Infrastructure

Karnataka: Bengaluru Metropolitan Land Transport Authority (BMLTA) Bill To Be Tabled In Assembly On Friday

V Bhagya SubhashiniSep 23, 2022, 01:58 PM | Updated 01:58 PM IST
Karnataka state assembly in Bengaluru (Tharun Masarp/Wikimedia Commons)

Karnataka state assembly in Bengaluru (Tharun Masarp/Wikimedia Commons)


The Bengaluru Metropolitan Land Transport Authority (BMLTA) Bill will be introduced during Friday's (23 September) assembly session. 

The bill envisions a Bengaluru-based umbrella organisation similar to Transport for London (TFL). 

BMLTA will be a unified transportation agency that unites several government agencies and develops initiatives like the common mobility card and multimodal transportation hubs.

The proposed BMLTA bill will provide a comprehensive mobility plan and a framework for managing site visitors.

The BMLTA will serve as the nodal authority for improved coordination among multiple agencies such as BMTC and BMRCL. It will ensure lowering traffic and provide last-mile connectivity. In addition, the organisation would be responsible for planning Bengaluru's urban mobility requirements.

Although a committee was established in 2007, it lacked statutory backing. The BMLTA bill seeks to establish the authority with statutory support to oversee and coordinate urban mobility efforts in the Bengaluru Metropolitan region under the National Urban Transport Policy's recommendation.

Bengaluru currently has multiple agencies and departments, such as the BMTC, BMRCL, Transport Department, BBMP, etc., which cater to the city's transportation and mobility needs.


Since September 2021, a draft Legislation prepared by the Directorate of Urban Land Transport (DULT) has been available to the public.

The bill envisions the authority as a statutory professional body with the financial authority needed to coordinate among the various stakeholders in urban mobility, plan for a comprehensive and integrated mobility vision for the city, and bring together the multiple stakeholders, including civil society, in the Bengaluru metropolitan area (BMR).

The proposed legislation states that BMLTA will have 21 members, with the chief minister serving as chair and the ministers of development and transportation serving as vice chairs, reports Times Of India (TOI)

Other members include the mayor of the BBMP and representatives of the following agencies: the police, BBMP, BDA, BMRDA, BMRCL, Directorate of City and Nation Planning, Air Pollution Management Board, and Karnataka Rail Infrastructure Improvement Enterprises, the TOI report added. 

There will be two special invitees from the Indian National Highways Authority and South Western Railway. 

BMLTA would also have ten non-official members, including three consultants on business governance, finance, and mobility in cities, two representatives from civil society organisations, three from organisations that represent the private sector and professional organisations, and two from educational institutions. 

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