Thursday 13 October 2016

Highly Concerned .... 1



Ref.No.151/2016                                                                    Date:  14 October 2016


Dear Shanker,

Nice talking to you yesterday (13 October 2016) on various aspects of long haul driver training, safety aspects of commercial vehicle running etc.

Am sure this would come as a pleasant surprise to you  as well that the authorities in United States have shut down - yes, shut down - a five fleet transport company for not adhering to driver qualification, drug testing, maintenance regulations etc. recently.

Yes, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) literally collapsed Industrial Transit for its violation of above-mentioned charges. One of the company's vehicles, ferrying hazmat material crashed in the neighborhood of Texas causing damage to property and people. Investigations proved the two drivers failed to meet the safety and driver training standards. Industrial Transit is focused on ferrying automotive parts and the hazmat in question was Takata airbag components for passenger cars, presumably.


Here's the operative part of FMCSA order: Industrial Transit "does not have safety management controls in place to ensure drivers are qualified to operate its commercial motor vehicles, drivers operate its CMVs safely, and its CMVs are properly inspected, repaired and maintained."

To make it simple, take a look at the bullet points of violations committed:

#Failing to comply with any driver qualification requirements
#Failing to sufficiently implement a random alcohol and drug testing program
#Failing to ensure that its vehicles were regularly inspected
#Failing to properly monitor its drivers to ensure compliance
#Failing to provide any of its HM employees
#Failing to comply with other related federal safety regulations
#Failing to have HM security or communication plans

I really appreciate the approach to road safety. Like the Japanese say, to become better or perfect you don’t have to do anything spectacular. Regularly cleave out or eliminate negative aspects in howsoever small measure. Such removal would automatically usher in good practices outweighing bad ones. Elementary and easily doable, no?

Shanker, more than the news report I was having a ball reading reactions of the stakeholders.

"As long as companies will allow unfit drivers to be in a truck we will always have this type of problem. The driver should spend time in jail for negligence along with the owner of the company and the safety manager. That is if they had a safety department," writes Twade.

He adds: “Drivers want to be treated like intelligent and professional drivers but will do stupid things to prove that they are not. If you as a driver are unable to do your job safely, legally, and professionally then go home and work at McDonalds where the worst can happen to you is you burn your finger on the grill. Too many drivers want to be the company fool by running illegal or unsafe because dispatch will pat you on the back and call you the company hero and then laugh behind your back to how stupid you are to take chances on getting tickets or having a serious accident for the company. And they will call on this driver to do it again with a "hot" load because they are dumb enough to do it." Spot on, right?

Rickey Gooch from www.causes.him/JusticeforTruckers seems to be a cool guy. Here's what he has to say: "The Constitution of the United States does not allow any of us to pick and choose which laws we like or don't like. In trucking you face prison at max or ending your career at best if you don't follow the law. Ever OTR driver in America and Canada is suffering equally and in 2017 these laws will change and be even more difficult to manage than ever before."

So what is the remedy? Simple. "My advice is to learn how these rules work against you so you can manage your trucking business under the law to make more money. One thing for sure, if you are sitting on the side of the road being inspected or being ticketed you will not be making money. Don't get mad, get CSA smart!" adds he.

Interestingly, they are debating the responsibility of shipper. Hear this out: "... the shipper has no control over a negligent carrier. In this case, 100% of the stupidity and negligence is on the carrier," avers one. Echoes David Ciufo: Ïf they make the shippers responsible, they would think twice about using carriers like this."

Well, Shanker, let us turn the spotlight onto India.

Leave alone Hazmat ferrying where you had spent a lot of time, monitoring safety for a MNC. Even non-hazmat carriage is a serious issue. Not a single day passes without some ghastly accident across Indian highways. As a member of FriendsofDrivers group on Whatsapp you would have not missed regular postings of highway accidents by Harbans Singh from Charnaka Roti, on National Highway 8. Of course, his complaint mostly is that the concessionaire managing that stretch (IRB Infra in this case) is lackadaisical in providing emergency services whenever any mishap happens. Am sure you would have noticed the large number of accidents involving commercial vehicles.

