The Ministry of Roads and Highways has indicated that security officers will remain at post at all thirty-eight tollbooths sites across the country.
The ministry says the move is to maintain sanity at the various tollbooth sites nationwide although toll collection has been suspended.
This follows public outcry that some of the booths are being destroyed by heavy-duty vehicles whose drivers run into the cubicles.
In a Citi News interview, sector minister, Kwasi Amoako-Attah, said the booths will be protected and put to good use soon.
“All the 38 centres will continue to have security officers. We have not abandoned them. They are our assets and we are going to put them to good use for the good people of the country.”
The Minister’s comments come shortly after he was widely criticised for saying the tollbooths will be converted into washrooms for motorists.
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The Ministry of Roads and Highways directed the discontinuation of the collection of tolls on all public roads and bridges across the country from Thursday, November 18, 2021.
The directive followed the announcement by the Finance Ministry of the scrapping of tolls on all public roads.
The monies raised from tolls go into the Road Funds and are supposed to be used for maintaining public roads.
But government said the tollbooths had become a nuisance and had to be removed.
Meanwhile, it emerged later that government expects the proposed Electronic Transaction Levy to take care of the monies lost to road toll collection.