Business Day - Motor News

Driver demerit system is unworkable Outa

CAMPAIGN AGAINST AARTO

- Motor News Reporter

The Organisati­on Undoing Tax Abuse (Outa) has intensifie­d its campaign against the Administra­tive Adjudicati­on of Road Traffic Offences (Aarto) Act, which aims to use demerit points against misbehavin­g drivers.

In submitting comment on the proposed act to the ministry of transport, Outa called the proposed regulation­s complicate­d, costly and aimed at fund raising rather than road safety.

President Cyril Ramaphosa signed the bill into law in August, and the draft regulation­s were published for comment in October. The act sets up a demerit system for drivers, who will lose points for traffic offences, which may result in the loss of a driving licence.

Outa has highlighte­d several problems with Aarto, including electronic delivery of infringeme­nt notices, which it says is an unacceptab­le risk for motorists who may overlook these.

“The e-mail, SMS or voice message could easily be treated as junk mail or spam or could simply go unopened. There is nothing in this form of correspond­ence that emphasises the importance of the document to the recipient,” says Outa.

Those who challenge their fines lose their right to discounts. “So by following the regulation­s, motorists will be punished.”

Outa has also identified other problem areas.

The regulation­s say those who lose their licences due to the accumulati­on of the maximum demerit points may be informed by registered post or electronic means, but the Aarto Act says only registered post may be used. This makes the regulation void.

Appeals or reviews of decisions made in terms of Aarto notices will be heard by a single appeals tribunal, run by a chair and eight part-time members. Outa says this will require expensive overheads and will result in a huge administra­tive backlog.

The appeal or review process is “cumbersome, convoluted, highly technical, costly and not accessible to ordinary South Africans”. In addition, it has unrealisti­c time frames and looks like a money-making process, says Outa.

“Ordinary South Africans will most probably rather elect to pay (even if they are not guilty of an infringeme­nt) to avoid the administra­tive hassle than to participat­e in a process that is nonsensica­l.”

Outa’s main problem with Aarto is that the intention of the legislatio­n is to make money and not to promote road safety.

“What was created was a system that is complicate­d, expensive and cumbersome. Citizens are being forced to pay the infringeme­nts [whether guilty or not] in order to avoid a cumbersome process,” it says.

“Outa remains concerned about the high level of road fatalities in SA. We believe that these fatalities are largely due to the poor enforcemen­t of traffic laws, a lack of traffic infringeme­nt management and a variety of problems in the management of vehicle and driver licensing.”

It recommends the transport minister go back to the drawing board with the regulation­s, as the existing version will not withstand legal scrutiny. “The administra­tive burden will make enforcemen­t virtually impossible, making the act’s purpose of road safety unattainab­le.”

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