Skip to main content

Kapsch to deliver customer service system in Georgia

Kapsch TrafficCom’s Customer Service System (CSS) will be used by the Georgia State Road and Tollway Authority (SRTA) to process electronic toll and parking transactions. The modular product is also intended to provide an interoperability platform for future multi-modal service invoicing. The back-office solution will be deployed with the intention of allowing SRTA to offer drivers a seamless experience by processing transactions for all of its toll facilities as well as support partner facilities within
April 30, 2018 Read time: 2 mins

4984 Kapsch TrafficCom’s Customer Service System (CSS) will be used by the Georgia State Road and Tollway Authority (SRTA) to process electronic toll and parking transactions. The modular product is also intended to provide an interoperability platform for future multi-modal service invoicing.

The back-office solution will be deployed with the intention of allowing SRTA to offer drivers a seamless experience by processing transactions for all of its toll facilities as well as support partner facilities within a single user account.

Kapsch will carry out the project at its Duluth office which will run until June 2025. Five subsequent one-year renewal options are also available to SRTA.

Chris Tomlinson, executive director of SRTA, said: “The Kapsch CSS will make it easier for customers to manage their accounts and broaden the ways and places where customers can use their Peach Pass account.”

Peach Pass is an electronic toll collection system used in Georgia, designed to be fully interoperable with Florida’s SunPass and E-Pass systems along with North Carolina’s Quick Pass.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Mexico and the US slow to adopt ETC interoperability
    April 12, 2013
    Splinteroperability is a word devised by Travis P. Dunn and Victor J. Michelet C. to encapsulate the lack of progress towards ETC harmonisation in the US and Mexico. Five thousand miles of tolled roads and bridges. Widespread implementation of electronic toll collection (ETC) systems. One dominant interoperable ETC service provider covering just over half the nation’s toll facilities. Numerous other ETC service providers offering alternative visions of interoperability. Years of customer requests for better
  • Fast and efficient barrier-free electronic toll collection
    May 21, 2012
    Canada’s 407 tolled highway allows non-stop travel and a fast and efficient way of paying for it. Ontario’s 407 ETR highway features one of the most advanced barrier-free and all- electronic toll collection systems in the world. The company that operates the road launched the latest phase of its strategy to provide end-to-end automation in summer 2011. A self-service website is now available, allowing users to view and pay charges online using technology supplied by the international market leaders in e-bil
  • Kapsch New York AET system opens
    November 24, 2020
    Cash not now accepted anywhere on 570-mile New York State Thruway Authority network
  • Anywhere card delivers prepaid contactless ticketing
    January 25, 2012
    David Crawford investigates a far reaching initiative in integrated travel. The Port Authority Transit Corporation (PATCO), an operator of high speed commuter rail in the north eastern US, is not one of the world's best known transit providers. Its 13 stations along a single east-west route (three of them interchanges with other regional commuter lines) handle 40,000 passengers a day, travelling to and from Philadelphia, the US' fifth most populous city.