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National Land Transport Bill

National Land Transport Bill. Presentation to Portfolio Committee 29 July 2008. Table of contents. National Land Transport Strategy document Introduction Overview Institutional issues Funding Transport planning Contracting for PT services Regulation Registration Rail Freight Appeals.

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National Land Transport Bill

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  1. National Land Transport Bill Presentation to Portfolio Committee 29 July 2008

  2. Table of contents • National Land Transport Strategy document • Introduction • Overview • Institutional issues • Funding • Transport planning • Contracting for PT services • Regulation • Registration • Rail • Freight • Appeals

  3. 1 Strategy document:Introduction • Drafting of the Bill was based on National Land Transport Strategy Document (NLTS) presented on 23 August 2007 • NLTS was based on interviews and policy docs since 2000, e.g Public Transport Strategy & Action Plan approved by Cabinet in 2007, National Rail Plan, 2005 etc. • Basic policy in 1996 White Paper stays the same

  4. 2 Strategy document:Overview • More uniform laws and procedures needed across the country • Functions should be consolidated with the same entity where possible to avoid fragmentation, within limits of Constitution • Interprovincial and tourist transport should be regulated nationally • Integrated rapid PT networks (IRPTNs) should be established in larger cities, incorporating all modes, with through-ticketing etc.

  5. 2.2 Strategy document:Overview cont. • Dedicated funds should be established in each sphere with new funding sources • Planning authority should do contracting for services and issue operating licences (OLs) • Registration can be dealt with by entities responsible for OLs: Bill does not need to control registration • Will be a separate Rail Act later, e.g. to establish Rail Economic Regulator and deal with infrastructure issues • Freight should not be regulated by the Bill, but there should be other measures: e.g. to attract freight to the rail mode

  6. 3 Institutional issues • White Paper, 1996 supports principle of subsidiarity i.e. devolve functions to lowest appropriate sphere • Concerns/impediments in NLTTA: • Lack of sustainable funding • Conflict with local government legislation • Limitation in range of functions assigned to TAs • Problem of unfunded mandates • Problem: transport authorities (TAs) not autonomous from their municipality/ies

  7. 3 Institutional issues cont. • 6.1 Underlying problems: • Fragmentation of functions is a problem: • Rail function is national (SARCC does planning) • Bus subsidies, OL Boards & Registrars at provincial level • Municipalities required to do ITPs • The following functions should be performed by the same entity: • Planning – ITP: all PT services • Service delivery: operations and subsidies • Regulation – OLB functions • Monitoring: compliance/operations

  8. 3 Institutional issues cont. • Recommendations: • 4 essential elements need to be placed at a single sphere of government: • Planning and co-ordination • Service delivery • Regulation and market entry • Monitoring • All these should be placed at the municipal sphere • Consolidate the following at municipal sphere: • Road based subsidy function • Monitoring of subsidised service contracts • Regulation (operating licence) function

  9. 3 Institutional issues cont. • 6.3 Recommendations cont.: • Funding for subsidised service contracts should be transferred directly to metropolitan municipalities • Metros should have more responsibility for service level planning for commuter rail – establish a statutory committee • Treat “aspirant metros” the same as metros • Transport authorities: where there is more than one municipality in a functional area, a TA should be established • Where a TA is established, it should have the full range of transport functions • Resolve conflict with Municipal Systems Act and MFMA • Provide dedicated funding sources

  10. 4. Funding • NLTTA provides no dedicated funding sources (Min. or MEC may give funds) • Bus subsidies “frozen”: i.e. only increased for inflation • Bus subsidies voted on DoT budget and distributed by provinces: system largely not integrated with ITPs – leads to lack of accountability • Cities and TAs responsible for ITPs, but have no control over rail services and limited control over bus and taxi operations – leads to lack of accountablility • Deficit funding by central government discourages the search for more efficient supply mechanisms

  11. 4. Funding cont. • Recommendations: • Empower TAs and certain municipalities to raise user charges • Establish funds in all three spheres of govt. • Transform subsidies into a metro-managed integrated system • Substantially increase subsidies to promote PT – educate public about need for PT • Consolidate functions in the local sphere • Clarify role of TAs re capital expenditure

