Roads Minister, Kwasi Amoako-Atta in February 2019 charged road toll collectors to insist on taking tolls from Ministers of State.
According to the Minister, he had picked information indicating that some public officials were hiding behind their titles to avoid paying tolls despite them not being exempted.
Read the full article as first published by 3news.com below:
Roads Minister Kwasi Amoako-Atta has charged road toll collectors in the country to insist on taking tolls from ministers of state.
According to him, aside a few selected individuals in the country, all citizens are required by law to pay road tolls including ministers.
He said he has received reports that some public officials hide behind their titles to avoid paying tolls at toll booths.
“I have heard some people get to the booths and they say I’m managing director or that, and so they just pass. All the toll booth collectors in this country have been instructed that every single individual in Ghana, no matter who are you, you are to pay tolls, if you are a minister you have to pay, if you are managing director you are to pay. I’m the Roads minister now by the grace of God, anywhere I pass, you can ask my driver I pay my tolls,” he told the media Thursday.
Last year, the minister noted all 35 toll booths in the country will be automated soon.
“It is important that we sharpen our competence in road toll collection because road tolls are the second-highest contributor to the Road Fund. The highest contributor to that fund is the fuel levy. If you take all the toll booths in the country as at now, we have 35 of them nationwide and out of this 35, it is only four that are automated and the four are the Ngleshie Amanfrom, Accra Plaza, Tema Plaza, and the Amasaman booth.
“What I will do to improve on the toll collection is to improve on the automation of many of them as possible. I will ensure that those that can be automated will be automated to improve toll collection.”