Oral Answer

Rationale for Stopping Park and Ride Scheme

Speakers

Summary

This question concerns the rationale for terminating the Park and Ride Scheme as raised by Mr Ang Wei Neng and Mr Lim Biow Chuan. Minister for Transport Khaw Boon Wan explained that the 1975 scheme is less relevant today due to the extensive rail and bus network and low user take-up. He stated that many users were abusing the scheme for cheap parking instead of switching to public transport, defeating its original purpose of reducing central business district congestion. The Minister for Transport Khaw Boon Wan noted that motorists can still park at fringe locations like Kallang to save on high city parking and Electronic Road Pricing charges. Therefore, the Ministry maintains that additional taxpayer-funded subsidies are no longer necessary to encourage motorists to utilize public transport.

Transcript

14 Mr Ang Wei Neng asked the Minister for Transport (a) whether the termination of the Park and Ride Scheme runs contrary to encouraging Singaporeans to take public transport; and (b) whether the Ministry will consider encouraging and incentivising motorists to park their cars at the Sports Hub and Kallang surface car parks during days with no major events and take train rides to the CBD.

15 Mr Lim Biow Chuan asked the Minister for Transport if he can explain the rationale for stopping the Park and Ride Scheme and what are the alternatives available to motorists using this scheme.

The Minister for Transport (Mr Khaw Boon Wan): Madam, can I take Question Nos 14 and 15 together, please?

Mdm Speaker: Yes, please.

Mr Khaw Boon Wan: The objective of the Park and Ride scheme is to reduce traffic congestion in the central business district (CBD) by encouraging motorists to switch to public transport just before entering the CBD. It was introduced long ago in 1975, before our Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) system was built, and when the public transport network was also much less extensive. Today, many commuters are able to take the MRT and buses directly to the city from their homes which, therefore, makes the Park and Ride Scheme much less useful.

Indeed, over the past few years, the take-up rate for the scheme has been consistently low, very low. There are fewer than 2,000 regular users, most of whom do not take public transport after parking their cars. This suggests that a good number of motorists are using the Park and Ride scheme as cheap, subsidised destination parking. This defeats the purpose of the scheme.

Motorists who wish to drive for a part of their journey before switching to public transport can still park their cars at any car park near public transport. It will still be cheaper than parking in the CBD, even without the subsidy from the Park and Ride scheme. Motorists who park at the Sports Hub or at Kallang, for example, and take public transport, could see savings of up to a few hundred dollars monthly, as they do not have to pay the much more expensive season parking in the CBD nor Electronic Road Pricing (ERP) charges. There is no need for taxpayers to provide further subsidies.

Mdm Speaker: Mr Ang Wei Neng.

Mr Ang Wei Neng (Jurong): I thank the Minister for the comprehensive reply. I noted that half of the regular users of the Park and Ride scheme do not take public transport after parking their cars. But there still remains about a thousand users who will still park their cars and take public transport. Is it easier to maybe enforce the action against abusers rather than you let another thousand people lose their benefits?

On top of that, we also noted that, as the Minister said, Kallang carpark and the Sports Hub have many parking lots and are very much under-utilised. Could we not have a more aggressive scheme to encourage people to park their cars there and take public transport to the CBD area, or is the Public-Private Partnership arrangement with the Sports Hub hindering such an arrangement to encourage more people to park their cars at the Kallang carpark?

Mr Khaw Boon Wan: I think the number of actual users of the scheme, numbers by the hundreds, should be seen against the daily commuter traffic of more than two million, and whether Kallang or whichever car parks, where motorists can still park and ride. Many motorists that I know of, including myself, do park and ride, except that we park and we pay for the car park, without having to ask for more subsidies because there are already significant savings, as I said, of a few hundred dollars per month by parking at the fringe rather than going into the CBD and trying to look for a car park.