Transport Department

The Transport Department of the Government of Hong Kong is a department of the civil service responsible for transportation-related policy in Hong Kong. The department is under the Transport and Housing Bureau.

Transport Department
運輸署
Agency overview
Formed1968
HeadquartersSouth Tower, West Kowloon Government Offices
11 Hoi Ting Road
Yau Ma Tei, Kowloon
Employees1,243 (March 2008)
Annual budgetHK$1,108.9m (2008-09)
Agency executive
  • Mable Chan, Commissioner for Transport
Websitewww.td.gov.hk

The Transport Department was created in 1968 as a separate department within the Hong Kong Government.[1] Prior to 1968 it was assigned to the Transport Office under the Colonial Secretary's department.

History

The Transport Office was founded in 1965 within the Colonial Secretariat, initially with a staff of 23.[2] The office was set up in response to the territory's worsening traffic problems, and was modelled after the systems in Britain and other Commonwealth countries, with the new department taking responsibility for vehicle registration and driver licensing.[3] In 1968, it was spun off as a separate government department, and was renamed as the Transport Department.[4]

In 1974, the department's headquarters moved from the Blake Block on Queensway to the new Murray Road Multi-storey Car Park Building. Around the same time, the department's Chinese name changed from "交通事務處" to "運輸署" to avoid confusion with the similar Chinese name of the Traffic Branch of the Royal Hong Kong Police.[2]

The department's role expanded significantly in April 1982, when it absorbed the Traffic and Transport Branch of the Highways Office of the former Public Works Department. Units that moved to the Transport Department at this time were responsible for traffic engineering, traffic control and surveillance, road safety, and traffic surveys.[5]

In 2019, the Transport Department headquarters moved from Immigration Tower to the new West Kowloon Government Offices in Yau Ma Tei.

Role and responsibilities

  • registration of vehicles in Hong Kong
  • licensing of rail and bus operators in Hong Kong
  • licensing offices
  • all roads within Hong Kong
  • co-ownership of bridges and tunnels (mainly a public-private mix)
  • 18,000 on-street metered parking spaces
  • traffic management
  • transport planning

Leadership

The post of Commissioner for Transport (歷任署長) is currently held by Mable Chan.[6] The Commissioner reports to the Secretary for Transport and Housing.

List of commissioners:

  • Brian D. Wilson (惠柳新) (1972-1974)
  • Ian Macpherson (麥法誠) (1974-1978)
  • Alan Thomas Armstrong-Wright (顏敦禮) (1978-1982)
  • Peter F. Leeds (李舒) (1982-1987)
  • James So Yiu-cho (蘇燿祖) (1987-1989)
  • Gordon Siu (蕭炯柱) (1989-1992)
  • Rafael Hui Si-yan (許仕仁) (1992-1995)
  • Lily Yam Kwan Pui-ying (任關佩英) (1995-1997)
  • Fanny Law Fan Chiu-fun (羅范椒芬) (1997-1998)
  • Robert Charles Law Footman (霍文) (1998-2005)
  • Alan Wong Chi-kong (黃志光) (2005-2009)
  • Joseph Lai (黎以德) (2009-2012)
  • Susie Ho Shuk-yee (何淑兒) (July 2012-October 2012)
  • Ingrid Yeung (楊何蓓茵) (October 2012-October 2017)
  • Mable Chan (October 2017–present)
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See also

References

  1. "New HQ for Transport Department". South China Morning Post. 5 January 1974. p. 5.
  2. "Govt Setting Up Transport Department". South China Morning Post. 26 November 1965. p. 10.
  3. "No big expansion for Transport Office". South China Morning Post. 27 September 1968. p. 6.
  4. Organisational Structure of Transport Department
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