The Civil Engineering Contractor June 2018 | Page 38

BUSINESS INTELLIGENCE A rethink on e-tolls By Kim Kemp We all hate them. We feel we have been duped and frogmarched into submission, so, in a momentous act of civil defiance, we refused to bow to the gantry god. But were we wrong? It is going to take more than a billboard’s assurance that e-tolls are affordable to woo the public back and regain their trust around the system. D espite our best endeavours as a province (and country, ultimately), the notorious e-toll gantries still stand in Gauteng — a grim reminder that they are not going anywhere, almost sinisterly waiting. For the first time in decades, South Africa stood firm against what they saw as governmental dictatorship, as an unreasonable foisting of public 36 - CEC June 2018 responsibility onto the shoulders of Joe Citizen, who was expected to reach deep into its communal pocket and pay to use the roads. The audacity! The key objection was the widespread belief that there had been no consultation, that the gantries went up overnight, and that the cost to adhere to the system would be financially extreme for individuals and vehicle fleets alike, ultimately impacting on the economy. The argument soon arose that the fuel levy should be used to fund road repairs, maintenance, and new roads. And Gauteng — largely — stood firm, refusing to pay what they saw as the South African National Roads Agency’s (SANRAL’s) unacceptable abuse of the taxpayer. SANRAL became the villain, derided,