That's just one location, but a critical stretch. There must be 100s of accidents happening on a daily basis which I wonder whether monitored and collated or not.

My key questions: what kind of mechanism we have in place when accidents happen? How long the driver/s are put off from driving again? What kind of rehabilitation course drivers have to undergo post accident? What kind of penalty vehicle owner has to bear? In this age of outsourced model, when asset light or zero asset transporters or 3PLs jumping into the fray in a big way, how are their alleged complicity in these accidents tackled under the prevailing legal framework? Does the revised and yet to be passed Motor Vehicle Amendment Bill address these concerns?

I am ignorant. But worth mulling.

By the way, the outsourcing model while it is convenient for shippers (actual end users), it should not mean abdication of responsibility. So any accidents involving their materials (inbound or outbound) anywhere in India they need to be pulled up.  Because at the end of the day, it is THEIR materials being moved on highways. While outsourcing is fine, adequate safeguards in tendering out transporters should have taken place. Stiff Service Level Agreements (SLAs) between shipper and carrier is okay, but very little of its contents get implemented in letter and spirit. Just paperwork and hogwash, sorry to say.

Safety is a major concern for all of us. Indian government set a goal to slash accidents by 50% over the next five years time. This is easily doable through strict vigil by all stakeholders. Let's remember it is JUST NOT the work of government - Federal and States - alone. It involves all. You, me  and everyone.

Cheers
Ramesh Kumar


Reference:
1.http://www.ccjdigital.com/carrier-shut-down-by-fmcsa-for-driver-qualification-hazmat-violations-more/
2. http://fleetowner.com/fleet-management/fmcsa-shuts-down-georgia-carrier

Copy to:
Mr Nitin Gadkari, Minster for Road Transport & Highways, Govt of India
Mr Abhay Damle, Joint Secretary (Transport), Minster for Road Transport & Highways, Govt of India
Secretariats of CII, FICCI, Assocham & SIAM
Offices of AIMTC, AITWA & ACOGOA

Monday 3 October 2016

NH 34 - Kolkota to Dalkhola - Status



Ref.No.103/NHAI/                                                                          Date: 4 October 2016

Mr Raghav Chandra IAS
Chairman
National Highways Authority of India
New Delhi

Sir,
Sub: National Highway 34 – Kolkota to Dalkola (West Bengal) – Pathetic Status

Navratri greetings.

On 29 September 2016, I was on a road trip from Kolkota to Siliguri to examine the condition of the National Highway 34 linking Kolkota with Dalkola in the state of West Bengal.

Barring a few stretches of excellent 4 lane carriageway, most of it is absolutely in pathetic stage. Not only it is 2-lanes but full of massive pothotes. 

Though long haul truck drivers ferrying goods from Guwahati to Kolkota and vice versa complain of RTO and police challenges on this route, the poor condition of this vital National Highway is one of the main reasons for these drivers ability to navigate not more than 300 km in any 24 hour cycle.

En route enquiries with various parties operating on this route (including dhaba owners, fuel stations, roadside mechanics etc) reveal that non payment of dues to contractors of NHAI led to their desertion leaving incomplete work in many stretches.

While the RTO and Police challenges are taken up with concerned state government authorities, I will be grateful if someone can provide answers to the following queries:

1)      National Highway 34 covers which two locations?
2)      From Kolkota to Dalkhola (both falling in West Bengal State) what is the length NH34 covers?
3)      Of the distance mentioned in Question 2, how much is 2-lane and how much is 4 lane?
4)      Name the parties contracted to execute the project? Mention km stretch, when the contract was given. What was the deadline set for each of these stretches & contractors?
5)      What is the status of NH 34 – particularly from Kolkota to Dalkhola?
6)      If any stretch commissioned, but not completed, what reasons attributed by contractors? What penal action was initiated against for non-fulfilment, if any?
7)      What was the contracted amount and how much was distributed as of today 4 October 2016?
8)      In case of non completion, any legal action and recovery procedure initiated?
9)      When was the last review meeting on the status of this particular stretch (Kolkota to Dalkhola) conducted? Who all attended?
10)   Who presided the meeting mentioned in Question 9?
11)   What was the outcome of that meeting? Share the Minutes of this particular meeting.
12)   Any representative from Ministry of Road Transport & Highways physically present at this meeting? If yes, kindly name the name and designation of the MoRT&H representative?
13)    Any tentative date/year by which time the entire Kolkota-Dalkhola stretch of NH34 will be fully 4-lane? 

