12 April,2017 08:55 AM IST | | Shashank Rao
The Mumbai Regional Transport Office (RTO) has asked dealers of two-wheelers to tie up with driving schools to encourage bike riders to get their training right
Two-wheeler deaths accounted for 29.3 per cent of vehicular fatalities in 2015. PICTURE FOR REPRESENTATION
The Mumbai Regional Transport Office (RTO) has asked dealers of two-wheelers to tie up with driving schools to encourage riders to get their training right.
Also read - Mumbai: Kurla bikers lose control during stunt, injure 90-year-old granny
In a letter to two-wheeler dealers, RTO officials appealed for motor training facilities for their customers.
ALSO READ
Mumbai: Shift to NCERT in state schools sparks worry
Battle for CM intensifies even before state goes to polls
Mumbai: BEST conductor stabbed for protecting bag and phone from thief
Mumbai: 94 of 125 tenders go to BJP and Shinde Sena
Mumbai: TC assaulted by student with a hockey stick at Nalasopara
The request has been prompted by the high rate of fatalities - 29.3 per cent of total vehicular deaths - attributed to two-wheelers in 2015. Besides, there are few driving schools in the city that specialise in training two-wheeler riders.
At a workshop yesterday on Global Road Safety, Sanjay Sasane, deputy regional transport officer of Wadala RTO, said, "We have written to two-wheeler manufactures and dealers to get in touch with driving schools, and take the initiative to provide training to customers before handing over newly bought vehicles to them."
Also read - Mumbai: Biker, 2 pillion riders crash into divider in Bandra
Nalin Sinha, India coordinator for Global Health Advocacy Incubator, a model for providing effective advocacy support and training for help, said 1.08 lakh deaths in India in 2015 were mainly due to speeding and lane cutting.
Over the past decade, Mumbai has seen an exponential growth in vehicle registration, touching 28 lakh. Of these, 55-60 per cent vehicles are two-wheelers. Annually, over 1 lakh two-wheelers are added to the city's roads.
The government has begun providing road safety training to schoolteachers, and testing driving skills on scientific test tracks.