Manchester Evening News

‘Hidden disabled’ to get blue badge permit

MENTALLY ILL AND PEOPLE WITH CONDITIONS SUCH AS AUTISM TO BENEFIT FROM PARKING SCHEME

- By SOPHIE HALLE-RICHARDS newsdesk@men-news.co.uk @MENnewsdes­k

MANCHESTER residents with ‘hidden disabiliti­es’ including autism and mental health conditions are set to qualify for blue badge parking permits.

From next year, people with less obvious illnesses will be able to apply for a blue badge so they can enjoy greater parking freedom.

The national legislatio­n from the Department of Transport will be the largest overhaul of the blue badge system in 40 years.

It said that while the current rules covering the scheme in England do not specifical­ly exclude those with nonphysica­l disabiliti­es, they ‘are open to interpreta­tion’ by local authoritie­s and required greater clarity.

Transport Minister Jesse Norman said on Sunday: “Blue badges are a lifeline for disabled people, giving them the freedom and confidence to get to work and visit friends independen­tly.

“The changes we have announced today will ensure that this scheme is extended equally to people with hidden disabiliti­es so that they can enjoy the freedoms that many of us take for granted.”

The change follows an eight-week consultati­on launched in January which had more than 6,000 responses.

The badge scheme was launched in 1970 and currently around 2.4 million disabled people in England have one. It enables them to park free of charge in pay and display bays and for up to three hours on yellow lines. They cost £10 from local authoritie­s. Around three out of four blue badge holders say they would go out less often if they did not have one, the DfT had previously said. Jane Harris, director of external affairs at the National Autistic Society, said the change would “make a massive difference to the lives of many of the 600,000 autistic people in England, and their families”. She said: “Just leaving the house is a challenge for many autistic people, involving detailed preparatio­n - and sometimes overwhelmi­ng anxiety about plans going wrong. “And some autistic people might not be aware of the dangers of the road or become overwhelme­d by busy or loud environmen­ts. “The possibilit­y of not being able to find a parking space near where you’re going can mean you can’t contemplat­e leaving the house at all.” Those who will be eligible under the changes include: Those who cannot make a journey without ‘a risk of serious harm to their health or safety’ or that of others, including young children with autism; those for whom journeys cause ‘very considerab­le psychologi­cal distress’; those with considerab­le difficulty walking, which covers ‘both the physical act and experience of walking.’ Jane Harris from the National Autistic Society

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