Kejan Haynes
The Ministry of Transport and Civil Aviation has refused a Freedom of Information request that would have clearly explained which traffic offences now carry higher fines, despite growing public confusion over the recent changes.
The request asked the ministry to provide one clear, consolidated list showing each offence, the old fine, the new fine and the legal reference, so motorists would not have to search through multiple legal notices to understand what now applies.
Instead, the ministry replied yesterday that the information was already publicly available, relying on section 12(c) of the Freedom of Information Act.
“Pursuant to section 12(c) of the FOIA you are not entitled to request access to the documents/information detailed at Nos. 1, 2 and 3 in your application as these documents/information are already available for public inspection on the Digital Legislative Library and published in the Trinidad and Tobago Gazette accordingly,” the letter said.
While the amended fines are published in the Gazette, the legal notices list only item numbers and dollar amounts, without naming the offences themselves. This means members of the public must cross-reference multiple schedules and laws to figure out which offence attracts which fine.
The FOIA request was made after several legal notices published on December 25, 2025 increased fines across dozens of offences, with amounts such as $1,000 raised to $2,000 and $750 doubled to $1,500, without setting out the corresponding offences in the notices.
The ministry’s response did not say whether it has prepared, or plans to prepare, a simple public guide explaining the changes.
Concerns about poor communication were raised in the Senate yesterday by Opposition Senator Dr Amery Browne, who said the lack of clear information had fuelled suspicion and confusion.
“The other factor in all of this, unfortunately, the good minister didn't sufficiently address it in his piloting, is the public communication around this matter," Browne said.
"The government has not distinguished itself in this department. Maybe with one or two minor exceptions. But on this issue, it's an unmitigated disaster,” Browne continued. “And when that space, no one is speaking, the official voices are quiet, speculation rises, and then you have amateur hour, your little sideshows and conmen and different persons come in and try to inflate.”
“Increasing the age of used vehicles into Trinidad and Tobago while simultaneously ratcheting up all of these fines and simultaneously motivating and rewarding and driving police officers to go out there and issue these tickets, it appears to all and sundry that it’s a setup, a treasure hunt, where the treasure is being found in the pockets of the ordinary citizens of Trinidad and Tobago,” Browne said.
Transport and Civil Aviation Minister Eli Zakour has previously said the tougher fines were introduced after the Government gained access to enforcement data showing widespread indiscipline on the nation’s roads, which he said was worse than previously understood.
