What citizens must do to speed up Commuter Rail

A panel of rail activists list what citizens can do to speed up the commuter rail project for Bengaluru

Long before it was called the commuter rail or the suburban rail, it was known as the circular rail.

When it was first talked about in the 1980s, it sounded like simplicity itself: Bengaluru has railway tracks on three sides — East, North and West. Build tracks on the Southern side and voila, we will have a circular railway that goes all around the city. Well, that was the plan.

Let alone its name, even the concept of a circular railway was forgotten. Years later, when several mass transit options were considered to meet the growing city’s transport needs, the commuter/suburban rail project did not receive the boost it needed.

Our 2009 article Commuter rail plans going nowhere? talked about the back and forth between the State and the Railways over commuter rail project (CRP). Many moons, Budgets and announcements have passed by. Finally in October 2020, the project was approved by the Prime Minister’s Office. 

The much-downsized proposal now is for 148 km, and 58 stations, with four corridors: KSR Bengaluru City to Devanahalli, Baiyappanahalli to Chikkabanavara, Kengeri to Whitefield, Heelalige to Rajanakunte.

On January 4 this year, the Bengaluru-Kempegowda International Airport Halt (KIAH) service train started on the existing track. The next commuter rail service is expected only in 2023-24. These are only baby steps.

The much-awaited train services from Bengaluru city to KIA (Kempegowda International Airport) commenced on January 4, 2021. Pic: Sanjeev Dyamannavar

Activists and public opinion have played a stellar role in keeping the movement for commuter rail alive for over three decades. The concept received unprecedented public support soon after the #steelflyoverbeda protest, when the commuter rail — through the #chukubukubeku campaign — was presented as the alternative.

On January 16, 2021, Citizen Matters arranged a discussion with a panel of rail activists on the way forward for the CRP. They included: Prakash Mandoth, Ex-Zonal Railway Users Consultative Committee; Rajkumar Dugar, Citizens for Citizens; Sanjeev Dyamannavar, Praja RAAG; Tara Krishnaswamy, Citizens for Bengaluru; Zibi Jamal, Whitefield Rising; and Sathya Sankaran of Praja RAAG.


Read more: If Bengaluru needs Commuter Rail, Commuter Rail needs Bengaluru


The panel agreed that mobilising the suburbs is the way forward for the much-sidelined project, and prescribed what citizens should do to ensure there are no more delays. Here’s what they had to say:

Sathya Sankaran — Praja RAAG

Zibi Jamal — Whitefield Rising

Rajkumar Dugar — Citizens for Citizens

Tara Krishnaswamy — Citizens for Bengaluru

Sanjeev Dyamannavar — Praja RAAG

Prakash Mandoth — Former ZRUCC

Also read:

Comments:

  1. Amith Subramanian says:

    The state needs to step up and do the needful. However, the Metro Lobby is so strong that every possible attempt to scuttle this project.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Similar Story

Road safety: Accidents continue, measures inadequate

The infuriating hit and run Porsche case in Pune, is still on people’s minds, and now another case of hit an run, this time in Mumbai’s Worli, hit headlines, raising serious questions about road safety. Mihir Shah, son of a Shiv Sena (Eknath Shinde) leader, is accused of hitting a couple on a scooter and dragging the wife on the bonnet of the car instead of stopping the car, resulting in her death. He has been arrested and sent to judicial custody. Victim’s husband, on a video, said that if the driver of the vehicle had stopped the car, his…

Similar Story

Train travails at Chennai Central signal dire need to solve overcrowding

Overcrowding in trains bound from Chennai to faraway places points to an urgent need for additional trains to ease the rush.

Last month, news reports emerged of ticketed passengers stranded at Chennai Central railway station. They carried bonafide tickets for seats on a train bound for Howrah, but discovered that unauthorised travellers had occupied their coaches; it is said that people began to board the train even as the railcars were entering the platform so that the sleeper coaches were full by the time they made a stop at the station. According to a report in The Hindu, ticketless passengers had not only overrun the reserved coaches but also blocked walkways with their luggage, making it impossible for those who had…