Manukau and Papakura Courier

$4 park and rides in parking shake-up

- TODD NIALL

Charging up to $4 for park and ride spaces, and making kerbside parking the lowest priority use on many Auckland arterial routes are in a new strategy likely to be signed-off before October’s elections.

However, anxiety about public hostility and some lengthy processes ahead mean much change might not occur this decade, and not before 2030’s target date for cutting transport emissions by 64 per cent.

Signing off the Auckland Transport (AT) draft parking strategy might be one of the last big tasks for the agency and for councillor­s, before the October local body election, where transport is a big issue.

Charging for park and ride spaces is a small but sensitive part of the planned changes, shifting the facilities from free parking to a premium service.

Auckland Transport officials would not put a timeframe on when the change might occur, but one factor could be to wait for the replacemen­t of the AT Hop ticketing technology, which could be years away.

Across Auckland, the city will be divided into three tiers of priority for a reduction in on-street parking, starting with more central, higher density areas, and moving to lower density suburbs.

Andrew McGill, the head of Integrated Network and Planning, said the creation of more than 100 fully consulted, Comprehens­ive Parking Management Plans (CPMP) was a huge task that could take 10 years, and could change some of key arterial roads which make up 16 per cent of the city’s roading network.

Even on those arterial roads – the Strategic Transport Network (STN) – such as Great North Road and Great South Road, change would only occur when a new project came along, such as a bike or cycle lane.

Auckland Council has pledged to halve Auckland’s carbon emissions in 2030, just over eight years away, which will involve cutting transport emissions by 64 per cent.

The chair of the council’s planning committee Chris Darby, also the liaison councillor with AT, said he was personally more ambitious about meeting those targets, than the timing the parking plan suggested.

‘‘We are stepping through the politics of this and the consensus of this as well, and bringing Aucklander­s with us,’’ Darby told Stuff.

‘‘If we hear from Aucklander­s that they want much stronger traction on this particular part of reaching a dramatic reduction in emissions, then we will act in response to that,’’ he said.

Public consultati­on on the draft is set to open later this week, and run until May 1.

 ?? RENEE CLAYTON/STUFF ?? Charging up to $4 for park and ride spaces is part of a new strategy likely to be signed-off before October’s elections.
RENEE CLAYTON/STUFF Charging up to $4 for park and ride spaces is part of a new strategy likely to be signed-off before October’s elections.

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