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The Ministry of Road Transport & Highways (MoRTH) has announced plans to open approximately 2,000 driving training schools and 700 drivers' rest-and-learn clubs across India. The initiative aims to enhance driver education, reduce road accidents, and streamline the licensing process.
Key Points: National Rollout: MoRTH plans to set up 2,000 driving schools, with each serving as a training and vehicle fitness center to ensure drivers are well-prepared and licensed.
Drivers’ Clubs: Around 700 drivers’ clubs will be established along national highways, offering rest facilities, health check-ups, and awareness programs aimed at improving driver well-being.
Safety-Driven Mission: The initiative is part of a broader strategy to lower India’s high road accident toll, attributed largely to driver error. Driving education is being centralized to complement reforms from the Motor Vehicles Act and skill training missions.
Infrastructure & Modernization: Centers are set to include driving simulators, biometric systems, automated test tracks, classrooms, and digital tools to align with National Skill Qualification Framework (NSQF) standards and improve training quality.
Public–Private Collaboration: Plans call for public–private partnerships; the government will fund up to ?17.25 crore per Institute of Driving Training & Research (IDTR). Driving schools may also be run by NGOs, private developers, and state agencies.
This major expansion in driver training infrastructure reflects a push toward safer roads, better-trained drivers, and a more efficient licensing ecosystem—backed by modern technology and strategic public-private collaboration.
By: Brijesh Kumar ProfileResourcesReport error
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