Skip to main content

Singapore to use travel plan programmes to ease peak-hour congestion

Singapore’s Land Transport Authority (LTA) has announced that it intends to look into how to encourage commuters to use public transport more frequently, lessen car travel and change their journeys to off-peak periods. A consultant is being sought by the LTA to evaluate if the various workplace-based travel plan programmes are feasible and effective in switching the travel patterns of commuters.
April 4, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
RSSSingapore’s 918 Land Transport Authority (LTA) has announced that it intends to look into how to encourage commuters to use public transport more frequently, lessen car travel and change their journeys to off-peak periods. A consultant is being sought by the LTA to evaluate if the various workplace-based travel plan programmes are feasible and effective in switching the travel patterns of commuters.

A consultant will come up with customised travel plans for three organisations and help three more in the implementation of their own plan. Every workplace-based travel plan programme will consist of a minimum of three measures, possibly including the provision of shuttle bus services for workers, improving flexible work schemes and teleconference facilities.

An ongoing incentive-based study that two universities are conducting to urge MRT commuters to travel off-peak times in the morning is being sponsored by the LTA. Also, an inter-ministerial work group will be set up to evaluate on how to introduce flexible work arrangements. Additionally, the pilot study will also analyse if such programmes are beneficial in the long term.

A total of 1,500 commuters will need to be surveyed on their travel patterns and how they might be urged to switch them before the programmes can be created. The management of 100 organisations will also be interviewed to see if they are open to the implementation of such schemes.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Siemens and Hyundai propose concession company for Moscow metro construction
    April 20, 2012
    Siemens and Hyundai have made a proposal to Moscow’s government to form a concession company for underground construction. The company is not only to build the metro and supply the rolling stock but also get a concession for land plots.
  • Xerox makes transportation simple
    May 16, 2012
    To many, Xerox is nothing more than the ‘copy company’. For those who know better, they are now the largest provider of transportation services to governments around the world. Xerox is appearing in all sorts of unexpected places after their acquisition of Affiliated Computer Services (ACS) in 2010 and dropping the ACS name earlier this year. To help establish the company as a key player in the intelligent transportation world, Xerox chairman and CEO Ursula Burns will be the featured speaker at the 2012 ITS
  • Strategy for public transport in Greater Rabat outlined by IBM
    June 13, 2012
    A team of experts funded by an IBM Smarter Cities Challenge grant has provided government leaders with initial recommendations for a more effective and efficient public transport system in Rabat and nearby Sale and Temara, in Morocco, by 2020. Rabat won a Smarter Cities Challenge grant from IBM which sent some of its top employees to work and live in the city for three weeks. There, they studied the area's transportation opportunities and created a plan to improve the urban public transport system.
  • People to power reporting of weather-related road conditions
    November 28, 2013
    Citizen reporting offers the potential of gathering timely information about road conditions without the need to invest heavily in equipment or to dispatch inordinate numbers of staff to visit and report from various locations. What could be better than an army of motorists and other road users sending in reports of conditions they encounter on their journeys? Back in 2003, Wyoming DOT set up a system of enhanced citizen-assisted reporting as a way of gathering weather-related information on road conditi