Burton Mail

Drivers handed 22,000 parking tickets every day

-

DRIVERS are being handed an average of more than 22,000 tickets every day by private parking firms, according to new research.

Companies issued four million tickets to British motorists between April and September, analysis of Government data by the PA news agency revealed.

This was despite car use being more than a quarter below pre-coronaviru­s pandemic levels in the early part of the six-month period. If the rate of tickets continues, the total for the financial year will come close to the record high of 8.4 million set in 2019/20.

The figures show the number of times parking companies obtained records from the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency (DVLA) to chase car owners for alleged infringeme­nts in private car parks such as at shopping centres, leisure facilities and motorway service areas.

Each resultant ticket can cost drivers up to £100.

Steve Gooding, director of motoring research charity the RAC Foundation, said: “The sheer volume of tickets being issued is a clear sign that something in the current system isn’t working.

“We believe there are very few drivers who set out to intentiona­lly break the rules and consequent­ly get stuck with a bill for up to £100, particular­ly if all they were doing was dropping off some of the myriad parcel deliveries we’ve been ordering this year to an apartment block or industrial estate. Our advice to drivers is never ignore a parking charge notice. Read it carefully and, however strongly it’s worded, if it’s wrong, challenge it.”

Some 163 firms requested car owner records between April and September. The biggest buyer was Parkingeye with nearly 900,000 records.

Mr Gooding said: “If there is one sector of the economy which has been resilient during Covid then it is the private parking industry, which continues to attract new players and is on course to issue as many tickets to drivers this year as it did before the pandemic reached these shores.”

The DVLA charges private firms £2.50 per record. The agency says its charges are set to recover the cost of providing the informatio­n, and it does not make any money from the process.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom