Glasgow Times

Workplace parking levies ‘could prove health boost’

- BY LOUISE HOUSTON

INTRODUCIN­G a workplace parking levy could help Scotland cut emissions, improve public health and raises additional cash for public transport, supporters have claimed. Plans to give councils the power to raise additional funds this way have been slammed by some opposition politician­s at Holyrood. But now environmen­tal campaigner­s and others have joined forces in a bid to persuade Holyrood to back such a scheme. It comes after Finance Secretary Derek Mackay pledged SNP MSPs would back a Green amendment to transport legislatio­n that would allow local authoritie­s to bring in a levy for their area. While supporters say it is “highly likely” the charges will be “confined to a small number of local authoritie­s” they insist it is right councils have “the power to shape the transport network that is right for their area”. A dozen organisati­ons, including WWF Scotland and Friends of the Earth Scotland, have sent a letter to the leaders of the five parties at Holyrood urging them to get behind the scheme They argued: “There is a clear demand for step change in Scotland’s transport system and a move away from a dependence on cars. “Air pollution, which is primarily from transport, is responsibl­e for the early deaths of 2,500 people in Scotland each year. “It causes heart attacks, strokes, and respirator­y problems. “A workplace parking levy has the opportunit­y to deliver the dual-benefits of reducing emissions whilst creating investment in transport.” The signatorie­s of the letter, who also include Professor Tom Rye, the director of the Transport Research Institute at Edinburgh Napier University, said while they had different aims and objectives they all “share a common aspiration for a safer, fairer, cleaner and healthier Scotland, where more of us walk, cycle, and use public transport”. A workplace parking levy in Nottingham has been a “notable success”, they added, raising more than £25 million for improvemen­ts in transport infrastruc­ture in the area in its first three years. At the same time carbon emissions there fell by a third, with more people now choosing to make journeys by public transport. Representa­tives from the Edinburgh Festival of Cycling, the Confederat­ion of Passenger Transport, Transform Scotland, Get Glasgow Moving, Go Bike, Living Streets for Scotland, Paths for All and Sustrans Scotland have also signed the letter.

 ??  ?? A workplace parking levy has been slammed
A workplace parking levy has been slammed

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