SSir, am Delhi-based. If anyone of NHAI officials would like to meet me in person to provide answers, I will be more than willing to come over to office.
 
Awaiting your valuable reply,

Sincerely,

Ramesh Kumar
Editor


Copy to
Mr Nitin Gadkari, Minister for Road Transport & Highways, Govt of India
Mr Abhay Damle, Joint Secretary(Tranpsort), MoRT&H, Govt of India

Corruption & Highhandedness in Malda stretch of NH34 (West Bengal)

Ref.No. 102/WestBengal/2016                                                                        Date: 4 October 2016

Mr Sharad K Dwivedi IAS
District Magistrate
Malda , West Bengal
Phone: 03512-252381
dm-malda@nic.in & dm-mldh@nic.in

Sir,

Sub: Corruption & high-handedness of Transport & Police officials in Malda district, West Bengal on NH34 (Kolkota to Dalkhola) Stretch

Navratri greetings.

On 29 September 2016, I was on a road trip from Kolkota to Siliguri to examine the presence or absence of corruption & highhandedness of various district/state officials in their dealings with uneducated and less privileged long haul truck drivers.

Met several of them at various points on this stretch which entirely falls in the state of West Bengal. The stories or allegations I heard from them was nothing new because every single state in India has same of attitude by officials towards these hapless soldiers on highways. Nonetheless I wish to bring to your notice with the hope that at some of you would take cognizance of these corrupt practices and
subsequently put to an end to them thereby enabling these long haul drivers shuttling between Kolkota and Guwahati/Assam ferrying essentials for people in Bengal to eat, drink and live peacefully. That too daily.

Why am I addressing this missive to you? You may wonder. It is because Malda district is singled out as the most corrupt district in West Bengal by these set of drivers whom I had bumped into. Unsurprisingly, these corrupt officials point fingers at their higher ups saying that they were forced to
fleece these drivers to feed their higher ups. How far that is true, none knows. Hereagain, this kind of
allegation is omniscient/omnipresent across Indian states.

These drivers are unlikely to give written complaints to someone like you – a District Magistrate – by
meeting you in person in your office. Whether you would give time and entertain them in your office is difficult to hazard a guess. Having said that, surprise checks by you personally on highways where these drivers ply at any time, will be advisable. That way, you can try to alleviate their sufferings.

By the way, this will be a big service to the entire country. Perhaps you are aware that none other than
Minister for Road Tranpsort & Highways Mr Nitin Gadkari has openly stated that there is a 22% driver shortage in the country. Why? Mr Gadkari admits that the nation treats them shabbily. While IAS babu’s children was to be join Civil Service, doctors’ children have no compunction to enter medical profession and, last but not the least, politicians’ wards eyeing an early entry in politics, NO drivers’ children desire to be in this profession where these life sustainers are ill-treated.

Well, as a citizen of this country and and as a media watchdog, I have brought this to your notice with
the hope that you would do something positive. Rest I leave it to the Almighty.

Plans for another trip on the same stretch in November end/December early is on the cards.

If I hear from you or from drivers who have taken my phone numbers during the recent interaction to
inform me of any POSITIVE changes on this route following this written submission ON THEIR BEHALF, half my job is done. Hope you won’t let me down.

Warm regards

Ramesh Kumar
Editor

Copy to:
Mr Adhikari Suvendu, Minister for Transport, Govt of West Bengal
Mr Basudev Banerjee, Chief Secretary, Govt of West Bengal
Mr Alapan Bandyopadhyay, Transport Secretary, Govt of West Bengal
Mr Nitin Gadkari, Minister for Road Transport & Highways, Govt of India
Mr Abhay Damle, Joint Secretary(Tranpsort), MoRT&H, Govt of India