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Chiang Mai Public Van Drivers Petition Against GPS Speed Detectors

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CHIANG MAI – Representatives of Chiang Mai’s public transport van association on Monday converged at the provincial transport office, calling for sympathy over the requirement for public transport vans to be installed with speed-detecting GPS devices.

Association president Soros Phromrak, on behalf of several thousand members, submitted the petition to the office’s acting director, Pannee Phumpan.

The move comes after many of the association’s members have been hit with traffic tickets – resulting in them paying thousands of baht in fines per month – for exceeding the speed limit, while some have also had their vehicle-tax renewal rights suspended due to the offence, Soros said.

The group also called for the cancellation of the suspension of drivers’ tax-renewal rights in these circumstances

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Seven people, including Chinese tourists, have been injured following a crash between a van and a pickup truck on Chiang Mai-Chiang Rai Road (Highway 118) in January 2019

Soros explained that with many of the northern region’s roads mountainous, many uphill sections required the use of a higher speed of about 100-110km/h for about one or two minutes, in order to overtake other vehicles, and that such instances occurred several times a day during a driver’s journeys.

As the provincial transport office combined the times that a van accelerated beyond the speed limit, and issued tickets demanding that the driver pay a Bt1,000 penalty for each occasion, this resulted in some of them having to come up with at least Bt4,000 a month, the association chief explained.

Van drivers were continuing to shoulder the fine for driving beyond 90km/h, as they still had to violate the speed limit to get past slower-moving vehicles, he said.

“Please be sympathetic with public transport van drivers, as we’re also part of the tourism business providing services to tourists as well as the general public. With such a speed limit imposed, we have to carry this traffic-fine burden every month, meaning we might be [put ] out of business,” he said, adding that driving at less than 90km/h added to traveling time, and made the drivers exhausted and sleepy due to the longer period that they had to spend behind the wheel.

Pannee said she would table the association’s petition to the Land Transport Department with a view to discussing appropriate solutions at a later date.

By The Nation

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