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New road laws for SA: 'Aarto Bill in its current form is flawed' – AA

In its current form, the Administrative Adjudication of Road Traffic Offences (Aarto) Bill, is cause for concern, says the Automobile Association AA.

The National Assembly earlier this month passed the Bill and sent it to President Cyril Ramaphosa to be signed into law. 

The AA said: "In principle the AA is in favour of a demerit system for drivers, it is something we have always backed and supported even as far back as the 1960s when such a system was first mooted, and as recently as the late 1990s and early 2000s when it was again on the table. This punishes frequent road traffic offenders while those who obey the rules of the road have nothing to fear. However, many of the proposed amendments to the Bill, now before the President, are worrisome and raise questions about the practicality of the system’s implementation."

READ: Here's how the new demerit system will affect drivers when the Aarto Bill is signed off

For instance, the AA says, the provisions around demerit points appear to be geared more towards revenue collection than dealing with road safety, which should be a central theme of such a system.

A good example is the low Rand value and points demerit for not wearing a seatbelt which are the same as driving an unregistered vehicle. 


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"In our view not wearing a seatbelt should carry a much stiffer monetary punishment and accompanying high value points demerit. If making our roads safer is the objective let’s start here," the AA says.

Below is the proposed driver demerit system: Article continues below the infographic

More concerns for road users

Another concern is the constitutionality of certain amendments in relation to the issuing of fines via electronic mail instead of through traditional mail.  But by far the most egregious components of the Amendment Bill, the AA notes, relate to the rights of infringers and fleet owners.

In terms of challenging an infringement, a person must use the channels of the Road Traffic Infringement Agency (RTIA), the very body which is reliant on the revenue from fines for its very existence. This, in the AA’s opinion, violates the infringer’s rights to a fair hearing and places it with an organ of state it doesn’t believe can be impartial in this matter.

"As for fleet owners or managers, the burden the Amendment Bill places on them is immense especially as any demerits earned on these vehicles will go directly against their personal names. This is wholly unfair and, again, does not address what should be a predominant feature of this system: road safety," says the AA. 

According to the AA the piloted roll-out of Aarto in Tshwane and Johannesburg was not implemented properly as only fines and no demerit points were issued. This means amendments to the Aarto Bill are being made without proper testing of system. 

"The existing system as it was implemented has also proven to be largely unsuccessful, especially when measured against fatal road crashes in the province.

"In 2014 there were 2136 fatal road crashes in Gauteng, in 2015 there were 2171, 2385 in 2016 and 2398 in 2017. Instead of declining, these crashes have increased, all while the limited Aarto implementation was in force in the province," says the AA. 

The Association adds that despite the public consultation around Aarto, it seems little consideration was given to the many submissions which raised these and other issues, including those from the AA.

It notes that road safety must be the priority of any infringement system introduced into South Africa, which in this Amendment Bill it isn’t.

The AA concludes: "Our overall impression, though, is that any system which tinkers with the punishment of offenders instead of deals with the more important issues of stopping offenders, is not going to work. Essentially, unless people fear getting caught in the first place, there is no usefulness to a demerit system. This means there must be increased investment and focus on providing appropriately resourced and deployed traffic law enforcement around the country." 

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