By Oyo Amebo

As 2025 draws to a close, one cannot help but marvel at the transformation of Pacesetter Transport Service under the leadership of Dr. Ibraheem Salami Dikko.

Where once the agency stumbled under inefficiency, unpredictability and public scepticism, it now moves with purpose, precision and an unmistakable sense of accountability. What had been an organisation in flux is today a system in order, its rhythm measured, its direction clear.

Dr Dikko arrived not with fanfare, but with penetrating questions. Where were resources lost? Why did operations falter despite available assets?

How could a public service be made dependable beyond the influence of a single leader? These were not idle curiosities, they were the starting point for a year of relentless, structured reform.

Revenue, long a source of ambiguity, was brought into clarity. The shift from cash-based fares to a digital ticketing system may have seemed technical, yet it was profoundly transformative.

Every transaction now leaves a record, every journey a trace, and every anomaly demands an answer rooted in data. Accountability, once an aspiration, became a built-in feature.

Operations followed the same trajectory of exactitude. GPS-enabled tracking turned a scattered fleet into a coordinated system. Routes, schedules, and fuel consumption are no longer left to chance.

Deviations are visible, safety measures are enforced, and professional standards are embedded into the daily routine. Technology, however, served only as a tool; it was leadership and discipline that ensured its impact.

Central to the turnaround was the human factor. Staff who had endured delays and uncertainty received timely salaries, clear job descriptions, and structured training.

Confidence was restored, ownership replaced apathy, and a workforce previously defined by survival began to perform with pride. It is in this human renewal that the deepest transformation of Pacesetter Transport Service can be measured.

Sustainability became a strategic pillar. The introduction of Compressed Natural Gas buses was neither a token gesture nor a headline-grabbing stunt. It was a deliberate investment in efficiency, environmental responsibility, and long-term cost predictability.

With a dedicated CNG refuelling station in Ibadan, the agency demonstrated that its vision is backed by tangible infrastructure and enduring commitment.

Financial discipline, operational order, human motivation, and sustainable innovation converged to redefine the institution.

Budgets became tools, debts became manageable, and leakages narrowed. PTS, once fragile, now operates with the quiet confidence of an organisation aware of its limits, and its potential.

For the public, the effects are immediate and undeniable. Buses arrive on schedule, fares are straightforward, journeys feel safer, and trust, once eroded, has begun to rebuild.

Every trip, every interaction, every punctual arrival is a testament to the chain of reforms that underpin the service today.

What distinguishes Dr Dikko’s leadership is its coherence. Technology reinforces accountability, accountability restores professionalism, and professionalism nurtures public confidence. Each element supports the next, a self-reinforcing cycle of clarity, discipline, and purpose.

As the year ends, the lesson is clear: institutions thrive not through appearances, but through structure guided by integrity. On Oyo’s roads, Pacesetter buses move forward, carrying not just passengers, but the promise that public institutions, when led with vision and determination, can work as they were always meant to.

And looking ahead, the horizon is bright: PTS is not only reliable today but poised to define the future of transport excellence.

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