Bus owners hold schools ransom over subsidies
The owners said
the city's subsidy was too low to continue maintaining operations.
The bus owners
said their businesses had faced losses because of higher fuel prices.
During a recent
meeting between the management board of Thanh Son Transport and Tourism
Cooperative, which has responsibility to pick up students at 40 schools in
the city's outlying districts, Pham Thi Thanh, head of the cooperative, said
subsidy contracts for 2013 had not been signed, and little money was
available.
Thanh was cited by
Nguoi Lao Dong (Labourer) Newspaper as saying that the subsidy rate her
cooperative received from the city for 2013 was much lower than previous
years. If the cooperative maintains operations, it would suffer huge losses,
she said.
The meeting was
held to hear the opinions of the cooperative's members to see if they should
suspend operations and wait for the Centre for Public Transport Management to
sign a contract for new year, Thanh said.
The cooperative
will not receive the August and September 2013 subsidies until January.
"The subsidy
is too low while the cooperative has to cover several types of fees such as
tolls. Almost all cooperative members agreed to suspend operations. If the
shuttle buses maintain operations, we have to charge fees from the students'
parents," Thanh said.
Beside the low
subsidy, the centre has issued several regulations that create difficulties
for cooperative members, such as the penalty of VND500,000 (US$24) for buses
without GPS gadgets.
Without sufficient
number of buses, the cooperative will be fined VND400,000 ($19), and other
penalties could occur.
In early December,
the Joint Venture of Thanh Long Transport Cooperative and Phuoc Dat Transport
Company, which is in charge of transport students from more than 100 schools
in the city, also requested that cooperative members stop operating their
buses from January 1.
Tran Van Thuan,
who has four 35-seat buses that transport students of Hoc Mon District's
"I will have
a big loss if I keep operating my buses. In 2012, when the subsidy was
higher, I received about VND22 million ($1,047) monthly for each bus, and I
received profits of VND10 million ($476). Now that the subsidy rate has
shrunk to one third, I get VND7 million ($333) for each bus. Excluding fuel
and other fees, I don't have enough money to pay drivers' wages," Thuan
said.
Nguyen Van Tuan,
owner of four buses, said he had asked buses for students at Pham Van Sang
High School in Hoc Mon to suspend operation. The other buses will also stop
running soon, he added.
Tuan complained
that he had to spend VND15 million ($714) for his two 50-seat buses, while he
received only VND13 million ($619) as subsidy.
In previous years,
the two buses received over VND40 million ($1,904) monthly.- VNS
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Thứ Hai, 30 tháng 12, 2013
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