Shakthi impact: Private bus owners surrender their vehicles to RTO
The Hindu
Private bus owners in Shivamogga surrendering vehicles due to Shakthi scheme, incurring loss of revenue to the tune of ₹90.03 lakh.
Shivamogga
Following the implementation of the Shakhti scheme that offers free travel to women passengers on KSRTC buses, the owners of private buses have been surrendering their vehicles, unable to make a profit.
As many as 188 stage carriage vehicles have been surrendered in the Shivamogga division, which includes regional offices in Sagar, Chitradurga, Chikkamagaluru, Davangere, Mangaluru, Udupi, Puttur, Tarikere and Bantwala.
In the Shivamogga Regional Office alone, 47 buses have been surrendered in the current financial year. Since the year 2016-17, a total of 128 vehicles have been surrendered to Shivamogga RTO. It includes the vehicles surrendered during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Soon after the Shakthi was introduced, the owners of the private buses complained that they were running at a loss. There were no passengers on the routes they covered. In Shivamogga, the private bus owners stated that against the estimated ₹15,000 per day, the buses were collecting only around ₹8,000.
R. Rangappa, president of the private bus owners association in Shivamogga, told The Hindu that the State Government introduced the Shakthi scheme without discussing its impact with the owners of private buses. “If the scheme was restricted to routes where KSRTC has a monopoly, there would have been no impact. On the routes where we were competing with the KSRTC earlier, we are losing,” he said. The association has demanded the extension of the scheme’s benefits to passengers on private buses as well.
On the other hand, the Transport Department is losing revenue as private players surrender the buses. Once they surrender, they need not pay the road tax, which is paid once every three months. The amount varies from ₹40,000 to ₹50,000 for three months, depending on the number of seats.