RAF Trains Youth to Champion Road Safety in High-Risk Communities
This year, the RAF is leading the charge to keep our children safe on the roads. Today we are at Musengavhadzimu primary school raising awareness on the importance of road safety for learners . - Photo: Instagram/RAF

The Road Accident Fund (RAF) is empowering youth with opportunities to promote and raise awareness about safe road practices. A total of 173 out-of-school and unemployed youth across Limpopo, Gauteng, KwaZulu-Natal, and the Eastern Cape have been trained as part of the RAF’s Comprehensive Road Safety Programme. The youth assist school learners to: cross the roads in the mornings and afternoons; spray livestock with a reflective paint to increase visibility at night; cut vegetation that is growing on the sidewalks; and educate learners about road safety to save the lives of road users in their communities.

The Fund launched the programme in August 2023, focusing on communities living closer to roads with the highest road accident fatalities to reduce road crashes and influence safer road use. The initiative involved school competitions, edutainment, industrial theatre production, and youth dialogues aimed at increasing road safety awareness by school learners and empowering youth to become road safety ambassadors.

Winners of the school competition received prizes relative to each school’s needs. These included laptops for a computer lab, painting of a school, learner toilets, an invertor, a printer, speakers and a microphone, and literature books. Youth projects commenced in July 2024, providing training, support, and stipends to the young people who are participating in the selected road safety projects.

Road users can look out for the youth in: Nyavani, Thohoyandou, and Lebowakgomo in Limpopo; Soweto and Soshanguve in Gauteng; Umlazi and KwaDukuza in KwaZulu-Natal; and Mamfeneni, Colosa, and Umtata in the Eastern Cape. In these areas, school learners, elderly people and road users with special needs are assisted when crossing the road, cows, donkeys and horses are sprayed to increase their visibility at night, and vegetation making sidewalks unusable is trimmed to encourage safe use of the roads. Participating youth are also enrolled to an on-going Youth Driver Development Programme, where they are provided with free training and assisted to receive a learner and driving license as well as a Professional Driving Permit (PrDP).

“We are proud to have inspired a new generation of road safety ambassadors,” said RAF Chief Executive Officer Collins Letsoalo. “This programme demonstrates the power of collaboration and commitment to road safety. We are encouraged by the compliments that we receive from community members and parents who believe that their children are now in safe hands, among other positive feedback.”

The Comprehensive Road Safety Programme is implemented in  partnership  with  the  Safer  South Africa Foundation. The current leg of the youth aspect of the programme will run until the end of July 2024. Thereafter, the RAF will measure the impact of the programme in those high accident areas.

If you or your children are unfortunately involved in a motor vehicle accident, contact the RAF Contact Centre on 087 820 1 111 from Monday to Friday, 07h45 to 16h00. Claimants may also contact the RAF’s Contact Centre on the WhatsApp number 071 605 4707, via SMS on 44930, or by email on contactcentre@raf.co.za. In addition, the services are reachable through www.selfservice.raf.co.za or its offices countrywide, details of which are available on its website on www.raf.co.za.

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