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Severn Bridge Tolls Scrapped – But Why Shouldn’t People Pay To Go To Wales?

The tolls on the Severn Bridges are about to be scrapped, ending an 800 year old tradition – that entering or leaving Wales be something to be paid for. Entering, well, not so much as a thing of value, leaving definitely. However, there is a deeper point here. Providing those bridges costs money, that money must come from somewhere. Why shouldn’t it be those who wish to travel in and out of Wales which provide that cash? Why should the bill be dumped upon the rest of us?

[perfectpullquote align=”full” bordertop=”false” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””] Motorists are to be granted a welcome early Christmas present as journeys over the Severn bridges get set to go free for the first time in 52 years. Sunday is the final day that the current fee of £5.60 will be required for cars heading from England into South Wales and work is being done to remove toll booths from the original Severn Crossing and the Prince of Wales Bridge. Both are undergoing changes to create a route that means drivers will no longer have to stop to pay, just as thousands of people prepare to travel home for the festive period. [/perfectpullquote]

Those of us from the South West have always thought that the tolls were the wrong way around anyway. Paying to enter Wales? Surely the thing of value is being able to leave, which is where the toll should be levied. Leaving such regionalisms aside, there is a proper point here:

[perfectpullquote align=”full” bordertop=”false” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””] Sunday marks the final day of a centuries’ old tax of paying to cross between south Wales and south-west England before the toll is removed. Charges on both the M4 and M48 Severn bridges are being abolished – saving commuters as much as £1,400 a year. Passengers have had to pay to cross the Severn Estuary, with its treacherous tides, since Roman times and the first recorded ferry crossing was in 1775. “Monday will be a very historic day,” said historian Anne Rainsbury. “It’ll be the first time you can cross the Severn Estuary for free.” [/perfectpullquote]

History teaches us lessons and why not learn the one that crossing to or from Wales has costs which need to be paid for?

Sure, perhaps the mortgages associated with the bridges have been paid off. But there are still maintenance costs that someone has to pay. Who is that should pay those costs? Someone in Kent chips in their tax money for infrastructure they’ll never get within a 100 miles of? Or someone in Cardiff desperate for the civilisation of Bristol? That Bristol is considered civilisation telling us something of Wales.

A fair, just and righteous outcome would be that those who use the bridges should be the people who pay for them. It being users who are gaining the benefit so they should carry the costs. Plus, of course, a proper charge will mean fewer Welsh entering the South West of England, a result to be devoutly desired.

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Rhoda Klapp
Rhoda Klapp
5 years ago

Really? Why not the same principle for everything?

FrankH
FrankH
5 years ago

“Providing those bridges costs money, that money must come from somewhere. Why shouldn’t it be those who wish to travel in and out of Wales which provide that cash? Why should the bill be dumped upon the rest of us?” Providing the road that leads to your house costs money, that money must come from somewhere. Why shouldn’t it be those who wish to travel to your house which provide the cash? Why should the bill be dumped on the rest of us? I know the answer to my question and I suspect that you know the answer too. It’s… Read more »

timworstall
timworstall
5 years ago
Reply to  FrankH

“Providing the road that leads to your house costs money, that money must come from somewhere. Why shouldn’t it be those who wish to travel to your house which provide the cash? Why should the bill be dumped on the rest of us?”

Heard of the concept of private roads, private streets? Something which does work with a small enugh group living on it. Or an identifiable group using it. You know, like an identifiable group going across a bridge? Or how many European motorways are toll roads?

Rhoda Klapp
Rhoda Klapp
5 years ago
Reply to  timworstall

1. It’s just more tax.
2. They always promised they’d do it ‘when it’s paid for’.

Disclaimer: I don’t want to go to Wales.

Q46
Q46
5 years ago

Time to remove Vehicle Excise Duty and introduce road charging. The technology exists. Télépéage in France for example, is a little gizmo stuck to windscreen which is used on toll roads and registers when you enter and leave the toll zone and thus the charge for that zone. Also works in some car parks. You get a monthly bill and money deducted from bank account. This could easily be used for most roads, bridges, tunnels and would properly reflect an individual’s road use. Also avoids the VED dodgers and collection and admin costs. Of course it would require private enterprise… Read more »

Jonathan Harston
Jonathan Harston
5 years ago
Reply to  Q46

Pay-as-you-use is simpler to do by just putting the charge on the stuff you use in order to use – fuel.

Quentin Vole
Quentin Vole
5 years ago

Plus you pay more per mile if you drive a pickup (or a lorry) rather than a Fiat 500.

JH
JH
5 years ago
Reply to  Quentin Vole

You do more damage to the road if you drive a pickup too.

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