Tolls on Road Bridgs end
The SNP does something:
Tolls removed from Scots bridges
BBC News – Feb 11, 2008
Tolls have been officially abolished on the Forth and Tay road bridges after years of campaigning by drivers.
The final fee-paying motorists crossed the bridges at midnight before the charges, of £1 on the Forth Bridge and 80p on the Tay Bridge, were lifted.
Scrapping of the tolls was a major manifesto commitment by the SNP during the 2007 Scottish elections.
Legislation to remove the fee was given royal assent last month. It means Scotland now has no chargeable roads.
Funding for both bridges will now be provided entirely by the Scottish Government.
Supermarket worker Lorraine Cleverley was the first driver to cross the Forth Road Bridge after the tolls were abolished.
She said: “The guy came up and said I was the first person to cross. I thought ‘wow, it makes it well worth going into work today’.”
A few minutes before midnight, student Ashley Gregor was the last driver to pay on the Tay bridge.
She said: “It’s brilliant because sometimes I can pay two or three times a day just going back and forward to university, so I think it’s great”.
Gordon Struthers was the first motorist to drive without paying on the Tay bridge.
He said: “It’s the end of an era really. I’ve been paying 80p to go across the bridge for 10 years now, two or three times a day, so it feels amazing to get across for free.”
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