The Scotsman

Teachers could face £1 per day charge to park at their school

- By JOHN JEFFAY

Teachers could be charged £1 a day to park at school under plans being considered by a council.

The proposal has been condemned by teaching unions, which say it would make it even harder to recruit teachers.

Depute provost Colin Brown, a Forfar independen­t councillor, put forward the plan and has also suggested charging staff at Angus Council.

He says the proposal could bring in £320,000 a year in his town alone.

But a spokesman for teaching union EIS Scotland said: “Teachers arrive at school early and often leave late, frequently have to carry heavy books for preparatio­n and correction, plus public transport is often not a realistic option for travel to many schools.”

He added: “Teachers’ pay has been cut, in real terms, by more than 20 per cent over the past decade so any area introducin­g a parking charge might find it more difficult to attract staff to its schools.”

Mr Brown claims that by expanding the system throughout­angus,theadminis­tration would more than meet its commitment of securing an income of £700,000 a year from parking.

Car parking charges are due to return to Angus as a whole later this year after a gap of more than two decades, and councillor­s are being asked to finalise details of how the system might work.

Thousands have signed an online petition calling for a period of free on-street parking amid fears the move will damage town-centre trade.

Mr Brown said he would scrap on-street charges and replace the proposed £4-a-day charge for council car parks with a £1 a day levy and extend it to council premises.

He said: “If you take the public car parks in Forfar alone, the Greens, Myre and West Port, a charge of £1 a day would bring in £150,000 per annum.”

He said a £1 a day rate would bring in £68,250 a year at Angus House, £50,400 a year attheforfa­rcommunity­campus and £36,000 a year at the three Forfar primary schools – Langlands, Whitehills and Strathmore.

Mr Brown added: “I am aware this is quite controvers­ial and the proposal for parking charges at primary schools will be a hot potato, but I see no reason why these people should park free when those working in the shops in town have to pay perhaps £4 a day, which would work out at £100 a month.”

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