Transport -
Motoring
A
controversial plan to tax motorists according to
the distance they drive and send them a monthly
bill is soon to be debated. Under the scheme,
which is designed to ease congestion, drivers in
some busy areas would pay up to 45p a mile for
being on the roads at peak times. But if it goes
ahead, drivers will be able to claim discounted
fuel and may see their car tax levy scrapped in
order to offset the new charges. The Commission
for
Integrated
Transport says its plan would cut jams by nearly
a half within 10 years and replace existing road
taxes. If the scheme does get the go ahead, the
government has said it will not be introduced
before 2011. Commission chairman Professor David
Begg told the BBC: "It's good for Britain.
There will be significant reductions in
congestion and there will be less pollution
because a lot of pollution is caused by queuing
traffic." But the Conservatives have
condemned the plan as another "stealth
tax". Shadow transport secretary Theresa May
said it was "another attempt at a sort of
stealth tax trying to price the motorist off the
road". The commission, which provides
independent transport advice to the government,
said Global Positioning System satellites would
track vehicles via electronic black boxes fixed
to the dashboard.
Average
charge proposals per mile:
* Top charge: 45p,
central London, rush-hour
* Motorway weekday:
3.5p
* Other roads weekday:
4.3p
* Rural roads busy
times: 1p
* Rural roads
off-peak: free
* Birmingham to
Manchester - £7.40
* Leeds to Liverpool -
£6
* Road tax scrapped
* Fuel duty cut by
between 2p and 12p
Information on
their whereabouts could be beamed back to
computers at highway authorities or to a private
company contracted to the government. Monthly
charges would be levied according to the time of
day the car is travelling, and the type of road
used. But the proposals also
recommend getting rid of vehicle
excise duty and reducing fuel prices to render
the change "fiscally neutral", meaning
there would be no extra cost overall to the road
user. Professor Begg said motorists using only
minor roads or driving short distances outside
peak hours may not be charged at all. He added:
"We have to come up with a mechanism which
discourages some people, who do not really have
to be on the busiest roads during the peak hours,
to travel at different times and that's where
congestion charging comes in." Professor
Begg called on the government to implement its
10-year plans to improve public transport and
provide the alternative people need to leave
their cars at home. But the government is already
playing down the prospects of the scheme being
developed in the foreseeable future. A Transport
Department spokesman said: "There is no
prospect of introducing road user charging for
vehicles other than lorries in the present
decade."
Transport
Secretary Alistair Darling is considering an
extra charge for motorists who drive at peak
times. He admitted such charging is
"difficult political territory," but
added doing nothing would be anti-motorist
"because congestion is the worst possible
outcome for the motorist." Mr Darling said
that while road pricing is a scheme for the next
decade, as it needs advanced technology, stark
choices need to be considered now. He said,
"By charging less we could encourage people
to use the road when it's less congested, but
charge more to use a busy motorway at 8am on a
Monday. This way, for example, a haulier might
choose to send their lorry out at a less
congested time of day."
He said this approach could have significant
benefits, including quicker journey times, a
reduction in pollution and improvement in road
safety. Mr Darling said it would benefit people
who don't use their cars very often or who travel
when it does not inconvenience other motorists.
He said the aim must be a fairer deal for the
motorist, adding such a charge could avoid the
need to build more and more roads to deal with
what can often be a very concentrated congestion
problem.
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