The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Council forced to U-turn on High Street parklets

Controvers­ial street furniture to be removed after backlash from businesses

- JAMIE BUCHAN jabuchan@thecourier.co.uk

Council bosses have agreed to remove controvers­ial street furniture from Perth High Street and reopen it to traffic, after a fierce backlash from shopkeeper­s.

Wooden planters and benches, described by critics as “tattie boxes” and blamed for an 80% downturn in trade at nearby stores, were installed earlier this summer as part of a £1.1 million scheme to make the city safer after lockdown.

Perth and Kinross Council also pedestrian­ised a section between Scott Street and Methven Street and removed parking bays in an effort to help with social distancing.

The changes were made using emergency powers, with next to no consultati­on with business owners and residents.

Now, after six weeks of complaints, the local authority has bowed to pressure from furious locals and promised to remove the parklets and reintroduc­e traffic.

The decision was revealed in a tweet by a council officer involved city’s regenerati­on plan.

Redevelopm­ent projects officer Mike Morgan said in the now-deleted post: “Testing out ideas is not failure. Failure is not learning from your mistakes.”

He said the wooden features would be moved to businesses that said they could use them.

Traders were told of the revised plan at a virtual meeting with Perth and Kinross Council representa­tives on Wednesday evening.

A council spokesman said: “We have been engaging with businesses in Perth High Street about their concerns over some of the changes we introduced.

“In response to their concerns, and after a reassessme­nt of safety measures, we are reintroduc­ing vehicle access and some parking in Perth High Street, while introducin­g alternativ­e trafficcal­ming measures, with outdoor spaces for businesses which request this.

“Designs of these alteration­s will be shared with businesses before we make the changes, and once agreed, this work will be carried out as quickly as

“I am very relieved they have taken this decision. It has been very damaging for us. SHOPKEEPER IMRAN JAVID

with the we can while maintainin­g public safety.”

Imran Javid of Mobile Solutions, who led a petition against the changes, said: “I am very relieved they have taken this decision. It has been very damaging for us.

“We’ve been told these boxes will be taken away in the next week or two.

“We did not want them, but they put them right outside our shop. It just seemed like a real waste of public money.”

Tory MSP Murdo Fraser, who last week described the structures as “tattie boxes” and urged the council to rethink its plan, said: “I had been contacted by many traders and property owners in the High Street who were very concerned about the parklets plan.”

Perth City Centre SNP councillor Eric Drysdale said he was pleased that the revised plans had been “broadly welcomed” by businesses.

Local SNP MP Pete Wishart said: “I think any business who thinks they can make use of the parklets should feel free to request one.”

 ?? Picture: Steve MacDougall. ?? Street furniture, known as parklets, which encourages social distancing will be removed from Perth High Street.
Picture: Steve MacDougall. Street furniture, known as parklets, which encourages social distancing will be removed from Perth High Street.

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