Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Are e-tolls here to stay?

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THE Department of Transport is completely out of touch with the sentiments of Gauteng motorists, the Automobile Associatio­n said this week.

This comes after Transport Minister Fikile Mbalula recently reiterated that the e-tolling system could not be scrapped, as the Citizen newspaper reported.

However, the minister did hint that a solution was being sought, stating that the funding model that we have employed as a country for our roads is affected by our attitude towards e-tolls. “But we are working on that, and an e-toll solution will be found,” Mbalula said.

However his comments have come under fire by the AA. Suggesting that road funding and maintenanc­e is an either/or situation based solely on e-tolls is misleading, the associatio­n said, as there are other options available.

“Scrapping of e-tolls should not, in our view, result in a lack of maintenanc­e and developmen­t on the Gauteng freeway, it just means alternativ­e sources of funding must be sought,” the AA said.

The associatio­n says its research showed clearly that the overwhelmi­ng majority of Gauteng motorists would never pay e-tolls under any circumstan­ces, and therefore the system needs to be scrapped.

But what are the alternativ­e solutions?

“We have also called for the ring-fencing of a portion of the existing General Fuel Levy to fund the Gauteng Freeway Improvemen­t Project as a more sustainabl­e funding mechanism for e-tolls,” the AA said.

The associatio­n also expressed concern that no formal decision on the way forward for the e-toll system had been communicat­ed to the public. Back in 2019, just before the election, Sanral announced that it would suspend the process of pursuing historical debt owed to it.

“Not since 2019, months before the election, when Sanral announced it would suspend the process of pursuing historical debt owed to it has anything been officially communicat­ed about the future e-tolls. The Cabinet has an obligation to inform the public on what the future of this system is, and it should do so sooner rather than later,” the AA said. |

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