Difference between revisions of "PTO Handover Exercise"
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In April 1981, then Communications and Labour Minister Ong Teng Cheong announced that the goverment will grant a licence to a second public transport operator who was willing to compete with the Singapore Bus Services (SBS), which had a monopoly on all public bus services in Singapore since its inception in late 1973. | In April 1981, then Communications and Labour Minister Ong Teng Cheong announced that the goverment will grant a licence to a second public transport operator who was willing to compete with the Singapore Bus Services (SBS), which had a monopoly on all public bus services in Singapore since its inception in late 1973. | ||
In January 1982, City Shuttle Service (CSS) operator Singapore Shuttle Bus (SSB) submitted applications to the Ministry of Communications to establish a second bus operator and the Registry of Vehicles for four bus depots. Applications were granted on 12 March 1982, with the new company set to take over 11 SBS bus services plying the northern areas of Sembawang, Admiralty, Marsiling and upcoming services | In January 1982, City Shuttle Service (CSS) operator Singapore Shuttle Bus (SSB) submitted applications to the Ministry of Communications to establish a second bus operator and the Registry of Vehicles for four bus depots. Applications were granted on 12 March 1982, with the new company set to take over 11 SBS bus services plying the northern areas of Sembawang, Admiralty, Marsiling and upcoming bus services in the then developing new towns of Yishun and Woodlands. On 31 May 1982, the new operator, Trans Island Bus Services (TIBS), was inaugurated as a subsidiary of the SSB. | ||
The first transfer of SBS bus services to TIBS began on 3 April 1983, commencing with Services 160 and 167 at Sembawang, with an initial fleet of 37 buses and 2 bus services. During that same year, the remaining SBS bus services plying the northern areas were progressively transferred to TIBS. | The first transfer of SBS bus services to TIBS began on 3 April 1983, commencing with Services 160 and 167 at Sembawang, with an initial fleet of 37 buses and 2 bus services. During that same year, the remaining SBS bus services plying the northern areas were progressively transferred to TIBS. | ||
In August 1994, the government announced that SBS will cede their bus services in Bukit Panjang, Jalan Kayu and Punggol to TIBS, which was also allocated to operate bus services from the upcoming new towns of Sembawang, Simpang, Sengkang and Punggol. This is as so to foster greater competition in the public bus industry, and also to cushion TIBS's impact from the rationalisation of its bus services caused by the opening of the Woodlands MRT extension in 1996. These bus services were transferred to TIBS between July and December 1995 in six tranches. | |||
In May 1999, the tender to operate the North-East Line (NEL), Sengkang and Punggol LRT lines was awarded to SBS. To achieve the government's goal of having a multi-modal public transport system in the North-East Corridor, the operations of the Jalan Kayu, Sengkang and Punggol bus services were also reallocated to SBS from TIBS, in exchange for the former's bus services in Choa Chu Kang and Bukit Batok. The Choa Chu Kang, Jalan Kayu, Sengkang and Punggol bus service swaps were carried out in three tranches between July and December 1999 while the Bukit Batok bus services were transferred to TIBS in three tranches between June and December 2000. This has made TIBS responsible for the operation of bus services in the northern and northwestern regions of Singapore. | |||
===Bus Contracting Model=== | ===Bus Contracting Model=== | ||
Line 117: | Line 117: | ||
!rowspan="5"|2016 | !rowspan="5"|2016 | ||
!29 May | !29 May | ||
!SMRT to | !SMRT to TTS | ||
|77, 106, 173, 177, 189, 941, 945, 947, 990 | |77, 106, 173, 177, 189, 941, 945, 947, 990 | ||
|- | |- | ||
!12 June | !12 June | ||
!rowspan="2"|SBST to | !rowspan="2"|SBST to TTS | ||
|66, 78, 79, 97, 97e, 143, 143M | |66, 78, 79, 97, 97e, 143, 143M | ||
|- | |- | ||
Line 128: | Line 128: | ||
