[sustran] Re: More on motorbikes

Guillen Danielle guillen at sk.tsukuba.ac.jp
Tue Nov 30 18:20:44 JST 2004


  Hello there Mr. Johnson and to those interested in motorcycle studies,

  Thank you for this interesting article.

  A paper by Dr. Ing Hsu, Tien-Pen entitled " A Comparison Study on 
Motorcycle Traffic Development in some Asian countries-Case of Taiwan, 
Malaysia and Vietnam" full report available at 
http://www.easts.info/Awards/ICRA-ComparisonStudyMotorcycleDevelopment.pdf 
might also be of  interest to you.


  Moreover, I must admit I am particularly interested in this topic as Im 
presently working on my graduate research about  motorcycle propelled 
vehicles, the case of tricycles and habal-habal (or motorcycle taxis with 
extension that can accomodate four passengers ) in Davao City, Philippines. 
Compare with other ASEAN countries, motorcycle taxi is not as popular in our 
country, however in 1999, the habal-habal emerged and initial interviews 
with local officials interestingly share the same views as with those of the 
municipal transport official of  San Paulo's. You can read more of it at 
this site http://www.iatss.or.jp/english/research/v28-n1/res-moku.html

  I would be very happy to know  if there are studies that have done to 
quantify its economic importance (as it is one of the thrust of my study 
too). Any discussion on this from the experts is greatly appreciated.

  Many thanks!

  Best Regards,
  Danielle Guillen
  Graduate Student
  University of Tsukuba


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: "Craig August Johnson" <caj24 at cornell.edu>
  To: "Asia and the Pacific sustainable transport" 
<sustran-discuss at list.jca.apc.org>
  Sent: Tuesday, November 30, 2004 4:56 PM
  Subject: [sustran] Economic Neccessity of Motorbikes in Sao Paulo


