

Siyabona Bonakala - "See and Be Seen"
The process of re-issuing driver’s licences to some 700 000
citizens of the province has brought to the fore some interesting areas of
concern. Failure rates of the eye tests offered at testing stations beg the
question: how many people on our roads cannot see clearly, and how does this
impact on the ability of our citizens to drive safely – especially at night?
Another question is whether the public transport drivers, especially taxi
drivers, are themselves roadworthy?
Though optometry services and glasses supply is just becoming
available in some public hospitals of KwaZulu-Natal, the urgency of the question
of vision and road safety compels the Department to take a serious and
pro-active stance.
SIYABONA BONAKALA has been launched to ensure that all
those who drive on our roads, can see clearly. Those who fall under the auspices
of the transport department: bus services, taxi services, and ultimately all
those who drive government vehicles, must be screened by a professional, and
given a pair of affordable spectacles if they need them.
The debate of whether drivers can see clearly must always be
married with a programme that will assist those who can’t. No government
wishes to enforce legislation with the concurrent fall-out of making criminals
of those who simply cannot afford the solution. In the case of vision and vision
screening – for which there are bound to be failures - legislation allows for
persons who have failed the eye test to approach an optometrist. This person
will then be supplied with glasses.
However, the sad fact of this country is that it is precisely
those who fail, who just don’t have glasses simply because they cannot afford
them. The department therefore undertakes, through a series of strategic
alliances, to ensure that optometrists are made available, and glasses are made
affordable to all those who fall under our umbrella. People also need to be
screened for those diseases that impact on vision: our chronic diseases of
diabetes, hypertension and glaucoma. Any of these can rob a person of their
sight – and we must ensure that those who rely on their sight to earn a living
need not live in fear of losing their sight if this is preventable.
The SIYABONA BONAKALA campaign has initially focused
on ensuring that the eye screening procedures employed in our traffic
directorates across the province are entirely uniform. This is to ensure that
whatever screening takes place is of the same standard as that offered currently
to those who have their eyes screened in private practices. This standardization
also allows for the statistical evaluation of the extent to which poor vision
currently impacts on the ability of our citizens to drive safely. This long-term
strategy will supplement the department’s commitment to addressing this issue
as a matter of urgency.
‘We are also committed to joining hands with the private
sector. The third-biggest block of road users are those employed as long-haul
truck drivers. If business can ensure that their drivers have been screened and
offered affordable spectacles, they will adopt a significant role in stemming
the carnage on our roads,’ says MEC Ndebele.
"The department is confident that in pro-actively addressing the issue
of whether people can see, and be seen, we will move forward significantly in
addressing previously unidentified areas of concern," concluded Ndebele.
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