|- | |- | ||
!4 September | !4 September | ||
!rowspan="2"|SBST to | !rowspan="2"|SBST to GAS | ||
|3, 34, 43, 43M, 62, 82, 83, 84, 85, 118, 119, 136, 382G, 382W, 386 | |3, 34, 43, 43M, 62, 82, 83, 84, 85, 118, 119, 136, 382G, 382W, 386 | ||
|- | |- | ||
Line 144: | Line 144: | ||
!rowspan="8"|2021 | !rowspan="8"|2021 | ||
!rowspan="2"|29 May | !rowspan="2"|29 May | ||
!SMRT to | !SMRT to TTS | ||
|944 | |944 | ||
|- | |- | ||
! | !TTS to SBST | ||
|974 | |974 | ||
|- | |- | ||
!rowspan="2"|31 May | !rowspan="2"|31 May | ||
!SMRT to | !SMRT to TTS | ||
|653, 657 | |653, 657 | ||
|- | |- | ||
! | !TTS to SMRT | ||
|665 | |665 | ||
|- | |- | ||
!5 September | !5 September | ||
!SMRT to | !SMRT to TTS | ||
|171, 670, 853, 853M, 854, 854e, 855, 856, 857 | |171, 670, 853, 853M, 854, 854e, 855, 856, 857 | ||
|- | |- | ||
Line 166: | Line 166: | ||
|- | |- | ||
!19 September | !19 September | ||
!rowspan="2"|SMRT to | !rowspan="2"|SMRT to TTS | ||
|169, 858, 963, 963e, 963R, 965, 966, 969 | |169, 858, 963, 963e, 963R, 965, 966, 969 | ||
|- | |- | ||
!3 October | !3 October | ||
|167, 656, 825, 859, 882, 883, 883M, 980, 981, NR1, NR2 | |167, 656, 825, 859, 882, 883, 883M, 980, 981, NR1, NR2 | ||
|- | |||
!rowspan="2"|2024 | |||
!1 September | |||
!rowspan="2"|SBST to SMRT | |||
|179, 179A, 181, 181M, 192, 193, 194, 199, 240, 240M, 241, 242, 243G, 243W, 246, 249, 251, 252, 405 | |||
|- | |||
!15 September | |||
|182, 182M, 185, 247, 248, 248M, 253, 254, 255, 257, 258, 502, 502A, 974 | |||
|} | |} | ||
[[Category: Buses]] | [[Category: Buses]] |
Latest revision as of 13:05, 23 August 2024
Background[edit]
SBS and TIBS[edit]
In April 1981, then Communications and Labour Minister Ong Teng Cheong announced that the goverment will grant a licence to a second public transport operator who was willing to compete with the Singapore Bus Services (SBS), which had a monopoly on all public bus services in Singapore since its inception in late 1973.
In January 1982, City Shuttle Service (CSS) operator Singapore Shuttle Bus (SSB) submitted applications to the Ministry of Communications to establish a second bus operator and the Registry of Vehicles for four bus depots. Applications were granted on 12 March 1982, with the new company set to take over 11 SBS bus services plying the northern areas of Sembawang, Admiralty, Marsiling and upcoming bus services in the then developing new towns of Yishun and Woodlands. On 31 May 1982, the new operator, Trans Island Bus Services (TIBS), was inaugurated as a subsidiary of the SSB.
The first transfer of SBS bus services to TIBS began on 3 April 1983, commencing with Services 160 and 167 at Sembawang, with an initial fleet of 37 buses and 2 bus services. During that same year, the remaining SBS bus services plying the northern areas were progressively transferred to TIBS.
In August 1994, the government announced that SBS will cede their bus services in Bukit Panjang, Jalan Kayu and Punggol to TIBS, which was also allocated to operate bus services from the upcoming new towns of Sembawang, Simpang, Sengkang and Punggol. This is as so to foster greater competition in the public bus industry, and also to cushion TIBS's impact from the rationalisation of its bus services caused by the opening of the Woodlands MRT extension in 1996. These bus services were transferred to TIBS between July and December 1995 in six tranches.
In May 1999, the tender to operate the North-East Line (NEL), Sengkang and Punggol LRT lines was awarded to SBS. To achieve the government's goal of having a multi-modal public transport system in the North-East Corridor, the operations of the Jalan Kayu, Sengkang and Punggol bus services were also reallocated to SBS from TIBS, in exchange for the former's bus services in Choa Chu Kang and Bukit Batok. The Choa Chu Kang, Jalan Kayu, Sengkang and Punggol bus service swaps were carried out in three tranches between July and December 1999 while the Bukit Batok bus services were transferred to TIBS in three tranches between June and December 2000. This has made TIBS responsible for the operation of bus services in the northern and northwestern regions of Singapore.
Bus Contracting Model[edit]
With the implementation of the Bus Contracting Model (BCM) announced by the LTA in May 2014, the routes were handed over to the 2 new BCM public transport operators (PTOs), namely Tower Transit Singapore (TT) and Go-Ahead Singapore (GA) in May and September 2016 respectively, based on the tender result of the Bulim and Loyang bus packages respectively. For Yishun bus services under the Seletar Bus Package, these bus services operating under SMRT Buses were handed over in two tranches to SBS Transit in March 2018.
Tower Transit, which won both the Bulim (2nd term) and Sembawang-Yishun bus packages in September 2020, has already commenced its second term of the Bulim Bus Package in May 2021 and has also taken over 27 bus services in three tranches from SMRT Buses in September and October 2021, as part of the Sembawang-Yishun Bus Package.
In August 2023, the LTA had awarded the Bukit Merah (2nd term) and Jurong West Bus Packages to SBS Transit and SMRT Buses respectively. The second term for the Bukit Merah Bus Package will commence in May 2024, while SBS Transit will transfer the bus services under the Jurong West Bus Package to SMRT Buses from September 2024.
Timeline of Handover[edit]
SBS and TIBS[edit]
Click to expand/collapse | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Handover date | Operator change | Services |
1983 | 3 April | SBS to TIBS | 160, 167 |
8 May | 161, 164 | ||
5 June | 169 | ||
10 July | 178, 204, 208 | ||
7 August | 180, 182 | ||
4 September | 181 | ||
9 October | 372 | ||
1995 | 2 July | 177, 179, 184 | |
6 August | 75, 343, 344 | ||
17 September | 5, 187 | ||
1 October | 176 | ||
5 November | 171 | ||
17 December | 59, 82, 103, 163, 214E, 214W | ||
1999 | 25 July | SBS to TIBS | 190 |
TIBS to SBS | 864, 865, 866 | ||
29 August | SBS to TIBS | 185, 300, 302, 307 | |
TIBS to SBS | 82 | ||
26 December | SBS to TIBS | 67, 172, 175, 188 | |
TIBS to SBS | 103, 163, 820, 821 | ||
2000 | 18 June | SBS to TIBS | 77, 189, 361, 365, 367 |
3 September | 61 | ||
24 December | 106, 173 |
Bus Contracting Model[edit]
Click to expand/collapse | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Handover date | Operator change | Services |
2016 | 29 May | SMRT to TTS | 77, 106, 173, 177, 189, 941, 945, 947, 990 |
12 June | SBST to TTS | 66, 78, 79, 97, 97e, 143, 143M | |
26 June | 41, 49, 96, 98, 98M, 183, 282, 284, 285, 333, 334, 335 | ||
4 September | SBST to GAS | 3, 34, 43, 43M, 62, 82, 83, 84, 85, 118, 119, 136, 382G, 382W, 386 | |
18 September | 2, 6, 12, 15, 17, 17A, 36, 354, 358, 359, 403, 518, 518A | ||
2018 | 18 March | SMRT to SBST | 800, 804, 805, 807, 811, 860 |
25 March | 803, 806, 812, 850E, 851, 852 | ||
2021 | 29 May | SMRT to TTS | 944 |
TTS to SBST | 974 | ||
31 May | SMRT to TTS | 653, 657 | |
TTS to SMRT | 665 | ||
5 September | SMRT to TTS | 171, 670, 853, 853M, 854, 854e, 855, 856, 857 | |
6 September | SMRT to SBST | 652 | |
19 September | SMRT to TTS | 169, 858, 963, 963e, 963R, 965, 966, 969 | |
3 October | 167, 656, 825, 859, 882, 883, 883M, 980, 981, NR1, NR2 | ||
2024 | 1 September | SBST to SMRT | 179, 179A, 181, 181M, 192, 193, 194, 199, 240, 240M, 241, 242, 243G, 243W, 246, 249, 251, 252, 405 |
15 September | 182, 182M, 185, 247, 248, 248M, 253, 254, 255, 257, 258, 502, 502A, 974 |