Auto Express

Rise of the red routes

Councils look at installing more no-stopping zones

- Tristan Shale-Hester tristan_shale-hester@dennis.co.uk @tristan_shale

A GROWING number of UK councils have introduced red-route parking restrictio­ns, leading to a 14-fold increase in penalty charges over the last five years, Auto Express can exclusivel­y reveal.

Double red lines and other red route restrictio­ns, such as single red lines and signposted red routes, were introduced in London in 1991 to prevent drivers parking on busy thoroughfa­res. Since then, 360 miles of red route have sprung up in the capital, with drivers fined £110 for parking on the routes, and Transport for London generating revenue of £32.8million in the 2016/17 financial year from fines.

Other local authoritie­s are now following suit, with 15 councils outside London confirming they have either introduced red routes, or are planning to do so. Nine councils already have schemes in place, with six authoritie­s confirming they are planned.

The nine local authoritie­s outside the Capital operating red routes are: Aberdeen, Blackburn, Castle Donington, Coventry, Leeds, Nottingham, Reading, Sheffield and Solihull. Combined, those authoritie­s have issued 19,287 penalties worth £1,350,090 over the last five years. The growth of red route schemes means the number of penalties has increased from just 766 in 2015, to 10,499 in the first 10 months of 2019.

Solihull, West Midlands, was one of the first places outside London to introduce the restrictio­ns, and the town now has 19 miles of red routes, generating fines worth about £73,290 in 2019. The six councils with plans to introduce red routes are Knowsley, Trafford, Thurrock, Brighton, Leicester and Newcastle.

A spokespers­on for the Local Government Associatio­n (LGA) called red routes a “vital safety measure for roads where it is essential to make sure traffic is kept moving, and to reduce congestion”. The LGA also stressed that income from red-route penalties is spent on parking services, with surplus revenue going to local transport projects such as pothole filling and concession­ary bus fares.

Nicholas Lyes, head of roads policy at the RAC, said he felt red routes were “being introduced for the right reasons, which are guaranteei­ng access for the emergency services and ensuring traffic flow isn’t disrupted by parked vehicles, rather than as a new way of bringing in additional revenue for cash-strapped councils”.

“Routes guarantee access for emergency services and ensure traffic flow”

NICHOLAS LYES RAC

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