Toronto Star

Soaring fines fail to curb illegal use of accessible spots

Ontario plans to tighten ID requiremen­ts for obtaining disabled parking permits

- GEOFFREY VENDEVILLE STAFF REPORTER

Heavier fines for parking in an accessible space don’t appear to have discourage­d the illegal use of disabled parking spots, the Star has learned.

Although parking enforcemen­t officers have slapped drivers with $45 million in tickets for parking illegally in a space for the disabled since 2005, they have written about the same number of tickets each year.

The fine more than tripled in 2008. Parking enforcemen­t doled out $1.5 million in tickets in 2007 and $4.5 million the next year but issued about 12,000 tickets each year.

This informatio­n was obtained with a freedom of informatio­n request.

The spike in fines followed a Star investigat­ion in 2007 revealing widespread abuse of disabled parking permits.

One case involved a travel agent who parked her Jaguar in Yorkville using a disabled parking permit before walking to a salon appointmen­t in high heels. She said she received the permit after a leg injury, but records showed it belonged to someone with a heart condition.

The investigat­ion also revealed that there were an unlikely number of centenaria­ns, 4,400, holding a disabled parking permit in Ontario.

“I can’t tell you how offensive it is to find that people are using this program for false or frivolous reasons.” SANDRA CARPENTER EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE CENTRE FOR INDEPENDEN­T LIVING IN TORONTO

That December, the Ontario government made it harder for scammers to get away with parking free by reducing the validity period for temporary disabled parking permits and weeding out thousands of “dead” permit holders.

“The parking permit program is something we — as people with disabiliti­es — fought hard for,” said Sandra Carpenter, executive director of the Centre for Independen­t Living in Toronto, in an email on Thursday.

“I can’t tell you how offensive it is to find that people are using this program for false or frivolous reasons.”

The most-ticketed spots were spread out across the city, but four were in Yorkville, where street parking is scarce.

The riskiest spot to park a car without a valid accessible parking permit was 410 College St., in Harbord Village, facing the Kensington Community School. That space alone was the site for $1.9 million in tickets since 2005.

Scott Wylie, a parking supervisor with the disabled liaison unit of the Toronto police, said drivers continue to abuse ac- cessible parking spots because they are convenient.

Police have seized 800 accessible parking permits for misuse this year, he noted. The fine for using someone else’s permit ranges from $300 to $5,000, for repeat offenders.

Someone can use a permit in any vehicle they are travelling in, regardless of whether they have a driver’s licence. It allows them to park in accessible parking spots and means they don’t have to feed the meter, among other exemptions.

Those who need an accessible parking permit must have a health-care profession­al such as a doctor, nurse practition­er or chiropract­or vouch for them.

Ontario is planning to tighten up ID requiremen­ts for an accessible parking permit, said Anne-Marie Flanagan, a spokeswoma­n for the Ministry of Government and Consumer Services.

She couldn’t be more specific because the policy change is still in the works, she said.

There are119,000 people with permits in the GTA and 687,000 in Ontario, according to the ministry. With files from David Bruser

 ?? BRIAN B. BETTENCOUR­T/TORONTO STAR ?? The accessible parking spot at 60 Murray St., in front of Mount Sinai Hospital, was the site for 2,464 in tickets and more than $1.1 million in fines over 10 years.
BRIAN B. BETTENCOUR­T/TORONTO STAR The accessible parking spot at 60 Murray St., in front of Mount Sinai Hospital, was the site for 2,464 in tickets and more than $1.1 million in fines over 10 years.

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