Daily Dispatch

Airports need to improve parking signage

- Wendy Knowler

Not only can you no longer enter an airport when seeing off family or friends, but when dropping someone off you’ll be forced to negotiate a multistore­y parking garage and pay hefty parking fees, too.

I’d been planning to get the Gautrain from Sandton to Johannesbu­rg’s OR Tambo Internatio­nal Airport on Wednesday, but accepted the kind offer of a lift instead.

My driver headed for the ramp to the usual drop-off area, but found a dead end and several other motorists who’d made the same mistake, all looking confused and stressed.

There were no signs directing us to the new drop-off area, so we had to flag down an official and ask. Parking on level 3, he said.

At this point my driver looked as if she was regretting her lift offer. Now the poor woman had get up to level 3, find a parking and schlep off to the pay machine instead of the prelockdow­n quick drop-and-go.

I told her there had to be grace period and urged her to drop me and then go straight to the exit boom and put her card in. She looked doubtful, but it worked. Up went the boom and she was off. How many people have paid unnecessar­y parking fees when dropping people? My guess is a lot.

And how could anyone know how long the drop off times are? Well, buried in Acsa ’ s website, under ORT Airport is something about free minutes parking. But that key informatio­n should be in a large, unmissable banner on the Acsa website. And in signs at the airport parking garage, especially at the pay point. Unless of course, it doesn’t suit you to tell people that, because the parking revenue is rather nice.

I asked these and other questions of Acsa management at “Africa’s biggest and busiest airport” after my first-hand experience. Here’s what airport spokespers­on Samukelo Khambule told me, in a nutshell:

● Parking level 2 of Parkade 2 South is the preferred pickup zone, though pickups may also be from levels 3 and 4. Levels 3 and 4 should be used for dropoffs and general parking;

● We are sorry for the inconvenie­nce passengers have experience­d in the parkade. We will therefore implement the following changes within the next few days;

● The free parking grace period on levels 2, 3 and 4 in Parkade 2 South will be increased from 20 to 30 minutes;

● The signage installed was initially deemed to be sufficient. In practice it is not. It will be improved as soon as possible;

● More parkade levels will be opened with demand;

● The parking tariffs will be republishe­d on our website and social media channels; and

● Level 2 of Parkade 2 South will remain a premium zone. The first 30 minutes are now free; the fee for the second 30 minutes will be R30 and after, the fee is R60 per hour or parthour. So essentiall­y you have half an hour from the time you pull that ticket out of the machine at the entrance boom, to the time you insert it at the exit boom, if you want your dropoff and goodbyes to be free.

For travellers, if you park on level 2 for 24 hours you will pay a whopping R1,440.

“Level 2 is not intended for stops of more than a few minutes,” Khambule said. The higher tariff helps to regulate traffic moving through that level. More vehicles parked on level 2 means that there is less room for other vehicles needing to pick up passengers.”

If you park on levels 3 and 4 for 24 hours you will pay normal parkade rates of R190. So why are the usual drop-off and pickup zones now no-go areas, and how does this help to stem spreading Covid-19?

“The old pickup and drop-off area is now only for emergency vehicles, SAPS and Ekurhuleni metro police department vehicles,” Khambule said.

“The upper and lower roadways have long been the source of security concerns and challenges. It has always been the intention to restrict use of the upper and lower roadways to emergency vehicles, SAPS and Ekurhuleni metro police department vehicles.”

As for how the new parking arrangemen­ts have been communicat­ed to consumers, Khambule said Acsa had issued news releases, done radio and TV interviews, and posted on Twitter and Facebook and on the ACSA website.

“Tariff boards on each level do show the rates that apply on that level,” he said.

Yes, but nothing about the grace period has been displayed, which applies to all those who are now just wanting to drop people off for a few minutes. Hence many drop-off drivers are currently parking for the sole purpose of (unnecessar­ily) paying for their parking. That doesn’t gel with the need to keep cars moving swiftly through that area at all.

At Durban’s King Shaka Airport, for example, the drop-off zone is a no-go area and dropoffs can only be done at the airport’s’ which, I m multistore­y told, is 10 minutes. parkade, with its pricey fees — unless you know about the grace period,

The airport’s cheaper shaded parking area is now off limits, forcing travellers to park in the multi-storey parkade. Why?

“Because of the need to reduce interactio­ns,” said the airport’s corporate affairs manager Colin Naidoo. “We don’t want people to use golf carts.”

Most people used to get to the terminal on foot, in lovely open air. Just saying.

GET IN TOUCH: E-mail consumer@knowler.co.za or on Twitter @wendyknowl­er.

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