The New Zealand Herald

Govt rings bell for road tolls

Electronic tolling on agenda but Joyce won’t support regional fuel tax

- Melissa Nightingal­e

The Government has confirmed it is now open to the introducti­on of electronic road tolling in Auckland. Finance Minister Steven Joyce has told a business audience the Government could support road tolling but will not support a regional fuel tax.

“There is no getting away from the fact that central Auckland is built on a narrow isthmus which makes it hard to get around — and the available land transport corridors are rapidly being used,” Joyce said.

“So beyond the current building programme we are going to have to look at demand management to reduce the reliance on the road corridors, in favour of better use of buses, trains and ferries.”

Joyce said the Government was developing a work programme to look at demand management tools including electronic road tolling in the medium to long term.

“But to be clear, we see this as a way to make the roading system work better — not as a revenue raising exercise.”

The Government had an expectatio­n that any road pricing initiative on existing motorways and highways would be as a replacemen­t for petrol taxes and road user charges, not in addition to them.

“And second, I stress that we are not interested in introducin­g a regional fuel tax,” Joyce said.

“Simon Bridges and I have reiterated to Auckland Council that we do not see regional fuel taxes as part of the Government’s mix for transport in Auckland because they are administra­tively difficult, prone to leakage and cost-spreading, and blur the accountabi­lities between central and local government.”

Joyce said they were keen to have a more detailed discussion about ways to tackle the problem, and explore further options for longer term funding for new infrastruc­ture.

One option was looking at using private finance for certain projects, using the proposed Penlink alternativ­e route between the Whangapara­oa Peninsula and SH1 at Redvale in Auckland as an example.

Auckland Mayor Phil Goff expressed his disappoint­ment at the decision to rule out a regional fuel tax.

“While the Government has the power to rule out a fuel tax, it has a duty to the people of Auckland to come back to council with alternativ­e solutions,” he said in a statement.

“Aucklander­s are fed up with sitting in their cars on the motorway for hours at a time. It’s lost time for them and lost productivi­ty for the city.

“In my view a regional fuel tax is a fair, effective and efficient way of helping close the current $400m a year gap in transport funding.”

Goff said putting the burden of resolving the transport funding deficit on to ratepayers would lift rates by about 16 per cent next year.

“I don’t intend to do that. Ratepayers have been shoulderin­g the burden for too long. We must find new revenue streams to fund our much-needed housing and transport infrastruc­ture rather than continuing to load the cost of growth on ratepayers.” 3. Which TV channel got up Vladimir Putin’s nose — BBC, CNN, Fox? 4. New Zealand has about 60, 110 or 160 craft breweries? 5. Air New Zealand has attracted the ire of which former partner airline — Qantas, Qatar, United? 6. Who scored New Zealand’s first goal in a Fifa World Cup finals game — Steve Sumner, Brian Turner, Steve Wooddin? 7. Chard is cheese, fish, vegetable? 8. The Lewis Pass is south of Christchur­ch — true or false? 9. Who had a huge hit with House of the Rising Sun? 10. “Put a rogue in the limelight and he will act like an honest man” was said by Napoleon Bonaparte, Winston Churchill, Gandhi?

We are going to have to look at demand management to reduce the reliance on the road corridors, in favour of better use of buses, trains and ferries. Steven Joyce, Finance Minister

Bonaparte. Napoleon Animals. The False. Vegetable. Sumner. Steve Qatar. 110. Fox. Phantom. The Dunedin.

6. 8. 5. 2. 10. 7. 4. 9. 3. 1. Answers:

 ?? Picture / Chris Loufte ?? The available land transport corridors in Auckland are rapidly being used, Steven Joyce concedes.
Picture / Chris Loufte The available land transport corridors in Auckland are rapidly being used, Steven Joyce concedes.

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