Friday, March 29, 2013

Traffic Services Stats

20 MARCH 2013
Traffic Services
City Traffic Officers clamped down on drunk drivers this weekend, arresting 39 suspects at various roadblocks across the city.


On Sunday 24 March 2013, Officers conducted an operation focusing on illegal drag-racing in the Bellville, Mitchells Plain and Sea Point areas. Two suspects were arrested for reckless or negligent driving after they were caught illegally drag-racing along Modderdam Road in Bellville.


Also on Sunday, Officers stopped a vehicle at Beach Road and Helen Suzman Boulevard in Sea Point because it looked as though its suspension had been lowered. The driver did not have any form of identification on him, and was taken to the nearest Traffic Department while waiting for his Identity Document to be brought in. He was charged with driving without a licence and the vehicle was suspended as it was not roadworthy.


Officers noted that the passengers in the vehicle appeared very nervous. They searched them and found the 20 year-old passenger in possession of two small bank bags of dagga and the 17 year-old passenger in possession of a dagga pipe and a small amount of dagga. A small amount of dagga was also found in a tog-bag in the car. The two suspects were arrested for possession of illegal narcotics.


Officers issued 767 fines for various offences, including:
21 vehicles suspended for not being roadworthy
46 for failure to wear safety belts
82 for unlicensed drivers
29 for unlicensed motor vehicles
26 for failure to display number plates
435 speeding offences on Helen Suzman Boulevard, between Buitengragt and Portswood Road
61 speeding offences on Vanguard Drive, between Zenith and Heideveld Roads


On Friday 22 March 2013, Officers held a roadblock on Vryburger Avenue in Bothasig, resulting in the arrest of eight suspects for driving under the influence of alcohol. The highest breathalyser reading registered at 0,70mg of alcohol per 1 000ml of breath. In addition, 16 traffic violations were also recorded.


Also on Friday, another 13 drunk drivers were arrested in Somerset West, one of whom had a breathalyser reading of 0,93mg of alcohol per 1 000ml of breath. The driver of a security firm was arrested for being in possession of a fraudulent licence token on the company’s light delivery vehicle; and a further 55 traffic violations were recorded.


Officers arrested 13 suspects for driving under the influence of alcohol at a roadblock in Main Road, Wynberg on Friday. The highest breathalyser reading registered at 0,99mg of alcohol per 1 000ml of breath.

End - Media City of Cape Town

City bus company under fire

 

  • 28 Mar 2013
  • Cape Argus
  • Murray Williams STAFF WRITER

Mayor accuses Golden Arrow of acting against poor

THE MAYOR of Cape Town has accused the Golden Arrow Bus service of sabotaging its efforts to correct apartheid’s impact on the city – and has lambasted the leading figures behind the bus service.

PICTURE: RYAN JACOBSFOR THE PEOPLE

MyCiTi buses will benefit the poor of Cape Town, says mayor Patricia de Lille

In an extraordinary attack yesterday, Patricia de Lille said the bus service was acting against the MyCity bus service – and thus against the interests of Cape Town’s poorest citizens.

De Lille said the city was using its MyCiti bus services to help undo the impact of apartheid on communities which found themselves strewn across greater Cape Town, with virtually no transport networks connecting them. This was “the physical expression of the apartheid system mapped in urban geography”, De Lille said.

The first phase had been rolled out in time for the 2010 World Cup, followed by the CBD and up the West Coast. There was also a public commitment to provide the service to Mitchells Plain and Khayelitsha by the end of the year.

De Lille said the city had engaged with stakeholders, including Golden Arrow, to bring various modes of transport together into one coherent network.

But Golden Arrow had thrown a spanner in the works by taking the city to court a fortnight ago, in an attempt to guarantee a role for their bus service.

“I am astonished that that a company like Golden Arrow is seeking to block an initiative that will directly benefit the poor of this city, especially given the ownership of Golden Arrow.”

She said the bus company was owned by Hosken Consolidated Investments, which had the South African Clothing and Textile Workers Union as its majority shareholder.

“Indeed, many of its directors are from Sactwu or are former unionists. Does Marcel Golding, the executive chairman of HCI, support Golden Arrow’s action?