  > This article was just in the NY times and I found it very interesting.
  >
  > It seems that globally as car transportation and congestion increase,
  > motorbike taxis and couriers will play an ever critical role in
  > maintaining the economic viability of these congested cities.
  >
  > It would be interesting to see a study that would attempt to quantify 
the
  > relative economic advantage of such Asian cities with high amounts of
  > motorbike transportation as Taipei and HCMC.
  > Any comments?
  >
  > Craig Johnson
  >
  >
  >
  >
  >
  >
  > November 30, 2004
  > SÃO PAULO JOURNAL- NY TIMES
  > Pedestrians and Drivers Beware! Motoboys Are in a Hurry
  > By LARRY ROHTER
  >
  > ÃO PAULO, Brazil - This is a city with nearly 11 million inhabitants and
  > 4.5 million passenger cars, 32,000 taxis and 15,000 buses. Traffic jams
  > more than 100 miles long are not uncommon, and even on an ordinary day,
  > getting from one side of town to the other can take two hours or more.
  >
  > Only one group here in South America's largest city seems immune to 
those
  > frustrations and delays: the daring army of motorcycle messengers known 
as
  > "motoboys." Zigzagging among stopped cars, ignoring lane markers, red
  > lights and stop signs, they regularly menace pedestrians and infuriate
  > motorists as they zoom their way down gridlocked streets and highways,
  > armed with the knowledge that without them business would grind to a 
halt.
  >
  > "Nowadays we are so integrated into the economy that São Paulo couldn't
  > function without us," said Ednaldo Silva, a motoboy who owns an agency
  > employing nearly 50 messengers. "People don't like us or respect us, but
  > we are as essential to transport as trucks, and if we were to go on
  > strike, the city would collapse."
  >
  > The bulk of the motoboy's work involves rushing contracts and other 
legal
  > documents from one business to another, especially for bank loans. But
  > from car parts to architect's plans, human organs for transplant to
  > passports or pizza, there is almost nothing he cannot or will not 
deliver.
  >
  > "There's no way to do away with them," Gerson Luís Bittencourt, the
  > muncipal transportation secretary, acknowledged. "They employ a ton of
  > people and facilitate things for everyone. So what we have to do is find 
a
  > way to regulate the phenomenon and restore sociability in traffic."
  >
  > Though no one is sure of their exact numbers, estimates start at 120,000
  > and range as high as 200,000. Many work 12 hours a day or more to earn a
  > salary of $300 a month or less.
  >
  > According to official figures, São Paulo now has 332 motoboy agencies.
  > Competition is strong, and they adopt names, often in English, stressing
  > efficiency: Adrenaline Express, Moto Bullet, Fast Express, Agile Boys,
  > Motojet, Fly Boy, Motoboy Speed, AeroBoy Express, Fast Boys.
  >
  > With so much emphasis on speed and so much competition with other
  > vehicles, the job is often dangerous. Broken bones and wrecked cycles 
are
  > an occupational hazard, and according to figures compiled by their 
union,
  > on average, at least one motoboy a day dies in a traffic accident.
  >
  > "The truth is that we're discardable," said Edson Agripino, 38, a 
veteran
  > of 15 years as a motoboy. "When a colleague gets hurt or killed, the 
first
  > thing the dispatchers ask is 'Did he deliver the document?' "
  >
  > Nevertheless, many motoboys, especially the younger ones, see themselves
  > as free spirits or urban cowboys, defying the conventions of society and
  > envied by stodgy wage-earners stuck in their cars and offices.
  >
  > "It's great to be out on the street, on your own, watching the girls, 
and
  > not in some cubicle with a boss bugging you all the time," said Fábio
  > César Lopes, who at 29 has nine years' experience as a motoboy. "I spent
  > five years at an insurance agency, and believe me, not only do I make
  > better money doing this, but it's a lot more fun."
  >
  > Ordinary motorists consider motoboys a plague, and hostility between the
  > two groups is fierce and growing. There are at least 17 online chat 
groups
  > devoted to complaining about motoboys, and conflicts in the street and
  > even fistfights between drivers and motoboys are not unknown.
  >
  > "I can't stand motoboys," said Flávio Kobayashi, a graphic artist. 
"You're
  > sitting there stuck in traffic, on your way home after a long, hard day,
  > and along they come with their infernal beep-beep-beep, weaving their 
way
  > through traffic in complete disregard of everyone else on the road.
  > They'll break the rear-view mirror of your car if you get in their way,
  > and any time there is an argument they come to each other's rescue to 
beat
  > up on defenseless drivers."
  >
  > Pedestrians, especially newcomers from small towns in the interior, feel
  > especially vulnerable. In a notorious incident in 2001, Marcelo Fromer, 
a
  > guitarist in the popular rock group Os Titãs, was run over and killed by 
a
  > motoboy with an expired license, who fled but was apprehended a year
  > later, tried and convicted.
  >
  > To bring the situation under control, the municipal government last year
  > created an obligatory registry system. The new rules required all 
motoboys
  > to pay a $110 tax, prove that they do not have a criminal record, obtain
  > life insurance, wear a helmet, drive motorcycles less than 10 years old
  > and carry their cargo in a rear-mounted basket with a license number on
  > it, so they can be tracked.
  >
  > But motoboys resisted the system, saying it was devised to banish them
  > from the streets. Only 40,000 of them registered, and they organized
  > protests that blocked some main streets. During the campaign leading up 
to
  > the mayoral election here in October, some candidates endorsed their
  > position and obtained judicial restraining orders exempting individual
  > motoboys from registration, which eventually forced Mayor Marta Suplicy 
to
  > rescind the program.
  >
  > A few years ago, Congress tried a different tack and passed a law that
  > would have made it essentially illegal for motoboys to practice their
  > profession, which has begun spreading to other cities in Brazil. But the
  > president at the time, Fernando Henrique Cardoso, who is from São Paulo,
  > vetoed the bill, tacitly recognizing the indispensability of the 
motoboy.
  >
  > "Everybody hates the motoboys except when they need one themselves," 
said
  > Caíto Ortiz, the director of "Motoboys: Crazy Life," a recent
  > prize-winning documentary. "When he's rushing some document of yours
  > across town, then he becomes your savior, a hero, and you adore the 
guy."
  >
  >
  >
  >




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