November 2015 will be known as the worst three weeks for Metrorail
since the double derailment at the beginning of 2014. Early in November the
rail operator announced a section of the Northern Line would be closed for
critical maintenance work to be done.
Ten hours before that section was due to open, I asked - on the
WhatsApp group that I have since been removed from – if maintenance work is
still on schedule. I was told a section manager is on duty.
At 9pm I cautioned
Metrorail – in the Whatsapp group – that there is no way a normal service would
operate that Monday morning and that all possible contingency measures be put
in place without any delay.
Sadly and to the biggest inconvenience of thousands of commuters,
Metrorail only realised that Monday morning, too late, trains will be delayed.
The failure by Metrorail to act sooner and implement better contingency
measures led to not only everyone arriving late at work, but many students
unable to write their exams.
I wrote to Transport Minister Dipuo Peters stating that the continuous
errors are unacceptable. “My email is not a plea to discuss matters in a
boardroom but to implement solutions and take action without any delay”. I also
asked the minister to request a detailed report and if it shows any wrong doing
corrective action being taken. Now this is where I commend the minister for her
speedy response and for requesting that report from Prasa. I wish to also
apologize to the Prasa Group CEO and Metrorail Regional Manager for changing
the agenda of their scheduled meeting.
Thursday 12th November, Regional Manager, Richard Walker,
took two trains with me. Even though he travelled undercover to assess the
service for himself, the RM also engaged with commuters. While we both agree it
is wrong and dangerous, as a commuter himself he understands why some commuters
would keep a train door open. He understands why people smoke on a platform but
says Metrorail cannot disobey the law of the country that smoking in public is
illegal.
Our second train was delayed by a few minutes and in the ten minutes we
were at the station there were no announcements. The Regional Manager called
the Acting Customer Service HOD to inform him there are no announcements. He
also questioned electronic boards not working, why loud hailers are not used
and other issues – some of which have been addressed and solutions implemented,
like platform 1 being used at Bellville.
Walker says for some things there are explanations but Metrorail should
be honest about the service and not make excuses for it. Communication and
customer service is not negotiable; these are things that should be in place. On
the train itself we walked through the carriages, with Walker making mental
notes since he arrived at the departure station. And to those wondering: yes he
bought a ticket at his start station and handed it in at the destination
station.
Sadly the rest of the Regional Manager’s management team does not see
the importance of them taking a train and engaging with commuters when the
service is critical and commuters experience massive delays.
The minister has since received her report and I have been shared some
of the content.
The massive delays the past three weeks is thanks to Transnet
who take forever to do maintenance.
Transnet has not prioritized maintenance
work to be done between Paarl and Kraaifontein, repairing vandalism and stolen
cables. Have to state though Transnet being centralised is the reason for the
delay. One should welcome the maintenance done at Bellville but criticize
Transnet for not communicating with Metrorail.
Had there been better
communication between the two SOE’s that Sunday afternoon, things would not
have been chaotic the Monday morning.
While Transnet should be held accountable for this month’s chaos,
minister Peters and her Public Enterprises counterpart, Lynn Brown, can apply
corrective measures. They can do this by approving the transfer of the lines
from Bellville to Wellington and Bellville to Strand from Transnet to Metrorail.
This will allow Metrorail to not wait on Transnet but do repairs without any
delay.
On the interim the solution is what I identified and suggested more
than a year ago: better communication to commuters, different Metrorail departments to work together and communicate better and for better communicate
to, with and from Transnet. Note the latter should come from Ministerial level
and not regional level.
Currently goods trains get preference between Wellington and Bellville
and this have on many occasions led to delays of commuter trains when the goods
trains fail in section.
Things that neither Metrorail/Prasa nor Transnet will admit though is
that money speaks and Transnet will get preference as they generate more income
than Prasa – even if every single person in the overcrowded train have a valid
ticket.
So what is the solution? Government will have to decide what is more
important: freight or people. What should be kept in mind when answering the
question is that the thousands of commuters on trains contribute towards the
economy and every minute many of us are late, not only do we lose out on income
but our employers lose out on production and the economy ultimately suffers.