Mr Golding is a former general secretary of the National Union of Mineworkers.

“Does the CEO, Anthony Copelyn, a former general secretary of Sactwu, support it?” (It is assumed she meant Johnny Copelyn.)

“(T)here are few contradictions more apparent, or greater ironies, than the fact that a union-backed company is opposing one of the most profoundly socially transformative projects of a generation, one that will change the lives of poor people in Cape Town.

“It is a brutal reality for the poor that their would-be champions choose to be brave only when behind a megaphone and not when making financial decisions behind the closed doors of the boardroom,” De Lille charged.

Golden Arrow was last night studying De Lille's attack, but had not yet responded.

Nor had Golding or Copelyn responded to De Lille's challenge.

Another officer in court over bribes

 

A GEORGE traffic officer yesterday appeared in the Athlone Magistrate’s Court on charges of corruption for allegedly soliciting bribes from drivers.

Benzil Ramati, 43, was arrested on Monday.

Prosecutor Pumlani Mpepuka told the court Ramati is alleged to have taken money from a driver who was due to take his vehicle for a roadworthy test.

Ramati was arrested along with another officer. Police were tipped off that the pair was soliciting bribes and they were monitored.

The other officer, Frickel Terblanche, appeared in the George Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday on a charge of corruption.

He was released on R3 000 bail and told to return to court on April 20.

Yesterday, Mpepuka said Ramati would be kept in custody for the Easter weekend as police had to ascertain his bail information, which included his criminal record, whether he had a fixed address and whether he was a flight risk.

The court heard Ramati was from George but would be staying in Cape Town during the case.

The investigating officer therefore had to verify his alternative address before a decision on whether he could be released on bail could be made.

Ramati’s lawyer, Gonville Michaels, asked that his client be held at Brackenfell police station.

Traffic officials, NSRI, gear up for Easter

 

TRAFFIC authorities and the NSRI are gearing up for one of their busiest weekends of the year.

PICTURE: PABALLO THEKISOROAD WATCH An officer checks the validity of a duplicated car licence taken from a taxi PICK OF WEEKEND EVENTS

Bathers have been warned to be especially careful on the beaches this Easter.

The effects of a spring tide, which peaked on Tuesday evening, have put the NSRI on high alert – with a “priority focus” on beachgoers and swimmers.

The NSRI’s Craig Lambinon said that extreme high and low tides would be accompanied by abnormally strong rip currents along the south coast.

“The spring tide presents a potential danger to swimmers who may not be aware of the current conditions.

“We urge bathers to be aware, and to take care of children close to water sources.”

Super Rugby: the Stormers will take on the Crusaders at DHL Newlands on Saturday evening. Kick-off is at 7.10pm.

Two Oceans: the Two Oceans Trail Run takes place on Friday, with the Ultra and Half Marathons taking place on Saturday morning.

V&A Waterfront concert: live music will be performed free of charge during the late afternoons and evenings at the V&A Waterfront between Friday and Monday.

Easter Vortex: one of the province’s most established outdoor trance parties takes place from Friday until Monday, near Riviersonderend.

Kenny Africa, the Western Cape’s traffic chief, committed his staff to trying to cut the number of road fatalities this weekend. Over the 2011 Easter weekend nine people died on the province’s roads, while 11 died last year – most between 6pm and 10pm.

This year, said Africa, there would be a special focus on fatigue and unbuckled back-seat passengers. A zero tolerance policy towards drunk driving and speeding would be be enforced.

There would be roadblocks every night between tonight and Sunday.

Clear, partly cloudy and moderate conditions have been forecast for the city on Friday and Saturday.

Temperatures will be in the low to mid 20s throughout the weekend. There will be showers in the interior on Saturday, and rain at the coast and in the interior on Sunday and Monday.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

CRACKING WHIP ON ERRANT DRIVERS

  • Cape Argus
  • Murray Williams STAFF WRITER

221 000 warrants of arrest issued against city motorists

DRIVERS in Cape Town who have failed to pay their fines, and then also ignored warrants of arrest, may have got away with it in the past. But this loophole is about to be tightly closed.

The Cape Argus has learned that as many as 221 000 warrants of arrest have been issued against Cape Town drivers.

Collectively, they have unpaid fines totalling R489 million for contempt of court, which are issued when original fines are not paid. This figure excludes the combined worth of the original fines themselves, which run into a further figure of hundreds of millions of rand.

The City of Cape Town’s traffic department said the estimate was given by Syntell, a city service provider.

The 221 000 warrants of arrest are estimated to involve about 50 000 Cape Town drivers.

But because of the scale of the backlog, only the worst offenders – those who have racked up the highest number of outstanding warrants of arrest – are being actively sought.

To end this lawlessness by drivers who routinely do not pay, the traffic department has warned that tens of thousands of Cape Town drivers may be barred from renewing their driver’s licences, or vehicle licences, until they have paid up their fines attached to their outstanding warrants of arrest.

This will be done by the introduction of “admin marks” – made against their names on the electronic eNatis database. This will in future alert admin clerks that these drivers would be required to first settle these contempt of court fines, before they can be issued with renewed driver’s or vehicle licences.

Asked when the system was due to kick in, the department’s Frank Lock said: “We have already implemented the admin mark on drivers that have been contacted to come see us and did not.”

These were typically worst offenders, including car rental companies and taxi owners.

The next step is for these admin marks to appear immediately next to the name of everyone with an outstanding warrant of arrest. This will be introduced with all new warrants of arrest issued.

Lock explained the requirements for motorists who had admin marks against their name: “They have to settle all outstanding warrants of arrest, as the due process of notices/ summonses has already taken place. Only once we have seen the finalisation, the receipt, do we take the admin mark off the name (on the eNatis) system.

If drivers cannot pay, they risk being arrested and detained until they appear in court, in line with the warrants for their arrest.

Drivers who can pay on the spot must also settle their original admission-of-guilt fines for their original offences, but will not be arrested for these fines. The original fines still have to be paid – with the threat of new warrants of arrest if they are not paid timeously.

Friday, March 15, 2013

Bus Tradegy

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24 passengers dead, 8 critical in one of SA’S worst bus disasters

 

  • 16 Mar 2013
  • Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)
  • SIBONGAKONKE MAMA and KOWTHAR SOLOMONS

THE DOUBLE-decker bus came careering down the Hex River valley outside De Doorns, the driver fighting desperately to keep control as bend after bend rushed up.

There were only two more bends to negotiate but the secondto-last bend was a hairpin and the Atlantic City Liners bus crashed into the mountainside yesterday morning.

By last night the death toll stood at 24 in one of the worst road accidents in South African history. Eight passengers were critically injured, 14 seriously injured and 44 others sustained minor to moderate injuries. Two of the dead were children. The bus driver was also among the dead.

Kenny Africa, provincial traffic chief, said: “Apparently the bus was coming from the Beaufort West side towards Cape Town. It is evident that halfway down the pass the driver had problems with the brakes because he went on to the arrester bed, which is used when vehicles have trouble stopping. But he went through the arrester bed down the pass.”

Dumisani Ximbi, provincial leader of the Twelve Apostles Church in Christ, said some of the women passengers had come from a national women’s prayer meeting in Secunda.

In the aftermath of the crash, church members who had followed in several smaller buses could be seen dressed in their distinctive blue skirts and white headscarves milling around the scene, comforting each other and handing out blankets to shocked survivors.

A church leader gathered some of the women and led them in prayer. Rescue workers and medical personnel battled to attend to the injured and those still trapped in the mangled wreckage. The dead were laid out on the road, the bodies covered in silver blankets. Ambulances formed a steady procession ferrying the injured in the direction of Worcester and Cape Town.

“This is the worst accident scene I have ever seen,” was the refrain from almost all those at the scene.

It took about three hours for the first of the relatives to arrive from Cape Town.

One man went to the bus and pulled from the wreckage clothes he recognised as his wife’s.

He couldn’t find her. The anguish was etched across his face as he turned to go to Worcester Hospital, hoping and praying that she was one of the injured.

Rescue and emergency vehicles snaked back along the road almost as far as the eye could see, while Air Force and Air Mercy Services helicopters buzzed overhead.

