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Will you be able to get around safely and on time, using public transport?

JOBURG – Will you be able to get around with just public transport?

If you need to get from Newtown to Hillbrow, Alexandra, Sandton and back to Newtown again, you only need about R70 and be willing to use taxis, buses, trains, tuk-tuks and sometimes, your feet.

Although travelling by public transport only is a daily reality for millions of South Africans in Joburg, thousands of cars still litter the roads.

Joburg’s inner city viewed from a taxi seat.
One of the Kasi to Kasi stops is the Hillbrow Tower.

During the City of Johannesburg’s Transport Month initiative called Kasi to Kasi, on 20 October, each member of a participating group was given R100 to get to certain landmarks across Joburg. Each team had about three hours to complete the challenge.

Although most South Africans are accustomed to using various forms of public transport, others experience driving in a minibus taxi and taking the Gautrain for the first time.

 

For Abram Ngulube, who takes a taxi every day from Ellis Park to Orange Grove for R40 a day, this is also a daily part of life.

Although he finds it convenient to use a taxi, he is often concerned about the condition some of them are in. He said that when it rains, water often comes through the roof and drips onto the passengers.
Even for some drivers, driving passengers through traffic and often, dangerous areas, is a reality. Nelson Baloyi, who has been a taxi driver for 10 years, says although he does get decent money for it, he still does it only to get paid.

His job can also be dangerous, with taxi violence often spurring when drivers overstep others’ territories, or rather, routes. Nevertheless, he gets hundreds of passengers to and from where they need to be every day.

Nelson Baloyi has been a taxi driver for 10 years.
Naledi Ramitloa in Alexandra reached the halfway point for the Kasi to Kasi challenge on 20 October.

The City of Johannesburg’s MMC for Transport, Nonhlanhla Makhuba, also joined the challenge with her own team. She said this day was an attempt to promote the use of public transport. Every team later briefed the MMC on their experiences. This would ultimately add to the overall analysis of the public transport network in Joburg.

“We encourage motorists to start thinking about using public transport,” she said.

“We know it can be more comfortable in your car, but you can skip traffic and relax when you use public transport like Rea Vaya.”

Roger McCulloch, the strategic advisor to the MMC, said the department knows there are still improvements to be made. “We were made aware of a lot of issues that need to be dealt with. Things like scheduling and the availability of information at stations are some of the frustrations we experience,” he said.

He said the goal is to make using public transport comfortable, convenient and reliable for motorists so they ultimately use public transport instead.

Teams had to take various modes of public transport, including the Gautrain, to get where they needed to be.

Also read:

R674 million public transport loop another step for Joburg transport
How Joburg is celebrating transport month 

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