
Audio By Carbonatix
The Students Representative Council (SRC) of the University of Ghana, Legon, has kicked against the decision of the university authorities to introduce user charges for all vehicles entering the university from February 1,2014.
The President of the SRC, Mr Eric Edem Agbana, told the Daily Graphic on Thursday that the proposed charges were too exorbitant and that it was also wrong for students to be included in the category of people who would be paying the full charges.
He indicated that the leadership of students would use all avenues at its disposal, including demonstrations, to fight the introduction of the user charges that were announced.
Mr Agbana, therefore, appealed to the government and the authorities of the university to revise the policy of duty charges to save students from any burden, adding that commercial drivers would definitely pass the user charges onto students.
User charges
The university has announced that with effect from February 1,2014, all vehicles entering the main campus and those using the road passing through the Staff Village would be required to pay a user charge. Private vehicles are to pay GH«ri per entry while taxis and other small commercial passenger vehicles would be required to pay GHC2 per entry. The university authorities indicated that large trucks delivering goods or passing through the campus would pay GH<t3 per entry.
They also said arrangements were being made for private road users to make one-time payments of GH<t400 per year; GHC250 for six months and GHC150 for three months. For the first two months, a manual collection will be used at the toll booths, while arrangements are being made for an electronic access control.
Exemption
The university authorities said only employees of the institutions and their dependants using vehicles registered with the university would be exempted from paying the charges.
Action illegal
Meanwhile, the Chairman of the Parliamentary Select Committee on Subsidiary Legislations, Mr O. B. Amoah, has described the action of the. university authorities as illegal, since the university had not received parliamentary approval to introduce such charges, reports Mabel Aku Baneseh.
He said Parliament had not received any bill seeking to introduce road tolls at the university and further indicated that the legislature was currently on recess and would resume on January 28, 2014.
“They can, therefore, not start on February l, 2014 as they intend to do,”
Mr Amoah added.
He further indicated that it was the responsibility of the Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning (MoFEP), which had the mandate to send rates, fees and charges to Parliament on behalf of government agencies to do so.
Latest Stories
-
From London to Accra: The UK-Ghana growth partnership in action
7 minutes -
Six dead, 34 rescued in multiple road crashes across Volta Region on Sunday
9 minutes -
NCPTA’s Deafening Silence: How parental failure, moral decay and social media excesses are turning Ghana’s schools into theatres of indiscipline
24 minutes -
Plastic pollution begins at design stage not gutters expert calls for producer responsibility
25 minutes -
Weak systems continue to hold back investment in Ghana’s plastic economy says CircularTech founder
30 minutes -
Wa East MP supports nurses, teachers with eye screening and glasses
34 minutes -
Keir Starmer says he’ll resign as Prime Minister, leader of Labour Party
34 minutes -
Child Rights International calls for ban on social media access for children under 17
34 minutes -
Kasapreko, Indigo Homes among early participants for Litina’s Made-in-Ghana World Cup Expo today
41 minutes -
McDan’s compassion fuels a new generation of entrepreneurs for Ghana and Africa
42 minutes -
Plastic pollution has spread throughout Odaw River, University of Ghana scientist warns
48 minutes -
CSOs tour reveals investing in Electrochem is an opportunity, not a risk
56 minutes -
EPA denies dismissing relatives of late Murtala Mohammed
59 minutes -
AngloGold Ashanti commissions GH¢2.8 million piggery centre to boost livelihoods in Obuasi
1 hour -
Today’s Front pages: Monday, June 22, 2026
1 hour