We must stop exploitative toll gates

November 25, 2008 Edition 1

Bonke Dumisa

The time has come for all political parties in KwaZulu-Natal, all trade union formations, different business stakeholders and the general public to learn that sometimes we have to agree to temporarily put all our petty differences and petty squabbles aside where there is need to confront a common problem. [Read more...]


N2 route along Wild Coast ‘to benefit locals’

2008/11/18

THE economic spin-offs of a proposed N2 toll road through the ecologically sensitive Wild Coast outweighed potential damage to the environment and loss of wildlife diversity. [Read more...]


Highway robbery in KZN

November 26, 2008 Edition 2
Sibusiso Mboto

MOTORISTS in KwaZulu-Natal already fork out far more than their fair share - almost half - of the money generated from tolls throughout the country, even before contentious new tolls are introduced in the province. [Read more...]


Uncertainty still surrounds controversial proposal to mine titanium at Xolobeni

Franny Rabkin

SIX weeks after titanium mining was to have started at Xolobeni in Eastern Cape, the AmaDiba community, fiercely opposed to the mine, is still uncertain about its future. [Read more...]


Wild Coast toll road sparks outrage

Emotions ran high in Amanzimtoti on Tuesday night as local residents turned out in force to protest against the proposed Wild Coast Toll Highway.

As tempers flared and arms waved in anger, voices were raised at a number of specialists called in to present various aspects of the draft Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) of the proposed toll road, which would bring a new toll plaza at Park Rynie and even closer to home at Isipingo as well as several ramp plazas in the Toti, Athlone Park area.

“You are just going to fleece us,” one man yelled at traffic specialist Willie Pienaar, who was surrounded by angry residents at the public open day in the town’s civic centre.

One irate man voiced his objections at Pienaar, then left to write down his official comment: “This is manipulation at its best,” he maintained.

‘This is manipulation at its best’
“Look I am paying for two children to go to university. You worry about your job. Now, we could be faced with toll fees,” said the exasperated protester, who merely gave his name as “Rob”.

Asked at the end of the evening if the Daily News could speak to him, one weary specialist, who was earlier surrounded by upset residents, Professor Christo Bester said: “As long as you don’t swear at me (like others had).”

The public open day was just one of 17 being held at central locations along the route of the proposed project. The plan aims to provide an improved, shorter and safer road link between the Eastern and Western Cape and KwaZulu-Natal.

Some 300 people turned up on Tuesday night - others had attended during the day - and most backed calls from Ted Holden, chairman of the upper South Coast anti-toll alliance (representing some 300 000 members), for a proper public sit-down question and answer session, instead of last night’s gathering where they could talk to specialists, study the proposed routes, fill in comment sheets and read the bulky EIA report.

Holden said that he wanted a public meeting in the third week of January, when South African National Roads Agency (SANRAL) should invite traffic and transport specialists “to explain to us in clear terms the strategic and future scenarios of how transport in our metropolitan area will be addressed and whether tolling the N2 fits in with their plans”.

‘We know there is a lot of resentment here and we understand that’
He wants an independent judge to chair the meeting and says that the closing date for submissions on the draft EIA should be extended from January 9 to February 18.

Holden said that if his request for a public meeting was denied, he would make it known in his submission to Marthinus van Schalkwyk, the Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism.

Local resident Roy Olckers said that at the last public meeting in 2006, people had almost come to blows about the issue.

“We have waited all this time and are still addressing the same thing. We are not opposed to roads in the Transkei, but we object to having to pay for them here,” he said.

Local business leaders, representing the Durban South Basin, the Southgate Business Park, Umbogintwini Industrial Complex and major industry in the area, also called for a proper question and answer session “as nothing is recorded here” and an extension of the January 9 closing date.

“These proposals (the toll fees) are going to have a huge economic impact on the businesses here and a knock-on effect on sub-contractors. There has got to be a greater level of public participation, particularly when it comes to the economic and social impact in this area. This report has not gone into that detail,” said Aldine Armstrong, the consortium’s lawyer.

Professor Bester, who did an economic analysis of the road, although he had not been told where the tolls would be or what would be charged, said that there was going to be cross-subsidisation.

“But my plea is for that cross-subsidisation to be reasonable and not unreasonable,” he said.

Asked about the possibility of a question and answer type of public meeting, Julian Drew of NMA Effective Social Strategists, the independent environmental consultants which drew up the draft EIA, referred to the one held two years ago.

Tuesday night’s session was more consultative, whereas a public meeting did not go into detail, he said.

“We know there is a lot of resentment here and we understand that. A similar meeting had been held in Scottburgh on Monday and “similar sentiments had been expressed”, he said.

Details of the draft EIA are available in libraries and on the websites www.ccaenvironmental.co.za and www.nra.co.za


Call for road users to unite against new toll plazas

November 18, 2008 Edition 2

Tony Carnie

DURBAN commuters and businessmen have been urged to gather in their thousands in Amanzimtoti at 6.30pm tonight to oppose plans to build new toll plazas at Isipingo and Park Rynie, as part of the N2 Wild Coast toll road proposal. [Read more...]


Municipality says road users should not be treated as cash cows

Nivashni Nair

ETHIKWINI has come out with fists swinging, charging that Durban motorists and other KwaZulu-Natal road users will not be turned into cash cows for the SA National Roads Agency because of a tollgate proposed for the new King Shaka Airport. [Read more...]