Macclesfield Express

Council defends its blue badge record ‘Everybody is treated the same’

- ETHAN DAVIES

RESIDENTS with non-visible disabiliti­es are treated the same as those with visible conditions when it comes to blue badge applicatio­ns, according to Cheshire East Council.

The council has defended its record on the parking permits after data from the BBC shows a disparity in approval ratings between those with non-visible and visible conditions.

Whereas 79 per cent of all blue badge applicatio­ns were accepted by the council since August 2019, when government rules on eligibilit­y were reformed to include non-visible disabiliti­es, only 59 per cent of submission­s were rubberstam­ped from the latter group - a stark 20 per cent difference.

“The council seeks to ensure that all people who qualify for a blue badge receive one and there is no evidence to suggest that applicants with hidden disabiliti­es are less favourably treated compared to applicants with visible disabiliti­es,” a Cheshire East Council spokesman said.

And added: “All applicatio­ns are rigorously examined and of 685 applicatio­ns from residents with hidden disabiliti­es, 404 were approved with 82 referred back for further supporting informatio­n. Since August 2019, the council received 8,446 new applicatio­ns for blue badges for all disabiliti­es, of which only 490 were refused.

“When considerin­g eligibilit­y, the council holistical­ly considers the impact that both physical and non-physical (hidden) disabiliti­es have upon an individual when walking during the course of a journey and the council must be satisfied that a badge would enable the applicant to undertake a journey that would not have otherwise been possible, or only possible with very considerab­le difficulty.”

A number of disability rights’ charities have called the national disparity ‘shocking’.

James Taylor, executive director strategy impact and social change at disability equality charity Scope, said: “This new data shows a shocking disparity between the allocation­s of Blue Badges to people with invisible and visible impairment­s. Our Helpline has also heard from disabled people with hidden impairment­s being denied a Blue Badge, for ‘not qualifying’.

“This research highlights the urgent need for staff training of the decision makers in the councils, so they can recognize and understand the range of hidden impairment. Councils need also to understand the devastatin­g impact their negative decision can have.”

However, the council spokespers­on refuted the idea that its staff are poorly-trained: “The council does make it clear that staff are available to help with applicatio­ns where an applicant is unable to apply online.

“The council firmly rejects any suggestion that applicants with hidden disabiliti­es are treated unfairly or that staff are not sufficient­ly trained.

“If any blue badge spaces are impacted by lockdown measures or tier restrictio­ns, introduced to maintain social distancing and aid safer pedestrian access to our town centre, the blue badge scheme allows for parking in any other parking bay both in our car parks or at the roadside. Blue badge holders are not compelled to park in a disabled bay only.

“Where the law allows, they can also park on double yellow lines with their time clock visible for up to three hours.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? East Cheshire Council said it seeks to ensure all people who qualify for a blue badge get one
East Cheshire Council said it seeks to ensure all people who qualify for a blue badge get one

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom