The Herald (South Africa)

AA continues its licence fees fight

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In the week since the Automobile Associatio­n first raised its concerns about proposed amended fees by the Road Traffic Management Corporatio­n for online bookings of driving licence renewals, no official correction to these fees has been published.

Instead, the AA warns, the fees as now gazetted will pass into law unless they are challenged and amended.

In a government gazette published on September 3, the department of transport noted, among other proposed amended fees for services offered by the RTMC, that online bookings for driving licences renewals would in future cost R250.

The AA stood by its earlier assessment that the published fees demonstrat­ed a lack of sensitivit­y to the plight of motorists.

The proposals include: A R250 charge for online bookings to renew driving licences (for booking only, excluding cost of the licence);

R700 for online registrati­ons of motor vehicles; and

R700 for online change of ownership of motor vehicles.

The fees are additional to fees of R72 for every transactio­n performed at the RTMC and R99 for the delivery of driving licence cards.

“When the issue of the R250 for online bookings was raised, the RTMC took to social media and issued press statements claiming the AA and others were misleading the public,” the AA said.

“They noted that the R250 cost of online bookings included the issuance of the credit card format driving licence — a fact which was not conveyed in the government gazette.

“Any misunderst­anding is entirely due to the poor and vague wording of the gazette which announced the fees, not through any misinterpr­etation from the AA.

“Despite all the ‘correction­s’ by the RTMC, it hasn’t actually amended the proposed regulation­s officially.”

It noted that social media posts, media statements and media interviews did not constitute an official notificati­on or correction of any amendment, especially a notice which had already been officially published in the government gazette.

Only a republishi­ng of the notice, with its correct and specific wording, would suffice legally.

The AA said its concern was that, among all the hue and cry after the publicatio­n of the proposed amended fees, no correction would be published, and that the fees would remain uncorrecte­d and duly enacted.

In light of this, the AA will continue with its online petition in support of its submission against the proposed fees due to be delivered to the transport department on October 4.

“When the issue first arose, we immediatel­y initiated an online petition to garner support from the public for our position that these fees are outrageous and amount to a shakedown of motorists,” it said.

“Since the RTMC and department of transport have not offered any formal correction of the original gazette, we remain concerned that the process will unfold exactly as it is stated.

“Ultimately, there will be no recourse for motorists when the R250 is charged in addition to the cost of the actual card.”

The AA said it was also perplexed that the cost of driving licence renewals varied across provinces, with motorists Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal paying significan­tly more than those in, say, the Western Cape.

“Apart from the fact that the entire renewal system needs to be completely replaced, we have to question why one standard cost for the renewal of this card doesn’t apply nationwide.”

 ??  ?? NOT HAPPY: The AA wants clarity over proposed amended fees by the Road Traffic Management Corporatio­n
NOT HAPPY: The AA wants clarity over proposed amended fees by the Road Traffic Management Corporatio­n

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