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Towards evening paratransit services to complement scheduled public transport in Cape Town: exploring alternative policy interventions from the minibus-taxi industry's perspective

Cities across low and middle income countries are seeking to improve public transport services, but the presence of large numbers of independent paratransit operators complicate reforms. City officials often seek to eliminate paratransit services in favor of scheduled services, typically bus rapid t...

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Main Author: Plano, Christopher Evan
Other Authors: Behrens, Roger
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Civil Engineering 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Plano, Christopher Evan
author2 Behrens, Roger
author_browse Behrens, Roger
Plano, Christopher Evan
author_facet Behrens, Roger
Plano, Christopher Evan
author_sort Plano, Christopher Evan
collection Thesis
description Cities across low and middle income countries are seeking to improve public transport services, but the presence of large numbers of independent paratransit operators complicate reforms. City officials often seek to eliminate paratransit services in favor of scheduled services, typically bus rapid transit, yet this has proven impossible to achieve. Cape Town is one such city, whose planning officials recognize that the transition to and operating costs of new scheduled services are unsustainable. Reconsidering the reform approach, the City has acknowledged a continued role for paratransit services primarily as feeders to scheduled services. This raises the question of how complementary service quality can be obtained at transfer points between scheduled and unscheduled services. The research seeks to assist operators in sharing their perspectives outside of a City-structured engagement process and to assist City officials in understanding what reform paths will be most feasible based on paratransit operator acceptability and cost to the City. To do so, this study uses a mixed methods approach using a naturally occurring example that mirrors the hybrid network arrangement as espoused by the City. The feasibility of interventions to improve evening service quality complementarity, specifically related to mismatched service span and long off peak headways, is explored with minibus-taxi operators. The two key stakeholders among operators are vehicle owners and drivers who have differing perspectives on the business and reform. Understanding these differing perspectives is critical to successful implementation of future reforms as past attempts have been met with considerable resistance from the industry. Driver perspectives were captured through a stated choice survey while owners were engaged through structured focus groups. Costs of interventions were estimated and combined with stakeholder data to indicate which interventions to extend service into the evening and maintain short headways are most likely to be successful if attempted by City officials. Results indicate that to extend paratransit services to match scheduled modes, improvements in rank (terminal) security, an increase in fares, or an operating deficit payment incentive are the most feasible of seven interventions explored. The first two require little transition effort or cost to the City but will not address potentially long headways; the third most feasible intervention addresses both service quality issues yet represents a larger burden for the City. Aligned with experience from previous reforms to eliminate paratransit in favor of contracted, scheduled services, this research finds that corporatization of paratransit operators may be less feasible than other interventions explored; this suggests that the City's policy shift is appropriate and that alternative approaches to paratransit reform that are less costly and require less onerous changes from status quo operations are feasible. By undertaking these alternatives, limited government budgets can be spent more effectively and efficiently so public transport reform reaches more residents more quickly.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/32295 Towards evening paratransit services to complement scheduled public transport in Cape Town: exploring alternative policy interventions from the minibus-taxi industry's perspective Plano, Christopher Evan Behrens, Roger Zuidgeest, Marcus Civil Engineering Cities across low and middle income countries are seeking to improve public transport services, but the presence of large numbers of independent paratransit operators complicate reforms. City officials often seek to eliminate paratransit services in favor of scheduled services, typically bus rapid transit, yet this has proven impossible to achieve. Cape Town is one such city, whose planning officials recognize that the transition to and operating costs of new scheduled services are unsustainable. Reconsidering the reform approach, the City has acknowledged a continued role for paratransit services primarily as feeders to scheduled services. This raises the question of how complementary service quality can be obtained at transfer points between scheduled and unscheduled services. The research seeks to assist operators in sharing their perspectives outside of a City-structured engagement process and to assist City officials in understanding what reform paths will be most feasible based on paratransit operator acceptability and cost to the City. To do so, this study uses a mixed methods approach using a naturally occurring example that mirrors the hybrid network arrangement as espoused by the City. The feasibility of interventions to improve evening service quality complementarity, specifically related to mismatched service span and long off peak headways, is explored with minibus-taxi operators. The two key stakeholders among operators are vehicle owners and drivers who have differing perspectives on the business and reform. Understanding these differing perspectives is critical to successful implementation of future reforms as past attempts have been met with considerable resistance from the industry. Driver perspectives were captured through a stated choice survey while owners were engaged through structured focus groups. Costs of interventions were estimated and combined with stakeholder data to indicate which interventions to extend service into the evening and maintain short headways are most likely to be successful if attempted by City officials. Results indicate that to extend paratransit services to match scheduled modes, improvements in rank (terminal) security, an increase in fares, or an operating deficit payment incentive are the most feasible of seven interventions explored. The first two require little transition effort or cost to the City but will not address potentially long headways; the third most feasible intervention addresses both service quality issues yet represents a larger burden for the City. Aligned with experience from previous reforms to eliminate paratransit in favor of contracted, scheduled services, this research finds that corporatization of paratransit operators may be less feasible than other interventions explored; this suggests that the City's policy shift is appropriate and that alternative approaches to paratransit reform that are less costly and require less onerous changes from status quo operations are feasible. By undertaking these alternatives, limited government budgets can be spent more effectively and efficiently so public transport reform reaches more residents more quickly. 2020-10-06T14:28:32Z 2020-10-06T14:28:32Z 2020 2020-10-06T14:06:07Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32295 eng application/pdf Department of Civil Engineering Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment
spellingShingle Civil Engineering
Plano, Christopher Evan
Towards evening paratransit services to complement scheduled public transport in Cape Town: exploring alternative policy interventions from the minibus-taxi industry's perspective
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Towards evening paratransit services to complement scheduled public transport in Cape Town: exploring alternative policy interventions from the minibus-taxi industry's perspective
title_full Towards evening paratransit services to complement scheduled public transport in Cape Town: exploring alternative policy interventions from the minibus-taxi industry's perspective
title_fullStr Towards evening paratransit services to complement scheduled public transport in Cape Town: exploring alternative policy interventions from the minibus-taxi industry's perspective
title_full_unstemmed Towards evening paratransit services to complement scheduled public transport in Cape Town: exploring alternative policy interventions from the minibus-taxi industry's perspective
title_short Towards evening paratransit services to complement scheduled public transport in Cape Town: exploring alternative policy interventions from the minibus-taxi industry's perspective
title_sort towards evening paratransit services to complement scheduled public transport in cape town exploring alternative policy interventions from the minibus taxi industry s perspective
topic Civil Engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32295
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