
To begin with, institutional changes need to happen to ensure that someone is responsible for reducing road deaths and to improve the quality and quantity of public transport for users.
I propose:
* To place SPAD under the command of the transport ministry, instead of the Prime Minister Department. The safety of road users and improvements to public transport should be the most important political and policy agenda of the transport minister;
* To partially devolve the power in managing public transport to state governments so that state governments are allowed to plan, manage and provide public transport as a joint effort with the ministry; and
* To empower the local authorities to ensure the planning of cities and townships gives priority to bus-based public transport to make public transport highly accessible, affordable and viable.
The transport minister should be made to bear full political responsibility of such tasks and be made accountable to the Malaysian public regularly.
Malaysia’s high road accident rate should be a wake-up call about the seriousness of the issue. We must act urgently beyond blaming drivers’ attitudes and building expensive infrastructure.
Liew Chin Tong is DAP national political education director and MP for Kluang. - FMT

1 comment:

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