Most of the way is
occupied by thousands of container trucks waiting for their turn to enter the
Chennai port. Often, one’s comfort is to
the discomfiture of the other. Things
were totally amiss in areas like Royapuram and to prevent jams like this, the
Chennai Port shifted gear – and now the snarls have moved elsewhere bringing
hardship over there. Indian Express of
date reports that plans are afoot to
begin regulating container traffic a lot further away than it currently is — at
Eranavur village near Ennore Port.
While generally prone to
bumper to bumper traffic due to the large numbers of container trucks parked
along the road, Tuesday night and Wednesday morning were particularly
bad.According to traffic policemen and people stuck in the jam, the Manali
Junction on the Manali High Road and the 100 feet road was host to unmoving
traffic from late Tuesday night.“This is what generally happens every time a
ship docks. Every container truck tries to rush into the Port and most get
stuck outside, causing huge jams. Today was particularly bad, because three
ships have docked,” said a traffic police official.The officials from the port
and traffic police are attempting to solve the chronic issue by putting into
place a new system.
A senior port official told
Express that container trucks coming into Chennai Port would now have to be
regulated from far outside the port, possibly at Ernavur village near Ennore
Port.“Chennai Port officials are going to hold discussions with the Additional
Commissioner of Police (Traffic) by the middle of next month to stop these
container trucks at Ernavur,” said the official. “This has been an ongoing
problem. Whenever, the ships enter the terminal, every truck operator wants a
share of the cargo. They park their vehicles on the stretch so that they can
export the cargo as well as return with imported cargo,” said the official.
The situation is further
complicated by the fact that Chennai Port does not have separate gates for
import cargo and export cargo. “It has been difficult to implement this due to
non-cooperation from truck operators,” admitted officials. The statement is
only buttressed by the ineffectiveness of earlier measures. In 2014, the
customs department issued a notice which said that a trailer bound to the port
had to come via the container freight station and would be allowed to enter the
port only after proper documentation. But the system could not be adhered to
due to the indiscipline of Trailer Owners’ Association.
Meanwhile, Chennai Port is
also planning to do away with the manual processing methodology to track the
container system and is coming up with a Radio Frequency Identification based
container tracking system. This has already been tested through the container
freight station, customs and terminal operators.While the Chennai Port is
optimistic that the system would ease congestion, it has to be seen how
effectively the authorities would be able to implement them.
That is the tale of
woe of ‘Chennai, Vada Chennai’
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
31st Dec
2015.
Ps.: the latter part reproduced from Indian Express.