  12. 5. Transport planning • Planning requirements too onerous: NLTTA amended by Act 26 of 2000 • Essential planning approach should remain the same • New Minimum ITP Requirements published on 30 November 2007: • NLTSF remains, and will incorporate National Transport Master Plan, National Rail Plan, Freight Logistics Strategy etc. • PLTFs remain • Comprehensive ITP for metros and larger cities • District ITP for district municipalities • Local ITP for local municipalities – much simpler plan

  13. 6. Contracting for PT services • Many interim contracts still exist on old multi-journey ticket subsidy system – contrary to NLTTA • Old subsidy system not integrated with ITPs – not acceptable to reduce or remove routes • Subsidy amount generally only increased for inflation • Model tender & contract docs too restrictive: only allow for net-based contracts • Negotiated contracts are supposed to be an exception, but many implemented • NLTTA requires TAs to take over the subsidy function – eThekwini TA has not yet done so • System managed by provinces, who are not the planning authorities

  14. 6. Contracting forPT services cont. • Recommendations: • Subsidy money should be transferred to authorities responsible for land use & transport planning • Roles of 3 spheres should be established more clearly • Should be a one-off phasing in process to convert existing contracts to negotiated contracts on a gross basis in urban areas to accommodate IRPTNs • Bill should promote more flexibility in contracting • Review definition of contracting authority to include aspirant metros and/or designated municipalities • No restrictions if authority uses own funds • Deadlines for interim contracts to be converted • Integrate municipal bus services • Expand maximum period of OLs in the case of contracts • Integrate bus and minibus services into IRPTNs

  15. 7. Regulation • OL system is not plan managed: PA control over OLBs is weak • OLBs not functioning properly: backlogs with conversion of permits etc. • The regulatory system should reside with the same body that does planning • Need to streamline regulatory process • Uniform, national system and standards needed • Concurrencies by provinces for interprovincial services are a problem • Different system needed for tourist transport: initiative of DEAT, DoT and tourist industry

  16. 7. Regulation cont. • Establish national regulatory entity, responsible for: • Interprovincial services • Tourist transport services • Oversight, setting standards etc. • Dissolve 9 OLBs and set up a new regulatory entity in each province that is primarily administrative • OL applications must first go to planning authorities for a decision based on plans (ITPs) • Where municipalities do not have capacity, provinces should prepare ITPs on their behalf • Where a PA issues a contract, the regulatory entity must issue an OL accordingly • OLAS must be on line to eNATIS and to PAs etc.

  17. 7. Regulation cont. • Recommendations cont.: • Regulatory functions must be fully assigned to a regulatory entity in the municipal sphere in selected municipalities designated by the Minister, and to TAs. These municipalities must demonstrate willingness, capacity and readiness • A municipal regulatory entity should be able to give notice that it will not accept unsolicited applications if its ITP does not show a need • Degree of regulation will differ according to type of service • OLs should be linked to vehicles and routes (with certain exceptions in the case of routes)

  18. 7. Regulation cont. • Develop a system for OLs in electronic format • PT facilities should be publicly owned & managed • PAs need more powers over fare systems • OLs for routes that terminate within a specified distance of an int. border should be dealt with by the Cross-Border Agency • Passenger liability insurance issues need to be resolved • Taxi Recap should not be explicit in the Bill

  19. 8. Registration • Registration of associations and operators was a transitional measure for minibus taxis • Registration of other modes could be provided in provincial laws: process not started yet • Registrars’ functions should now be covered by NPTR, PREs and DPAs/APAs • RAS and OLAS systems should be combined • Bill should not require compulsory registration

  20. 9. Rail • Changes in the rail sector since the 1996 White Paper indicate that a change in the regulatory regime is required • National Rail Plan: is a priority corridor strategy • Rail planning done in national sphere and not always integrated with ITPs • Recommendations: • A new Rail Act should deal with the proposed Rail Economic Regulator, and infrastructure issues • NLTB should provide a formalised structure for consultation between rail & road PAs • Need tighter provisions to integrate the rail mode

  21. 10. Freight • Freight was deregulated in 1988 • Establish principle to move freight by appropriate mode • Include basic, strategic freight network in ITPs • Include route networks for dangerous goods and abnormal loads • Disallow freight movement in some areas, e.g. environmentally sensitive ones

  22. 11. Appeals • National Transport Appeal Tribunal (TAT) should be retained for all OL appeals • Provincial appeal bodies should no longer be provided for

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