 
     All-electronic tolling boosts traffic flow but introduces the tricky question of enforcement. Workable solutions are starting to emerge.      
     
Enforcement is an essential part of tolling and one of the most important ways for a mobility agency to keep faith with its investors, its community stakeholders and the vast majority of its users. It can also be one of the most unpopular and contentious things a toll authority has to undertake.
     
If tolling is about paying for the roads, then everyone has to pay their bill and sometimes agencies must go all-out to collect overdue accounts. A driver who tries to avoid this civic duty is labelled a violator (or, worse, a scofflaw) and can face penalties ranging from a suspended driver’s licence to court action and fines.
     
Violation enforcement wasn’t a big issue when tolls were paid with cash or tickets at a booth. But all-electronic tolling is becoming the industry standard and while this allows drivers to pass at highway speeds (saving time and fuel and cutting pollution), these systems rely on customers to do the right thing: pay their bills. And tolling agencies have to track down the ones who don’t.
     
“Nobody’s out to be vindictive,” explains Patrick Jones, executive director and CEO of the Washington, DC-based International Bridge, Tunnel and Turnpike Association (
     
Agencies are stepping up their efforts to collect unpaid tolls and fines, and in many US states repeat offenders face suspension of their driver’s licences.
     
Big money
According to one recent estimate, typically between 1.5 to 2% of tolls across the US go unpaid. That seemingly innocent average adds up to big money. Toll violations cost the 
 
PTC warned 10,611 motorists with overdue toll violations and invoices that new regulations meant they risked having their motor-vehicle registrations suspended if they didn’t settle their account. The authority also unveiled a partial amnesty to encourage its top toll scofflaws to pay before the law was enacted in August 2017 and collected $300,000 from violators in the week before the amnesty period ended. With the amnesty now expired, motorists with six or more outstanding PTC toll invoices or violations (or unpaid tolls and fees totalling $500 or more) are at risk of suspension.
In  bordering New Jersey, a driver from Fort Lee who racked up $108,000 on  more than 1,500 toll violations and fees was charged with theft (and his  classy black Porsche impounded) and another driver caught in Monmouth  County owed $94,000 in tolls and fines. New Jersey also has a contender  for the biggest violator, a trucking company that accumulated a bill  that topped $1 million as its vehicle fleet was using a delinquent  E-ZPass account more than 100 times per day. 
     
The  sheer number of toll violators in many jurisdictions is simply  monumental — 131,000 in Maryland who were at risk of losing their  vehicle registrations in 2014.
     
Tolling  agencies frequently show flexibility in helping people adapt to  accumulated tolls and fines by communicating clearly with drivers and in  some circumstances, capping penalties. Ultimately, it’s a balancing act  because in the end, tolling is a matter of fairness for all.
     
Port  Authority police spokesperson Joe Pentangelo says: “Toll evasion is  costly for everyone, especially law-abiding drivers. Getting toll cheats  is just one of the many things our officers do, but it’s an important  task. It’s something we take very seriously.”
     
As  they should, Jones stresses. Toll rates are calculated to cover the  cost of operating a highway, keeping drivers safe, and delivering the  high levels of maintenance and upkeep that paying drivers expect.
“If  one driver doesn’t pay, the cost falls on their neighbour,” he   says,  “because someone has to cover the cost. Without the toll,   everyone would  be paying a higher cost in the form of slower trips,   heavier congestion  and rougher roads that increase maintenance bills.”
     
Those    costs may sound abstract, but the American Society of Civil  Engineers’   2017 infrastructure report card concludes that it costs the  average   driver in, for example, Wisconsin, an additional $637 per  year because   the roads are in need of repair and in Connecticut the  bill adds up to   $864. 
     
Con tricks
Earlier this year, the Associated Press published some of the wheezes drivers use to avoid paying tolls. 
     
One   truck driver allegedly used a fishing line to flip his licence plate,   making it unreadable as he passed through the video tolling system  while  a motorcyclist was accused of using a toggle switch which  activated the  licence plate retraction device to make his vehicle  impossible to  identify.
     
Tolling  agencies  have caught drivers using life-sized dummies to qualify to   usehigh-occupancy vehicle (HOV) or high-occupancy toll (HOT) lanes at no   cost. In Florida, some drivers are even risking their (and others’)   lives by driving the wrong way on busy highways to avoid passing through   the toll lanes at the plazas. Some individuals are clearly spending   hundreds of dollars and risking collisions, fines and legal costs to   save a couple of bucks on their daily toll. Jones admits that some IBTTA   members get annoyed.
     
“These   drivers want to get where they’re going, on time and at the least   possible cost — like everyone else on the road,” he says. “They don’t   realise that it can cost a billion dollars or more to build the lane or   the roadway that they’re trying to take for granted. There’s nothing   hip, edgy, or ironic about evading tolls. It’s just theft, pure and   simple.”
     
The North Texas   Tollway Authority (
     
At   the time, the agency had an 8% violation rate and senior management  had  identified the need to streamline its collections process for  unpaid  tolls. Equally important was ensuring equitable payment by all  toll road  drivers and converting violators into TollTag customers.
     
The   programme included vehicle registration blocks and banning habitual   violators from the region’s toll roads until overdue amounts are paid.   The initial phase began with a 90-day grace period, during which the   agency collected millions of dollars in unpaid tolls and boosted   enforcement awareness. Following the amnesty period, NTTA rolled out the   full TER Program, and in 2016 it collected $47 million in unpaid  tolls.  It also received $15.8 million in TollTag transactions by  requiring  habitual violators to open TollTag accounts and keep them in  good  standing as part of their payment plan agreements.
     
Suggestions for toll agencies:
- Focus on equity. The vast majority of users pay consistently, and it is fair to expect payment from all drivers.
- Provide clear and consistent communications about the consequences for habitual violators, while ensuring they receive due process.
- Introduce additional payment options and plans to make it easier for drivers to pay for what they use. Consider requiring those on payment plans to register for electronic tags and to keep their accounts in good standing.
- Add value to all-electronic tags to attract and retain transponder customers.
 
Cross-border enforcement
There’s   an added layer of complexity when tolling agencies have to enforce   collections across state, provincial or international borders. Several   US states are considering reciprocal agreements to help each other catch   violators and collect what’s owed.
     
In   2011, the states of Massachusetts, Maine and New Hampshire finalised a   deal to ‘crack down on their own residents who frequently blow off  tolls  in the other states’, the Pew Charitable Trusts reported in 2014.  While  this yielded only modest amounts of money, it was regarded as a  ‘model  for interstate cooperation’ as all-electronic tolling becomes  the norm. 
     
“It’s  really  an issue of fairness,” says Chris Waszczuk, administrator of the  New  Hampshire Bureau of Turnpikes. “If we don’t have the capability to   collect from the out-of-staters, it is going to be a huge problem.”
     
There   is, however, still more ground to cover. Earlier this year, the   
     
And   Maine recently decided to embrace a mix of all-electronic and cash   tolling systems, rather than trying to track down toll violators across   an international border.
     
In   the end, there’s no silver bullet or one-size-fits-all solution. But   tolling agencies are working hard to collect the money that violators   owe, and they’re sharing lessons learned as they figure out how to get   the job done. 
 
     
         
         
        



