Transcript User Perspective on the State of Public Transportation
Enhancing Public Transport…
…in the Klang Valley
National Summit on Urban Public Transport 18 September, 2008
Significant Problems
Poor planning of public transportation services and development Uncoordinated, incomplete planning Lack of timely investment in public transportation services Overcrowding, network breakdown (“KTM Krisis”) Existing networks have significant missing links and are not properly integrated Many options but services are unreliable Inaccessible and inconvenient for many passengers
Organization and Regulation
Too many government agencies Not enough power/ability/willingness to enforce regulations Incomplete understanding of what public transport can offer to a community Focus on the “Lower-income group” low expectations
Competition does not help
the public transportation industry Operators may sacrifice quality, service , mobility, safety , rights of workers, etc.
Transport Ministry (RTD - Roads, Licensing , Safety Enforcement) Traffic Police Cabinet Committe e Public Feedback (Insignificant) State, Local Governments (Insignificant) CVLB (Licensing, Fares) Private Bus Operators (Metrobus, SJ, KGN HIN, Milan, Red, etc.) EPU (Planning) Finance Ministry
Prasarana
Government Operators (RapidKL, Rapid Penang)
Regional / local planning
Local governments focus on traffic management and cater to cars Development planning does
not
include public transportation
early enough
Planning is not coordinated with other governments within the region Private model – improvements/proposals often
focus on
increasing operator
profits
rather than mobility
DBKL Plan for LRT Expansion
SENTUL EXTENSION DAMANSARA LINE CHERAS LINE KL MONORAIL EXTENSION SRI PETALING EXTENSION
KLCity2020 Draft Plan for LRT
11 Lines proposed 7 monorail 3 LRT 1 MRT Cost vs. Benefits Initial Cost: RM200-250 million per km RM40-50 billion Low carrying capacity (11 lines with less than 12,000 ppdph)
Federal Government Proposal
3 Proposed lines costing RM30 billion Kota Damansara – Cheras Line Kelana Jaya LRT extension from Kelana Jaya to Putra Heights Ampang LRT extension from Seri Petaling to Putra Heights A high cost, low mobility solution What about other corridors? Other options?
PJ north-south? Puchong-KL direct? Circle line?
Real Investments in Public Transportation
Change of Attitude – We are investing infrastructure which is
an asset
in for this nation Rail infrastructure is the most efficient way to move people and goods Complete, accessible rapid-transit networks increase people’s mobility Better planning + mobility = better quality of life Remove
thousands of cars
from our roads daily Fewer jams = greater economic productivity economic growth &
Solutions
1.
Parliamentary Committee 2.
National Public Transportation Authority Introduce and maintain National Standards Integrated Planning across Malaysia 3.
Local/Regional Public Transport Authorities Regional and Local Planning
Controls routes, fares, assets
Operators
under contract
to provide services 4.
Encourage and use public feedback
Recommended Structure
Public Feedback EPU (Planning) Parliamentary Committee NPTA (Vision & Standards) Finance Ministry (Funding) LPTA NCER (Oversight) LPTA KV (Oversight) LPTA KL-Sel (Oversight) LPTA ECER (Oversight) LPTA IDR-S (Oversight) Bus and Rail Operators are under contract (time limited) to each LPTA.
The Ministry of Finance would buy buses and provide capital funding where needed. LPTAs would own the buses and routes and maintain local oversight and provide direct operations subsidy where needed.
A more complete Rail Network
SENTUL DAMANSARA EXTENSION KOTA DAMANSARA PUCHONG – GOMBAK LINE CITY LINE SUBANG USJ EXTENSION ?
PUCHONG – GOMBAK LINE
Possible Future Klang Valley Rapid Transit System (courtesy of Fikir Runding Sdn. Bhd.)
CHERAS (PLAZA PHOENIX) SRI PETALING PETALING DAMANSARA EXTENSION
Think past the “LRT Dream”
People want connectivity and convenience but LRT takes time to build and serves limited areas Other forms of rapid transit do exist These may be the cost effective, quick, comprehensive solutions we need
A Plan for Action
Short-Term (up to Dec 2009) Enforce existing regulations and improve accessibility Revamp existing public transport services to follow SMURT-KL Fill in “missing links” in infrastructure (hubs, bus lanes) and network (more “rapid-transit” lines)
A Plan for Action
Mid-Term (up to 2012) Further investment in “rapid-transit” networks Invest in expansion of KTM Komuter (fleet, frequency, services) Expand rail and bus networks in major cities Long Term (2015-2020) Complete urban rapid transit network (KL, JB, Penang, Ipoh) National Public Transport Network
THANK YOU FOR YOUR TIME
Moaz Yusuf Ahmad SS17, Subang Jaya transitmy.org
012-248-3330 [email protected]