Return of toll gates
Eleven years after former President Olusegun Obasanjo ordered the dismantling of toll gates throughout the country, Minister of Power, Works and Housing Babatunde Raji Fashola recently said the Federal government is considering their reintroduction across the country to provide optional funding for road maintenance. The Senate Ad-hoc Committee on Works which investigated the state of the nation’s federal roads as well as the threat of gully erosion in the South-East also appealed to the federal government to reintroduce toll gates with a view to generating revenue for rehabilitation and constant maintenance of existing roads infrastructure.
Tolling has always been controversial with the Nigerian public. Motorists see
no need to pay tolls since the roads were built with public funds. Officials
however argue that toll collection is required to maintain the roads and to
fund the building of new ones. The problem is that federal roads were poorly
maintained when we had the toll gates. Obasanjo had dismantled the toll gates
when he announced an increase in fuel prices. He said at the time that the
additional fuel price, estimated at N4 billion a year, would provide much more
money to repair the roads than the N800million annually that government got
from toll gate operators.
The toll gates were initially run by Federal Ministry of Works staff but were later leased to private operators. There were allegations at the time that many of those who got the leases were but fronts for high ranking government officials. Not only was the effect of tolls not being seen in road maintenance, but the toll gates also became points at which numerous government agencies congregated and often extorted money from motorists.
The reintroduction of toll-gates on federal highways at this time should therefore be approached with caution, careful consideration and planning to avoid the pitfalls of the past. It is not yet clear if they will be run by Ministry of Works officials or leased out again to private operators. Either way, technological innovation in recent times will make it possible to determine the number of vehicles passing through the toll gate in a day, which means the operators cannot pocket most of the proceeds as was done in the past. Fashola has promised that this time round the money will be accounted for and will be used for the stated purpose.
The toll gates were initially run by Federal Ministry of Works staff but were later leased to private operators. There were allegations at the time that many of those who got the leases were but fronts for high ranking government officials. Not only was the effect of tolls not being seen in road maintenance, but the toll gates also became points at which numerous government agencies congregated and often extorted money from motorists.
The reintroduction of toll-gates on federal highways at this time should therefore be approached with caution, careful consideration and planning to avoid the pitfalls of the past. It is not yet clear if they will be run by Ministry of Works officials or leased out again to private operators. Either way, technological innovation in recent times will make it possible to determine the number of vehicles passing through the toll gate in a day, which means the operators cannot pocket most of the proceeds as was done in the past. Fashola has promised that this time round the money will be accounted for and will be used for the stated purpose.
For
the full story, check the Daily Trust newspaper.
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