Amid the death and despair there were moments of hope and prayer as relatives waited for news of loved ones.

Two men whose wives had been travelling on the bus could only look on as medics pulled badly injured passengers out through shattered windows.

“We haven’t heard anything,” one man said. “We can only hope that they will be okay.”

A crane tried to lift the wreckage of the bus to free those still trapped underneath. Seats were protruding through some windows.

A major investigation had been launched into the cause of the bus accident by late yesterday, transport MEC Robin Carlisle said.

“Early reports from the surviving passengers indicated brake failure as the main reason for the crash,” he said.

“The Provincial Regulatory Entity will investigate the legal status of the bus, including the validity of the operating licence, and whether the certificate of fitness is still valid.”

Aneeqah Salie, Communications Officer for Atlantic Charters & Tours, said: “We at Atlantic Charters hereby extend our sincere condolences to all the families and loved ones who have been affected by today’s tragic accident. We are also deeply saddened by the loss of our dear employee, who was the driver of the vehicle involved.

“We pledge our full support to the relevant authorities in the ensuing processes which are currently under way to establish exactly what happened in today’s tragic event. Unfortunately, at this stage we cannot comment any further until the relevant processes have been completed. We will revert to you should we have further information.”

Cape Argus Cycle Race – Sunday 10 March 2013

 

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Media Release by the City

 

Traffic Services


City of Cape Town Traffic Officers arrested 17 suspects during operations and patrols across the city last week.
On Sunday 10 March 2013, City Traffic Officers conducted roadblocks on Michaels and Hlati Roads in Lwandle, and arrested 14 suspects for driving under the influence of alcohol. Officers also arrested one driver for assaulting a Traffic Officer, resisting arrest, and possession of a false drivers licence. In addition, 87 traffic fines were issued.
On Thursday 7 March 2013, officers conducted an operation along Hospital Bend as part of their ongoing enforcement plan. The operation focused on serious moving violations such as disregarding the channelising lines, overtaking on the left shoulder, and disregarding barrier lines at critical points along Nelson Mandela Boulevard – all of which impact on traffic congestion and add to the frustration of law-abiding motorists.
During the late afternoon peak, officers issued 893 fines including:

  • 251 for disobeying channelising lines
  • 23 for talking on a cellphone while driving
  • 10 to unlicensed drivers
  • 11 for unlicensed motor vehicles

The following speeding offences were also recorded:

  • 300 on Nelson Mandela Boulevard, between Roodebloem Road and Melbourne Road
  • 276 on Helen Suzman Boulevard, between Buitengragt and Portswood Roa

Later that evening, Officers conducted a roadblock focusing on illegal drag-racing in the Bellville, Mitchells Plain and Gordon’s Bay areas, and arrested two suspects for reckless or negligent driving. One illegal drag-racer drove against oncoming traffic on Modderdam Road to escape the roadblock, but was pursued by a Ghost Squad Officer and arrested. The second motorist drove calmly through the roadblock but, two intersections later, decided to race another vehicle and was promptly arrested by the Ghost Squad Officer who had been following him.
Officers also issued 409 fines for various offences, including:

  • 46 speeding offences on Eisleben Road, between Wesport and The Cedars
  • 240 speeding offences on Vanguard Drive, between the R300 and Highlands
  • 74 speeding offences on Okavango Road, between Impala and Langeberg Road

END

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

We need to see a shift in behaviour on our roads

  • 14 Mar 2013
  • Cape Argus

Andrew Wheeldon explains why all road users should sign MyPledge

 

IT IS ESTIMATED that 20th century warfare claimed the lives of 160 million people – a dreadful, alarming statistic. However, without wishing to appear too cynical, this was war, and the intention of war is to dominate your rival, win over minds, protect what is rightfully yours, and prevent further threat to one’s environment.

TRAVEL SMART More than 100 million people died on the world’s roads, writes the writer

This mostly, if not always, involves killing people.

Far more disturbing and horrific is the fact that during those same 100 years, more than 100 million people died on the world’s roads. More than 100 million in 100 years, climbing each year as more cars were manufactured. There are now more than one billion cars on the planet. How easily do we look back on all the road death statistics and simply brush them off? Mobility is an act of travel from origin to destination, not an effort to destroy, maim or kill others. Or is it?

