11 December,2024 10:37 PM IST | Mumbai | mid-day online correspondent
An electric bus rammed into pedestrians and vehicles in Kurla (West), killing seven people and injuring 42 others, on Monday night. Pic/PTI
The Brihanmumbai Electric Supply and Transport (BEST) will make breath analyser test mandatory for drivers in the wake of the Kurla bus crash, news agency PTI reported. Officials on Wednesday met private operators who supply buses to government agencies and affirmed to focus on driver training and taking extra safety steps.
Two days after an out-of-control BEST undertaking electric bus rammed into pedestrians and vehicles in Kurla (West), killing seven people and injuring 42 others, officials held meetings with private operators who supply buses under the wet lease model.
At the meetings, the private operators were asked to provide details of training given to drivers, their appointment criteria, training infrastructure and modules, PTI stated, quoting officials.
Top officials of BEST and the Maharashtra State Road Transport Corporation (MSRTC) presided over these meetings.
Another meeting was held between senior BEST officials and the Maharashtra transport commissioner, PTI stated.
The transport commissioner directed Mumbai's civic transport body to conduct an internal investigation and submit a report, which will be sent to the state government, an official said.
Under the wet-lease model, the responsibility of providing drivers and carrying out the maintenance of the buses remains with private contractors. The state-run transport bodies pay them a specific amount for providing the buses.
MSRTC chairman Bharat Gogawale conducted the meeting at the state-run transport body's headquarters in Mumbai Central, while BEST general manager Anilkumar Diggikar met private bus operators at the civic-run body's headquarters at Colaba.
Diggikar told PTI that representatives of all the five private operators who provide buses to BEST under the wet-lease model were present at the meeting.
Members of the committee appointed by BEST to investigate the Kurla bus crash were also present.
"We are bringing uniformity in driver training, involving both on-wheel and simulation training, and also making breath analyser test (which measures amount of alcohol in blood) mandatory for every driver," Diggikar said, adidng that at the meeting, they tried to understand what kind of training each operator provides to their drivers and asked them to submit in writing what improvement they are going to bring to their current programme.
Their inputs will be analysed and then discussed with in-field experts, and directives will be given for a uniform training programme next week, the BEST General Manager said.
Initially, it was suspected that Sanjay More, 54, who was at the wheel of the ill-fated BEST bus, had consumed alcohol. It was also speculated that the brakes of the bus had failed owing to which it rammed into vehicles and pedestrians before crashing into a housing society wall.
However, following an inspection, RTO officials said that the brakes of the vehicle were working fine and the accident may have been caused by the lack of proper training to the driver in steering electric buses.
In a release issued after the meeting, MSRTC said the corporation will focus on a three-point programme: training drivers, making their mental health strong and inducting technically faultless buses in its fleet.
The state-run body said currently it gives a six-month refresher training to its drivers and inducts them in service after taking a test.
Electric bus manufacturing companies Olectra and Greencell supply air-conditioned (AC) luxury buses to MSRTC. The corporation ferries around 55 lakh passengers across Maharashtra every day with the help of its fleet of nearly 15,000 buses, including wet-leased electric vehicles of private operators.
(With PTI inputs)