RTN Newspaper – Costa del Sol 19 - 25 May 2017 Issue 003

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Issue 003

costa del sol edition rtnnewspaper.com 19th May-25th May

Cash incentive for road works ESTEPONA’S Council is offering companies €362,000 to remodel and improve the road layout on Avenida Juan Carlos I p8

Money traps

Cameras milk Costa drivers for €9.5 million

One woman’s stand against cancer A MOTHER and grandmother from Durham has produced 350 knitted knockers this year alone and now supplies them to North Africa p24

Spain leading commercial property investment Read more p26 The A7 motorway is a speeding fine hot-spot

George Benson back in Marbella The Puente Romano Tennis Club will play host to legendary ten-time Grammy winner and NEA Jazz Master, George Benson on Friday July 21 p39

By Jimmy Grayling NEW figures show that the Costa del Sol is a trouble spot for speeding drivers, with almost €10 million worth of fines issued last year. That places Malaga second in the national provincial ranking for 2016, being surpassed only by Madrid. A total of €9,530,000 in fines was generated by traffic cameras and radars across the province compared with €11 million in the Spanish capital. Malaga thus exceeded the total fines issued in several autonomous regions, including the Canary Islands, Balearic Islands and Navarra, while the entire Valencian Community raised just €10 million. The province also contains three of the busiest traffic cameras in the country, according to data

from the Directorate General of Traffic (DGT). These are located on the A-7 motorway at kilometres 246 (Cerrado de Calderon) and 256 (Rincon de la Victoria), plus kilometre 10 of the MA-20 Malaga bypass, a former section of the Autovia del Mediterraneo coastal motorway. Generating €1.52 million in 2016, the latter, situated in the ‘false’ Carlos Haya tunnel, provided the most sanctions, with the trio together issuing €3.6 million worth of tickets. Controversially, however, little to none of the cash is reinvested in Malaga’s ailing road network while the state’s profit margin continues to surge. Socialist councillor and secretary general of the PSOE opposition party in Malaga Miguel Angel Heredia had some strong words on the issue as he

told media: “It appears that Malaga has three radars in the DGT Top 20. “How can we be the second province where the state collects the most money from traffic infringements if we don’t have the second-greatest volume of traffic in the country? “Every year the government collects more traffic fines – in 2013 it was €5.7 million, in 2014 it grew to €8.7 million and by 2016 it has increased to €9.6 million. “The cameras are not placed where the greatest number of accidents occur, and are just designed to hunt drivers. “We once again request that the money collected in our province is reinvested to improve road safety and signage.”


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