The differential fatality statistics between wars and traffic are simply far too congruent. When humans go about their travels, they kill one another in great big bleeding numbers. At times this is purely accidental, at other times it is malicious and deliberate. It is the result of impatience, road rage, intoxication, a lack of respect, insufficient training and skills, unroadworthy and overloaded vehicles, the effects of an obsession with speed and power, and many other reasons.

We all need to travel – we require mobility and access to places of education, employment and leisure. But something is missing.

We need this to be safe, we need to have a better-than-wartime probability of making it there alive, but for many an innocent commute in a car is no different from an armed conflict. In South Africa, this is frighteningly evident.

Our country has one of the highest road fatality rates in the world.

A high percentage of vehicles and drivers are unlicensed. According to the SA Road Traffic Report of March 2011, there were 33.2 road traffic fatalities for every 100 000 people (of a population of about 50 million) a year; 208 fatalities for every 100 000 motor vehicles; meaning there were 13 802 fatalities in 2010.

This needs to be viewed against the UK figures of 3.5 deaths for every 100 000 people, seven deaths for every 100 000 vehicles, and 2 222 deaths overall; and the US figures of 12.3, 15 and 33 808, respectively, over the same period.

South Africa’s road fatality rate costs the taxpayer R10 million a year, with an additional R80 billion for all related damage, injuries and insurance claims.

One would think it would have improved over the past 25 years, but it hasn’t. Previously disadvantaged communities did begin to relocate closer to better schools and jobs and into the cities. However, for many the distances remained significant, as space is limited and the economic and social barriers remain.

Public transport to outlying communities has improved to some degree in the past 20 years, but the extent to which ever-increasing populations can be catered for remains a huge challenge.

High unemployment and the barriers to low-cost access to education and employment remain. Research conducted by the Bicycling Empowerment Network (BEN) in a number of the informal settlements in Cape Town showed that many residents spend more than 25 percent of their income on public transport. Even with this significant financial burden, people are forced to travel.

We all need to ensure that this is done in the safest and most respectful of environments, and this starts with each and every one of us. The joint LeadSA, Western Cape government, Independent Newspapers and BEN MyPledge safety campaign is an effective start to this.

All road users can begin to internalise what the MyPledge represents, and thereafter bring about behavioural change. It starts with you, and with me.

I will choose not to run a red traffic light, or stop street, or to speed, or to drive or cycle or even walk in the roadway while under the influence of drugs or alcohol, or to act aggressively to fellow road users.

I will do this and more, as will you, as it demonstrates a respect for the lives of others.

In Cape Town, Joburg and Durban, efforts are being made to improve the safety of all road users and to introduce more cycling and walking, coupled with public transport, at the expense of private motor vehicles. Cape Town’s NonMotorised Transport (NMT) Forum, also known as the Active Mobility Forum, established in 2004, consists of representatives of the city, the

provincial government, as well as transportation planning practitioners, NGOs, cycling advocates and other interested parties.

Moves are afoot to extend variants of the forum to Joburg, Durban and other metropolitan areas. The vision is that Cape Town will grow into a city with a general sense of well-being through the development of a dignified urban environment where people feel free to walk and cycle, space is shared and everyone has access to urban opportunities and mobility.

A key goal is to increase the use of bicycles and encourage walking by creating a safe and robust network of bicycle and pedestrian paths to serve all citizens, for when more people use bicycles or walk, a city becomes safer for all. This can be qualitatively demonstrated in more than 50 cities in Europe and the Americas.

In the period since the establishment of the NMT Forum the city has overseen the planning and implementation of between 250 and 280km of bicycle lanes and pedestrian paths, in both poor and affluent areas – some to directly address pro-poor mobility and others to enhance recreational routes.

All told, this will allow all a safe, low-cost and environmentally sound mode of travel to places of education and employment. All of this progress in design and affordability is welcome and does enable a safer environment. But once again, I return to the issue of individual responsibility.

If we as commuters – whatever form of mobility we use – do not think about our safety and the safety of others first, we will never stop killing one another on the roads.

