Ghana to lose ¢10m in road tolls from now to December – Kwame Agbodza

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(Credit GBC Online)

Ghana is projected to lose ¢10 million in road tolls from now to the end of the year following the suspension of its collection by the sector minister.

Following the stoppage of collection by the sector minister, Ghana is expected to lose $10 million in road tolls from now until the end of the year.

According to Kwame Agbodza, the Ranking Member of Parliament’s Roads and Transport Committee.

“Out of populace behaviour, the Roads Minister illegally as I always said, a lawyer who breaks the law with impunity illegally decides to suspend the collection of cancel road tolls. The Minister of Finance pretends they can’t see, hear, or do anything about it but since the Roads Minister embarked on this illegality, the Finance Minister says nothing.”

“I can tell you projected to the 31st December, we are going to lose GHS10 million in terms of road toll so how can government or the Minister of Finance wants everybody to tighten their belts everybody to contribute more but the one we have approved for you, you are allowing the Road Minister to squander or to prevent you from getting Ghana is projected to lose ¢10 million in road tolls from now to the end of the year following the suspension of its collection by the sector minister,” he said.

According to him the monies that would be lost from the road tolls by December this year would be used to build at least 20 CHPS compound facilities in the rural setting.

“Even if the Road Minister doesn’t need it [road toll] at least the Ministry of Health will require that money to build at least 20 CHP compound across we who live in the rural communities… Tell me which were each of those individuals who have lost their jobs at the toll booth will go tomorrow morning, Monday morning. So the budget is a mess.”

Meanwhile, Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta claims that the tollbooths’ discomfort and pollution may not be proportional to the revenue generated.

After visiting with some exhibitors at the ongoing Volta Fair at the Ho Sports Stadium, he chatted with JoyNews.

“Frustration, when you are just going to work, I think the relief is palpable you know our poorest people are in the ‘trotros’ etc standing at that place being populated, markets being created that should not be. So for me yes for me I think it is a call that we have to think through. Truly, for me personally the issue of pollution, the issue of loss of productivity makes more than GHS 10million,” he said.