Daily Mail

THE £1BN PARKING ROBBERY

Motorists face charges rising by up to 230%

- By James Salmon Transport Editor Turn to Page 4

car parks, many councils are raising the cost of residentia­l permits.

Shoppers and churchgoer­s will be hit by the end of cheaper Sunday parking in some areas.

Hampshire, Nottingham, Reading, Cambridge, Brighton and Exeter are all planning big hikes. Councillor­s insist higher fees are necessary because of major budget cuts from Whitehall. They also cite the need to tackle congestion and air pollution.

Families are already facing the second highest rise in council tax in a decade, with typical Band D rises of £76 from next month.

Councils expect to make a record TOWN halls are set to pocket a record £1billion profit from parking fees over the next year.

Motorists face increases of up to 230 per cent from next month, an audit reveals today. As well as charging more for town

surplus of £885million from parking fees in 2018-2019. And the RAC Foundation predict this will hit £1billion in 2019-2020.

Spokesman Steve Gooding said: ‘ With sums this large in play, the question must be whether they are actually helping our town centres and high streets to thrive, or whether it feels more like motorists being targeted to help increasing­ly cashstrapp­ed councils balance their books.’

Edmund King, president of the AA, said: ‘Drivers beware. April sees the start of new tactics for some councils going after more cash from drivers.

‘Some councils are already budgeting to make millions of pounds more from motorists, on top of the millions they already get, by increasing parking charges, extending restricted parking zones, enforcing new bus lanes and looking for new opportunit­ies to catch drivers.’

Analysis by the Daily Mail shows that residentia­l parking charges are set to rise by up to 230 per cent across Hampshire, with annual permits in Romsey and Andover increasing from £15 to £50, and from £22 to £50 in Winchester. The changes will be phased in over two years.

Northampto­n Borough Council is trebling evening car park charges from £1 an hour to £3. In Camden, council leaders are planning to increase the cost of residentia­l permits by up to 70 per cent.

This will saddle the owner of an older diesel estate with a £577 bill.

Reading hopes to raise almost £1million extra in one year by ratcheting up parking fees, permits, and fines and scrapping free parking in many areas.

Mike Cherry, of the Federation of Small Businesses, warned that low-cost parking was vital for town centres.

‘Hiking up the cost can drive people away from their local high street, with customers often heading to out-of-town shopping centres with free car parks,’ he said. ‘Parking shouldn’t be used as a cash cow for councils looking to raise revenue.’

Sir Greg Knight, Tory MP for East Yorkshire, who has successful­ly pushed for laws to crack down on private parking firms, said: ‘This is a short-sighted strategy that doesn’t make any sense.

‘I’m surprised that on the one hand local authoritie­s are complainin­g that their high streets are struggling yet on the other hand they are adding to their grief by putting up parking charges.

‘When you look at the budget of every family if they have to pay more for parking this also leaves them with less money to spend in the shops locally.’

Councillor Martin Tett, transport spokesman for the Local Government Associatio­n, said: ‘Councils are on the side of motorists and shoppers.

‘They have to strike a balance when setting parking policy, both on street and off street, to make sure that there are spaces available for residents, high streets are kept vibrant and traffic is kept moving.

‘Any income raised through on- street parking charges is spent on running parking services and any surplus is only spent on essential transport projects, such as tackling our national £9billion roads repair backlog and other transport projects that benefit high streets and local economies.’

MUCH is made of the decline of the British high street and its descent into a drab collection of charity shops, discount stores and fast-food outlets as internet and outof-town shopping take their relentless toll. But real help comes there none.

Now, traditiona­l retailers are being punched in the stomach again. As we reveal today, councils across the country are plotting huge hikes in parking charges to plug gaps in budgets, netting an astounding £1billion in profits.

Less incentive again for car- dependent families to battle their way into town centres. Why bother when you can park for free at a megastore on the ring-road?

Parking charges have mutated from a traffic management tool into a full-blown direct tax on drivers and a damaging indirect levy on shop-owners.

One day, there will be plenty of free spaces in town – because no one will want to go there. Goose and golden eggs anyone?

So Housing Secretary James Brokenshir­e has called for an inquiry into the mammoth scandal of rip-off leases on new homes. And not before time. Greedy developers who drove through these sales and lawyers who failed to protect unwitting first-time buyers face serious questions about their probity. Upwards of 100,000 homeowners were lured into signing toxic leases on homes that are now virtually unsaleable. They deserve answers.

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