/ 18 April 2007

Mixed bag for new transport system

At least 600 000 people had accessed services on the upgraded transport information system by 1pm on Wednesday, the Department of Transport said.

”That is phenomenal,” the department’s safety promotions manager, Ntau Letebele, said.

Letebele acknowledged that the system was still shaky in some areas like Johannesburg and Pretoria.

”Our technicians are working on it … to make the system stable.”

The best performing stations were Windsor Park in Durban with 4 259 transactions, Tshwane Central RA with 3 793 and Johannesburg with 3 291.

Vehicle-testing stations, vehicle-registering authorities and driver’s licence-testing centres were closed last week for the upgrading of the old National Transport Information System (NaTIS) to the new eNaTIS system.

All testing stations were supposed to have been operating by Monday, but were only opened on Tuesday in Johannesburg.

Although the stations were opened, the system was still shaky on Wednesday in Johannesburg and Pretoria.

”The system is slower than usual and there are possibilities of problems. We ask the public to please bear with us,” said Johannesburg metro police spokesperson Chief Superintendent Wayne Minnaar.

He said all vehicle registrations, licensing, testing and licence renewals would go ahead.

In Pretoria, the new system kept shutting down as it did on Tuesday, Superintendent Alta Fourie said.

”We keep explaining to the public that the system is down. We can’t say when will it be up, but they can wait.”

Fourie said drive-through centres, where motorists renewed their licences, would remain closed the whole week. — Sapa