South Bengal State Transport Corporation

South Bengal State Transport Corporation (SBSTC) is a West Bengal state government undertaken transport corporation. It plys buses in South Bengal and other parts of West Bengal to Durgapur and Kolkata. SBSTC owns many depots in West Bengal to station their buses. It is headquartered in Station Road, Durgapur.

South Bengal State Transport Corporation
Founded1 August 1963; 61 years ago (1963-08-01)[1]
HeadquartersDurgapur, West Bengal, India
Service areaSouthern West Bengal
Service typeLimited – Stop Service (LS), Express Service, Non – Stop Service, Normal Air – conditioned Service, Premium Air – conditioned With Bio – Toilet Enabled Service.
Fleet898
Fuel typeDiesel & CNG
OperatorMinistry of Transport, Government of West Bengal
Websitesbstc.co.in

By providing link between Jharkhand and West Bengal, it is the backbone of many people residing in the border areas between these two states. It also connects many cities in West Bengal, particularly major cities and towns like Durgapur, Kolkata, Singur, Gobindapur, Bardhaman, Arambagh, Suri, Purulia, Digha, Medinipur, Bankura, Haldia etc. which extend up to North Bengal.

Bus/Coaches

edit
Manufacturer
Ashok Leyland
Tata
Eicher

History

edit

The South Bengal State Transport Corporation started its journey on 1 August 1963 in Durgapur industrial township by the Government of West Bengal with an aim to provide a clean and hassle free ride to the people of Durgapur. initially, it started with only 8 buses operated inside the township covering a total route length of 65 km. In 1964–65, the fleet strength increased to 25 with and total operating route length increased to 102 km. In 1965–66, the fleet strength is increased to 62 and route length became 428 km.

On 15 August 1967, it was renamed to "Durgapur State Transport Board (DSTB)".In 1968–69, DSTB extended its activities through augmentation of fleet strength of 100 buses operating in 11 long distance routes and 8 township routes covering a total route length of 1200 km and 176 km respectively. In 1972–73, Durgapur-Siliguri bus service was introduced with 3 new town services and the total route length of long distance and town services went up to 1650 km and 143 km respectively.

In 1973, DSTB was ultimately converted into public sector undertaking under the name and style of " Durgapur State Transport Corporation(DSTC)" and many new routes has been introduced. DSTC got its present name in 1988 with an objective of increasing its service to the entire south Bengal.[1]

Organizational Set up

edit

The Corporation has a three-tier system of management which is, Depot, Division and Corporate. The entire operational network of the Corporation is carried out through its two Divisional headquarters – one located at Durgapur and other at Belghoria. At the Corporate level, the Deputy Managing Director, Chief Accounts Officers and HODs of other discipline assist the Managing Director. At Divisional level, the office is headed by Divisional Managers of the respective Divisions who is assisted by Works Manager or Works In-charge on the technical site, Traffic Manager for traffic and operation, Sr. Administrative Officer and other officers for general administration, Dy. Chief Accounts Officer for accounts matter. The Divisional Managers are directly reporting to the Managing Director. At the depot level, the Depot Manager or Depot In-charge is assisted by senior foremen, foreman or assistant foreman (depending upon the size of the Depot) for repair and maintenance work, Assistant Manager – Administration and Account, for general administration, accounts and disciplinary matters, Assistant Traffic Manager/Traffic Superintendent in the matter of traffic and operation. The Depot Manager or Depot In-charge directly reports to the Divisional Manager.

Traffic Operational Activities

edit

Traffic operational activities of this Corporation which was previously confined to Durgapur and its nearby areas, has been now gradually extended to cover the districts of Burdwan, Bankura, Purulia, Midnapur, North-24 Paraganas, Howrah, Hooghly and Kolkata. At the present, SBSTC operates road transport services from its two Divisional Offices – one at Durgapur and other at Belghoria. It is operated throughout the entire State of West Bengal and covers almost all historical places and tourist points like Digha, Garbeta forest, Bishnupur, Mukutmonipur, Susunia Hill, Kangsabati project, Ajodhya hill, Santiniketan, Mushidabad Hazarduari (Nawab Palace), Tarapit temple, Massanjore dam, Farakka barage, Gour, Nabadwip, Mayapur, Siliguri and Darjeeling, Tarakeswar, Thakurnagar and many more.

 
SBSTC bus ticket sample

This Corporation has operations in the inter-State routes like the present link with state of Jharkhand. Some inter-state routes on which the Corporation runs buses are Durgapur to Tata (Jamshedpur) via Bankura and Purulia, and Durgapur to Bokaro Steel City via Asansol and Dhanbad, Durgapur to Dumka via Suri. The Corporation has planned to contact some more areas in more States in the near future.

Divisions, depots and routes

edit

SBSTC provides its services through two divisions, namely Durgapur and Belghoria. It has a total fifteen depots, four bus terminus, two bus counter and one bus stand.

  • Services From
Durgapur Division Belghoria Division
Rampurhat Depot Belghoria Depot
Katwa Depot Howrah Depot
Asansol Depot Falta Depot
Bankura Depot Haldia Depot
Burdwan Depot Midnapore Depot
Purulia Depot Digha Depot
Arambagh Depot Esplanade Bus Terminus
Kalna Depot Karunamoyee Bus Terminus
Suri Depot Jhargram Depot
Durgapur City Centre/

Rail Station Bus Terminus

Santragachi Bus Terminus

Garia Bus Depot

Burdwan Stand (Nawabhat) Manbazar Depot
Asansol Bus Terminus Krishnanagar Depot
Bolpur Shantiniketan Depot

The list of depots in different years after the inception of SBSTC are as follows: [1]

Year Depots
1977–78 1
1987–88 4
1988–89 6
1989–90 10
1990–91 11
1995–96 12
1996–97 14
2011–12 15
2014–15 13
2016–17 14

Routes

edit

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c "Historical Background, SOUTH BENGAL STATE TRANSPORT CORPORATION". Retrieved 21 December 2012.
edit