Special vans for kerb-to-kerb transport

Special vans for kerb-to-kerb transport

SINGAPORE - More people with disabilities can benefit from kerb-to-kerb transport from their homes to their workplaces or special education schools.

A new fleet of 11 specially retrofitted vans was launched by the Handicaps Welfare Association (HWA) yesterday.

The vans have hydraulic lifts, which can raise wheelchair users aboard them, and systems that put a brake on wheelchairs when the vehicles are on the move. They also have high roofs to fit wheelchairs with high backs.

The 10 Toyota Hiace models and one Toyota Coaster add to HWA's current fleet of 23 vehicles, expanding its special needs transport service, which started in 1980.

The purchase and retrofitting of the new vehicles was funded by the Ministry of Social and Family Development and the Care and Share Movement, led by Community Chest, in which eligible donations are matched dollar for dollar by the Government.

About $140 million of government grants for some 180 welfare organisations have been approved. Of this, about $1 million was used to defray the costs of the new fleet.

It costs about $140,000 to buy and retrofit each vehicle.

HWA president Edmund Wan said: "The donation of these specially adapted vehicles is very timely to meet the increasing needs of people with disabilities... as public transport is not equipped to support their needs."

HWA executive director Subrata Banerjee said that the current fleet is used mainly to take elderly people to hospital and rehabilitation visits, while the new one allows HWA to help more young people go to work or school.

Ms Lee Yuan Ping, 30, an assistant accounts executive who is a wheelchair user, takes the retrofitted vehicles to get from her Sengkang home to her office in Whampoa.

"It's good to have more of such vehicles. It will be much easier for me to see the doctor or go to work."

goyshiyi@sph.com.sg


This article was first published on April 26, 2015.
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