Public transport operators, motorists, cyclists and pedestrians all need to sign MyPledge. I signed it because I know positive behavioural change makes a big difference.

We can bring the fatality rate down exponentially each year with a respectful attitude towards all who travel on our roads. South Africa demands this, our future generations deserve it.

Andrew Wheeldon, a safe cycling activist, is founder of the Bicycle Empowerment Network.

Monday, March 11, 2013

What truce? Gun is at my head

 

11 Mar 2013 Cape Argus

Daneel Knoetze STAFF REPORTER

AN OSTRACISED taxi operator has slammed the Bellville Taxi Association (Bellta) for claiming last week that a peace deal had been brokered between Bellta’s executive and rebel members.

Speaking on condition of anonymity because he “feared for his life”, the operator said that he and other members were forced on pain of death to “repent”, to accept the status quo and to adhere to Bellta’s rules.

“If we did not, they said that there were 10 hit men already assigned to each of us. ‘They’re just waiting for the order,’ we were told,” the operator added.

There has been infighting in Bellta since 2011, when a group of operators tried to break away from the group amid allegations of corruption, lack of transparency, favouritism, illegal rules and unelected leadership. They breakaway group called themselves the Bellville Taxi Alliance (BTA).

In fighting between Bellta faithful and BTA members, four operators were murdered from June to September. At the time, the provincial legislature said it was aware of a hit list with the names of 17 people. Both sides have accused each other of perpetuating the violence.

Last Monday, the violence flared up again, with shots being fired, BTA operators’ vehicles being pushed off the rank and a senior official at the Provincial Regulating Authority being assaulted.

“There is an illegal rule that each operator is allowed to have a maximum of six taxis operating from the rank. This is benefiting only corrupt Bellta executive members and suffocates bigger operators. But our lives are more important, so we accept this until the rule of law prevails,” the operator said.

In the wake of the violence, Transport MEC Robin Carlisle met police to set up a contingency plan. Police said they had increased their presence at the rank, and on Friday there was a roadblock checking taxi licences and documentation as well as issuing fines.

Carlisle’s department also put a moratorium on transactions between the regulating authority and Bellta, making the renewal of operating licences impossible.
But Mvuyisi Mente, Bellta’s vice chairman, said the provincial government was “meddling” in a conflict it knew nothing about.

“As a result they are undermining the move towards peace. Only the taxi industry is in a position to clean up its own house. If the government wants to get involved it needs to partner with us and not victimise us in this way,” he said.

Mente said the peace deal remained intact, despite claims to the contrary. He said nominations and elections for new membership might have to be put on hold until the ban on transactions with the authority was lifted.

But the operator said the government and law enforcement should come down on corrupt and illegal operators “like a ton of bricks”.

He suggested that gun control, regulation and a sustained police presence were needed.

City of Cape Town Traffic stats

Traffic
City of Cape Town Traffic Officers arrested 51 suspects during operations and patrols across the city.
On Sunday 3 March 2013, Officers conducted operations in Sea Point, Mitchells Plain and Bellville focusing on illegal street racing and illegally modified vehicles. Officers arrested one suspect for reckless and negligent driving and issued 1 241 traffic fines which included: 27 for failure to display number plates; three for participating in an illegal street race; 39 for unlicensed drivers and the suspension of 20 vehicles for illegal modifications.
The following speeding offences were recorded:

  • 366 offences on Helen Suzman Boulevard, between Buitengragt and Portswood Road
  • 168 offences on Helen Suzman Boulevard, between York Road and Beach Road
  • 370 offences on Vanguard Drive, between the R300 and Highlands Road
  • 91 offences on Eisleben Road, between Cedars and Wespoort Roads

Also on Sunday afternoon, officers arrested 17 motorists during a roadblock held along Vanguard Drive, with the highest breathalyser test registering at 1,16mg of alcohol per 1 000ml of breath.
On Saturday 2 March 2013, officers held a joint metered taxi operation with the South African Police Services and the Immigration Unit in the CBD. A total of 26 drivers were arrested for not being in possession of public transportation permits and another six motorists were arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol. In addition, officers issued 128 traffic fines.
City Traffic Officers took to the roads on Thursday 28 February 2013 to conduct an operation along Hospital Bend as part of their ongoing enforcement plan. The operation focused on serious moving violations such as disregarding the channelising lines, overtaking on the left shoulder, and disregarding barrier lines at critical points along Nelson Mandela Boulevard – all of which impact on traffic congestion and add to the frustration of law-abiding motorists.
During the late afternoon peak, officers issued 2 044 traffic fines, including:

