Government and COSATU meet on Gauteng Freeway Improvement
Project (GFIP)
Thabo Masebe, Spokesperson for the Deputy President&
Patrick Craven National Spokesperson, 20 July 2012
 
Government and the Congress of South African Trade Unions
(COSATU) met in Johannesburg today, 20 July 2012, to discuss possible solutions
to servicing debt associated with the Gauteng Freeway Improvement Project
(GFIP).
The meeting at COSATU House in Braamfontein, Johannesburg,
was part of the ongoing stakeholder consultation by the Inter-Ministerial 
Committee
on the GFIP, chaired by Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe.
The Deputy President led a government
delegation that included Minister of Finance Pravin Gordhan, Deputy Minister of
Transport Sindisiwe Chikunga, Presidency Director-General Dr Cassius Lubisi,
Director-General of Transport George Mahlalela, Director-General of
Environmental Affairs Environment Affairs Nosipho Ngcaba and senior officials.
 
COSATU President Sidumo Dlamini led the COSATU delegation
which included  First Deputy President Tyotyo James, General Secretary
Zwelinzima Vavi and a delegation of senior representatives of the trade union
federation.
Opening the session, Deputy President Motlanthe said the
Inter-Ministerial Committee was undertaking its consultations with open minds
and to hear stakeholder concerns that would eventually presented to Cabinet.
“The idea is for us to explore the best possible way of
finding a solution to this challenge.”
He said from all the GFIP consultations to date, there was
in-principle agreement among stakeholders that the principle of user pay is
key; that the South African National Roads Agency Limited (Sanral) is an
outstanding agency whose creditworthiness has to be sustained, and that in the
current economic environment, poor and unemployed people should not be burdened
with additional costs.
The COSATU General Secretary welcomed the consultation on
behalf of the federation and said COSATU had always insisted that the country
was morally obliged to service the debt incurred for the GFIP. COSATU would
work with government on ways to do this.
The meeting explored government’s plans to decongest
Gauteng freeways and improve public transport, as well as proposals on using
vehicle licensing fees, personal and income tax and a fuel levy as means to
replace toll fees.
COSATU is of the view that the road network is a public
good and that it is inappropriate to toll urban roads.
Government and COSATU agreed to meet again in two weeks’
time to consider a report on options developed by the ANC-COSATU-SACP Alliance
for the servicing of GFIP debt.
It was agreed that the Alliance Task Team, which has been
studying possible solutions to the problem, would meet again to look at
discrepancies between the two reports on the GFIP, and to amend its mandate
with a view to consensus on the broader and short-term issues.
At the end of the consultation process the
Inter-Ministerial Committee will present a report to Cabinet detailing all
proposals by stakeholders. This will inform Cabinet’s decisions on the way
forward.
Issued by Government Communications (GCIS) and the Congress of
South African Trade Unions (COSATU)

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