
People don't want to pay tolls but then they whinge about having to pay taxes. If there were tolls on the road you have the choice of using it or not and paying or not. Without tolls and with taxes funding roads you have no choice. It comes out of general revenue. I don't know that tolls on roads is the problem. The gridlock will occur because of increases in population and more cars on the road. The idea is to create a road system that alleviates gridlock. Does this alleviate gridlock or not? On Wed, Jul 2, 2014 at 10:13 AM, Andrew McGlashan < andrew.mcglashan@affinityvision.com.au> wrote:
On 1/07/2014 3:11 PM, Peter Ross wrote:
"Much of Royal Park's heritage-listed grounds have been spared the bulldozer after Mr Guy axed the Elliott Avenue interchange from the design. The road will instead be built with access to Flemington Road, "subject to further detailed design work", Mr Guy said.
Yes, and lane closures to push people to /have/ to pay tolls or suffer in gridlock if one must travel at any kind of peak period.
This is total BS .... not at all impressed.
A.
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