From thebahamasweekly.com -
Carpooling pilot project initiative to reduce traffic congestion
By Kathryn Campbell
Nov 19, 2009 - 2:50:00 PM
Nassau,
Bahamas -- A carpooling initiative implemented by the Government
is aimed at alleviating traffic congestion in New Providence.
A survey for
the pilot project is presently being conducted with 500 parents of students
who attend Aquinas College to determine how many of them carpool.
“If we can
get 10,000 cars off the streets in the early morning and afternoon hours
we can reduce congestion by two or three per cent,” said Marc Ingraham,
Economist in the Transport, Policy and Planning Unit of the Ministry
of Public Works and Transport.
“People in
New Providence car pool, we just don’t know how many,” said Mr Ingraham.
“As a measure to reduce congestion we must take all of the economic
alternatives for transport seriously. The amount of vehicles registered
is approximately 12 per day so the number of vehicles on the streets
is growing.”
Advanced Logistics
Group, a contracted transport research group from Spain who conducted
an urban transportation congestion reduction study and strategic plan
for The Bahamas recommended the pilot project in 2006.
“Car pooling
was one of the initiatives recommended as an economic alternative,”
said Mr Ingraham. “We decided that we would start with the schools
because many of the parents who drive their children to school live
in the same neighborhoods.
“The road
improvement projects would facilitate 30 per cent of the congestion
problem, the other 70 per cent would have to come from economic measures
for alternative transport use.”
To date one
hundred questionnaires have been returned and one week remains before
the deadline. Other schools included in the survey are Woodcock Primary
and Our Lady’s Catholic Primary School.
Mr Ingraham
said they have received “valuable” information from the questionnaires
returned. “We’ve found that about 60 per cent of the people surveyed
average about five miles on a one way trip to the school. We do not
know if it is because Aquinas has moved. We also found that about 60
per cent of the people surveyed live within a 10-mile radius of the
school.”
Survey results
from parents have also revealed that the main factors in selecting means
of transportation are travel time, convenience, flexibility, comfort
and safety.
Almost 60 per
cent of those surveyed said that what prevents them from using a commute
alternative is they prefer to drive their own vehicle.
Survey participants
said incentives to carpooling include flexibility of work schedule,
financial subsidies, guaranteed ride home in case of an emergency and
assistance in locating a carpool partner.
Carpooling
advocate Elva Laing-Carey has been carpooling with two families for
more than a year.
“It really
works,” she said. “Friendships, more time for household chores,
stress reliever, saves time and money, networking opportunity for children
and parents and reduces congestion on the roads.”
Survey results
will be shared with Parent Teachers Associations and schools. “Hopefully
they would take this initiative further than we can take it. We do not
intend to organize carpooling groups; we are going to share the idea
with the them and they can put groups together,” Mr Ingraham said.
“This is
a small initiative but it can turn out to be major in reducing congestion
because we have about 50 schools or more. Imagine how traffic could
be reduced if we have a carpooling group in every school.
“We need
to make people aware that carpooling is an alternative to being stuck
in traffic and that you can share the responsibility with someone else,”
said Mr Ingraham.
Private businesses
and corporations will be encouraged to offer incentives to employees
who carpool and to stagger their working hours as a means to reduce
traffic congestion noted Mr Ingraham.
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