  • 12 for disobeying the channelising line
  • 12 for unlicensed drivers
  • 6 for failure to wear safety belts
  • 45 for using a cellphone whilst driving
  • 5 for failure to display registration plates

The following speeding offences were also recorded:

  • 500 offences on Nelson Mandela Boulevard, between Roodebloem Road and Melbourne Road
  • 928 offences on Settlers Way, between Raapenberg Road and Jan Smuts Road
  • 140 offences on Table Bay Boulevard, between Lower Church Street and Christiaan Barnard Street
  • 379 offences on Helen Suzman Boulevard between Buitengragt and Portswood Road
  • Later that evening, officers conducted operations focusing on illegal drag racing in Mitchells Plain, Eerste River and Bellville. One motorist was arrested for reckless and negligent driving and 61 traffic fines were issued. The following speeding offences were recorded:
  • 350 offences on Vanguard Drive, between Highlands and the R300
  • 46 offences on Eisleben Road, between The Cedars and Montagu Road (highest speed at 101km/h in a 60 km/h zone )

END
ISSUED BY:
INTEGRATED STRATEGIC COMMUNICATION AND BRANDING DEPARTMENT, CITY OF CAPE TOWN

Friday, March 8, 2013

We active citizens take action over injustices

  • Cape Argus

ARE WE really active citizens, as we proclaim to be? This column has frequently debated what we do – and don’t do – in response to the wide range of dangers that surround us. In the face of crime, drunk drivers, bullies, people who break up families, the corrupt.

But are we all talk? Are we “big hat, no cattle”, as they say in Texas?

Sometimes we’re forced to act. Like now...

On June 16, 2011, Estelle Brigando, 50, was driving her daughter and Courtney Moore, 18, home from a modern dancing show in Claremont. Just past the airport, near the R300 turn-off, their lives ended. It is alleged a Mercedes travelling at speed smashed the women’s Toyota Yaris off the road from behind.

The Merc driver is still facing culpable homicide charges.

On Tuesday night, I was driving on the same stretch of road, carrying two Grade 7 pupils home from an international maths competition. Just a few kilometres from where Brigando and Moore died, I was in the fast lane, part of a string of cars overtaking slower traffic.

A car sped up behind us, and began “tailgating” – driving practically on our bumper. Lack of following distance is regarded as one of main causes of the carnage on South Africa’s roads.

I touched my brakes, just enough to activate the brake lights, to warn the driver to fall back at least a little. He didn’t budge.

Instead, he moved right, suggesting he was about to pass me on the right-hand shoulder if I did not “get out tamy way”.

I drive a solid Land Rover and wasn’t about to be forced off the road – I was still busy overtaking, legally and safely.

But he was putting my two child passengers in serious danger. If I had had to slow even a little, he would have smashed into us.

This continued for several minutes. I activated my brake lights again, this time repeatedly, to urge him to back off.

Instead, he yanked his car left, sped past me on the inside lane, and recklessly forced his way back into the fast lane ahead of the car in front of me.

He did this at least twice more as he raced off towards Somerset West. So what does one do now? Laugh it off? Dismiss him as a moron, and do no more? No. That’s precisely what an inactive citizen would do.

This driver was actively endangering many motorists, including my son and his classmate. Imagine another two funerals.

It’s in the public interest to speak out about such drivers.

I’ve thus laid formal complaints with the SAPS, the metro police, the Traffic Department and the provincial Transport Department, as the vehicle is a registered tour vehicle. I contacted the company owner and asked him to investigate. Their schedules are logged and the cars carry GPS trackers.

To the driver: You are a danger to society. I won’t be bullied off the road by you. You’re being watched, and now investigated.

You brought this upon yourself. Let’s see how well your aggression is working for you now.