RE: Road charging now inevitable?
RE: Road charging now inevitable?
Tuesday 20th February 2007

Road charging now inevitable?

Petition's last day nudges 1.7m names


Coming soon near you
Coming soon near you
The Government plans to introduce a voluntary road charging scheme in the teeth of public opposition that's currently centred around the petition, which expires today, on the Prime Minister's Web site (see link below).

Details on the Government's plans to set up the scheme are emerging. The voluntary element would, according to the Observer newspaper, involve a reduction in motoring taxes in return for allowing satellite tracking systems to be installed in the car.

Others have accepted that it's a done deal too. According to the RAC Foundation, those who volunteer for the scheme would benefit in areas such as navigation, help with finding parking spaces, and pay-as-you go insurance.

Executive director Edmund King said: "If drivers have got a meter they'll think more about their actions, they'll cut out some journeys and they'll save themselves some money. There's nothing to lose starting with a voluntary scheme, but it would be political suicide for any government to impose it on people."

A warning was sounded by the Social Market Foundation, which calls itself "an independent think tank, exploring ideas that link the state and the market to create a more just, free and prosperous society". In spite of that, this organisation has just published a report which argues that "it is now time to move the debate forward from the why to the how by setting out a clear road map for the introduction of road user charging."

It argues that road pricing could fail unless charges are high enough to raise enough cash to improve public transport to the point where drivers feel they have a choice. It warns: "Expensive, inaccessible or unreliable public transport could leave the motorist with little choice to pay for essential trips, no matter the level of the charge."

So what do we reckon are the odds of a go-anywhere, affordable, acceptable, comfortable, clean, attractive public transport system emerging anytime soon?

Meanwhile, Tony Blair is to email everyone who signs up to the petition explaining why his Government plans to go ahead with the scheme whether the electorate wants it or not.

Welcome to 21st century Britain.

Author
Discussion

tony*t3

Original Poster:

20,911 posts

270 months

Tuesday 20th February 2007
quotequote all
I have no problem with road charging in countries like Spain and France where the roads are excellent, but our roads are sh*te and we should be paid for using them as they are so poorly maintained.

burman

361 posts

236 months

Wednesday 21st February 2007
quotequote all
Anyboby voting for road charging are turkeys voting for Christmas, if you are daft enough to think this Government will reduce the other £40 BILLION we mugs already stump up, you really are innocent children!!
Why can a so called Socialist Labour Party get away with pricing the peasantry of the roads???
This is one step away from automatic speeding fines and God knows what else
NO NO NO

dandarez

13,886 posts

306 months

Wednesday 21st February 2007
quotequote all
Socialist Labour Party????????

As Roy Hattersley responded recently about the current Blair government mess...

'Ahh, but I used to be in The Labour Party'.

Get it? This is Nu Labor, very different animal... VERY different

drags06

454 posts

234 months

Wednesday 21st February 2007
quotequote all
tony*t3 said:
I have no problem with road charging in countries like Spain and France where the roads are excellent, but our roads are sh*te and we should be paid for using them as they are so poorly maintained.

i have, i don't want it anywhere! why should anyone or thing be charged to move? it is simply not right.
Call it what you want but this is true big brother, the begining of the end!