Bath Chronicle

Sharp rise in parking cost sparks anger

- John Wimperis john.wimperis@reachplc.com

Adam Leon, right

Bath locals have reacted with anger after the cost of an any day parking permit rocketed from £135 a month to £338 overnight.

Some ticket holders were not told of the increase and only found out when £200 more than usual was taken from their bank accounts.

Bath and North East Somerset Council is refunding the difference to people who had this money taken before the changes were announced but they will still be expected to pay the increased charges in the future.

It will now cost £4,056 a year for the season ticket, which allows someone to park at Charlotte Street car park every day of the week. The previous annual cost was £1,633 - an increase of around 150 per cent.

The new price reflects a 35 per cent discount on how much it would cost to park at Charlotte Street all day every day. Councillor­s have said there has not been a significan­t increase for some time but families and business owners have reacted with anger.

Adam Leon lives in central Bath and relies on his season ticket to park his family car. He said: “The problem is, I don’t have any choice as I live in Bath and I have a family. I can’t ask my 11-year-old child to ride her bike every day up Lansdown hill.”

He added: “I would challenge any council member to raise a family in Bath without a car.”

Because Mr Leon’s house was converted after 2006, council rules mean he is not entitled to a resident’s parking permit.

He said: “I have no choice but to use the Charlotte Street car park. When I bought this property, I knew that.”

But he added: “I never expected they would put the price up by [150 per cent] in one fell swoop.”

He said that he accepted needing to pay £110 a month to park at Charlotte Street when be bought his house in 2016, and that the increase to £135 in 2018 was a “proportion­ate increase.”

But he now worries that the overnight increase is so significan­t that it could impact the value of his house.

The parking charges are also affecting businesses in Bath. Applicatio­ns for business parking permits are currently closed, meaning that some local business owners also depend on parking at Charlotte Street.

Part-owner of Quiet Street Antiques Mike Barlow said that his business, which has stood on the central Bath street for 42 years, was struggling with rising energy costs and business rates.

He commutes from near Bitton in an electric car and has a season ticket for Charlotte Street. He said: “That’s another two and a half thousand we’ve got to find.”

He added that the antique shop had recently spent money on a new delivery van to comply with the clean air zone. Mr Barlow and his business partner are looking at other ways of getting to Bath to avoid having to pay the increased season ticket cost. But they are also considerin­g reducing opening hours to five days a week.

He said: “There’s just empty shops everywhere, so the net income to the council - at the end of putting all of these people out of business - will be negative.”

Mr Leon also has a business in Bath, as a partner involved in running Mary Shelly’s House of Frankenste­in. He believes the council wants to keep parking spaces available for visitors.

But he said: “I live in Bath. I raise a family in Bath. I have a business in Bath on Gay Street. I think I am contributi­ng way more to the city than the visitors.”

Sue Craig, whom Mr Leon contacted as his local councillor, escalated his case and said it had not been designed to affect people in his situation.

Keynsham councillor Lisa O’brien objected to the traffic regulation order which brought in the increased charges. It also saw season tickets for Keynsham long stay car park almost double from £19.80 to £39. She said: “You can’t escape the fact that this council is waging war on motorists.”

Bath and North East Somerset Council was approached for comment.

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