CEAT rolls out road safety programme for schools across Sri Lanka

19 March 2022 12:25 am Views - 133

CEAT Kelani Holdings resumed the rolling out of its ‘Schools Road Safety’ programme, the company’s flagship community initiative in Sri Lanka, with the distribution of road safety equipment to 25 schools in several districts of the country. 


As a manufacturer of products that are closely linked to road safety, CEAT Sri Lanka presented 175 road safety signboards and 200 traffic cones to schools located in congested areas and main cities such as Colombo, Gampaha, Kandy and Chilaw under this programme which is executed under the ‘CEAT Cares’ portfolio of community initiatives.


“Most schools have reopened after the lockdown necessitated by the pandemic, and traffic on the roads is back to pre-pandemic levels. The resumption of our programme is therefore timely. 


By equipping schools in busy localities with the necessary equipment, we hope to not only contribute towards the safety of students, parents and staff but to help remind the public about the need to adhere to road rules and drive safely,” stressed CEAT Kelani Managing Director Ravi Dadlani commenting on the resumption of the programme.
The beneficiary schools in 2022 to date include Ananda College Chilaw, Bandaranayaka College Gampaha, Basilika College Ragama, D. S. Senanayake College Colombo,  Dharmapala Vidyalaya Pannipitiya, Dharmasena Attygalle Balika Vidyalaya Kesbewa, Galahitiyawa Central College Ganemulla, Good Shepherd Convent Colombo, Holy Cross College Gampaha, Holy Family Convent Colombo, Isipathana College Colombo, Kingswood College Kandy, Presbyterian Girl’s School Dehiwala, President’s College Kotte, Royal College Colombo, Sri Chandrajothi Maha Vidyalaya Yakkala, Sri Dharmaloka Central College Kelaniya, St. Lawrence’s Convent Colombo, St. Mary’s College Chilaw, St. Pauls Girls’ School Colombo, St. Mary’s College Veyangoda, St. Peter’s College Colombo, Thurstan College Colombo, Wesley College Colombo, and Yasodara Devi Balika Maha Vidyalaya Gampaha. 


Historically, the CEAT ‘Road Safety for School Children’ community programme directly engaged with students, parents and transport providers, principally school van drivers, and was coupled with the presentation of traffic management kits comprising of traffic cones, safety jackets, traffic signs and other aids to the traffic squads in each of the schools visited. 


This year, CEAT has moved forward with a equipment-only model, considering the pandemic-related risks involved in interacting with large numbers.


Titled ‘Maga Yana Maga’ this programame was initiated in 2009 and has to date covered schools in Colombo and the Southern, Northern, North Western, Central and Eastern regions of the country.