Court to review e-tolling in November

Picture: Paballo Thekiso

Picture: Paballo Thekiso

Published Aug 2, 2012

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The e-tolling saga is one that many of us seem to have forgotten about, but the controversial Gauteng electronic tolling matter is far from settled.

The Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance (Outa) has announced that the High Court in Pretoria will hear arguments in the e-toll case on 26 November.

On 28 April the court handed down an order preventing Sanral from levying or collecting e-tolls pending the outcome of a judicial review.

Outa chairman Wayne Duvenage said Outa had filed supplementary affidavits, and the respondents in the case - Sanral, National Treasury, the transport minister, and the Gauteng transport MEC - would file responding affidavits.

After this, Outa would file a replying affidavit.

"It takes quite a while," he said.

The Constitutional Court will hear arguments in the e-toll case on August 15.

Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan applied to the Constitutional Court to set aside the court order preventing Sanral from implementing e-tolling.

Gordhan argued that Judge Bill Prinsloo had ignored the principle of the separation of powers.

He said the decision to halt e-tolling would negatively affect the economy. In its reply, Outa said Sanral was still not ready to launch the project.

Under the e-toll project, motorists will pay over 35 cents a kilometre to travel on some of Gauteng's freeways.

The project was to have been launched on April 30, but was postponed for a month after a meeting between the ANC and its alliance partner, the Congress of SA Trade Unions. -Sapa

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