The Scotsman

City leader: Parking tax ‘should be paid for by employees’

●Business subsidy of proposed workplace levy would dilute impact

- By SCOTT MACNAB and IAN SWANSON

Motorists face paying up to £10 a week to park at work in Scotland’s capital after finance secretary Derek Mackay caved in to Green Party demands for a “parking tax”.

A levy of around £400 a year per space is expected to be imposed on employers after Mr Mackay’s budget was passed last week thanks to a deal struck between the Snp-run administra­tion and the Greens.

Businesses will be able to decide whether they pay the bill or pass it on to their employees but Edinburgh City Council leader Adam Mcvey said it would be a “lost opportunit­y” if companies and organisati­ons absorbed the cost.

Mr Mackay was questioned on the tax – which has already been met with a backlash from motoring organisati­ons and business leaders – when he appeared before MSPS on Holy rood’ s finance committee yesterday. The finance secretary accused his opponents of “scaremonge­ring” but admitted he has not carried out any economic analysis of the plan’s likely impact. He also conceded there was a case for “further exemptions” to workers other than just NHS staff.

Labour MSP Neil Bibby asked whether any government research had been carried out on the proposed workplace parking levy (WPL).

Mr Mackay said: “I haven’t undertaken any individual economic analysis. This is about empowermen­t of local government. It was a necessary budget concession because if there was no budget the consequenc­es were that a £42.5 billion budget for Scotland would have gone down.”

NHS workers will be exempt and teaching unions are calling for schools to be excluded.

Mr Mackay was asked if police, firefighte­rs, apprentice­s, low income and rural workers could be similarly

exempt. He said: “I do happen to think there’s case for further exemptions and I do happen to think that local authoritie­s should look very carefully at local circumstan­ces before taking this forward.”

Conservati­ve MSP Alexander Burnett said he was aware of widespread concerns about the parking tax among rural teachers and college students.

The finance secretary said the powers already exist in “Tory-run England” and that the plans in Scotland are at an early stage. They will be taken forward by Holyrood’s rural affairs and connectivi­ty committee as part of the Transport Bill and a consultati­on will be carried out by MSPS, he added.

Mrmackaysa­id:“thisisatan early stage. If Mr Burnett wishes maybe he should advise some of the correspond­ents that he’s had on this matter of that, rather than scaremonge­r about who may or may not be paying this levy.”

He added: “Members shouldn’t scaremonge­r on this, should work with parliament in a constructi­ve and collaborat­ive fashion to get a scheme that’s right for the country and right for local authoritie­s and right for local people.”

He said he held talks with business organisati­ons to discuss the budget and that concerns over the workplace levy were “as nothing” compared with fears over the “financial catastroph­e” of Brexit.

Mr Burnett said the parking levy has only been implemente­d once in England – in Nottingham – and that this was in conjunctio­n with a tram scheme.

But Edinburgh has been pressing for a workplace parking levy for some time and Mr

Mcvey said he hopes that if the city introduced a charge it will lead to fewer people driving to work, less congestion and pollution and more space for people to walk and cycle.

Mr Mcvey said: “The nature of this as a discretion­ary tax means the onus would be on the local councils that want to implement the policy to consult on things like exemptions, how it’s applied and the charging level. The detail is not going to be set nationally, it will be set locally.”

He said although there had

DEREK MACKAY Finance secretary

been discussion of a parking levy, the council had not explored the details of how it should operate.

But he suggested a levy was likely to apply to the whole city rather than just the centre.

“On the low emission zone, we are looking to be quite bold and cover as much of the city as we can – that gives us a platform to jump from. I don’t imagine our thinking on a WPL would be very different.”

Mr Mcvey said he was open to looking at the options, adding: “We need to understand

all the issues at play and respond to them. I think there will be exemptions to make it make sense.

“Hospitals are obvious, but there are others – teachers have already been mentioned. I think we need to look at it.”

He added: “Businesses in the city could see it as a charge on a parking space or a way to engage with their workforce to encourage active travel and public transport as a way of getting in”.

“I haven’t undertaken any individual economic analysis. It was a necessary budget concession”

 ??  ?? 0 Finance secretary Derek Mackay admitted to MSPS that he had been forced to accept the car parking tax to get his budget passed
0 Finance secretary Derek Mackay admitted to MSPS that he had been forced to accept the car parking tax to get his budget passed

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom