Mumbai, Oct 25 (PTI) The Maharashtra and Goa circle of
the postal department has expressed willingness to deliver
e-challans to traffic offenders by speed post.
The department has written a letter to the Mumbai
Traffic Police as well as the state government in this regard,
an official said.
The traffic police had been sending e-challans to
motorists for violating norms through SMSes. However, this
system is reportedly not working well as e-challans are not
getting delivered properly because of frequent change in
mobile phone numbers of offenders.
"Therefore, we have come forward and written to the
traffic police as well as the state government to let us
deliver e-challans to their (offenders') doorstep through
our speed-post service.
"The violators can deposit challan amount in the
nearest post office through e-payment mode of the department,"
said H C Agrawal, Chief Post Master General (CPMG) of the
Maharashtra and Goa Circle.
But this move (delivering e-challans through speed
post) will put additional financial burden on the police
department's budget. Therefore, the traffic police alone will
not be able to go ahead with the proposal," Agrawal said.
The official suggested that to overcome the financial
burden, the speed post cost could be recovered from offenders
themselves.
If e-challans are printed and delivered at violators
address with an acknowledgement receipt, it will ensure
offenders pay the fine and police get their rightful revenue,
he said, "this will also sending a message to motorists to
follow traffic rules."
With a view to digitise the entire process of
recovering fines from road rule violators, the Mumbai traffic
police, in January this year, launched e-challan system.
It set up CCTV cameras across the city to monitor
traffic violations. Whenever a motorist broke traffic rules,
his/her vehicles number was captured on CCTV cameras.
Later, an SMS was sent about fine to be paid after
obtaining the offender's mobile phone registered with the RTO.
According to figures, on an average 5,000 e-challans
are issued daily in Mumbai, mostly for over-speeding, signal
jumping, not wearing helmets, triple-riding on two wheelers,
talking on phone while driving, driving without seat belts and
overstepping at zebra crossings. PTI APM
RSY
.
Source : http://www.newindianexpress.com
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