The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Solving mystery of why the kingdom’ s parking fees vary quite so much

- CLAIRE WARRENDER

Parking charges in town centres are a fixture of life across Scotland. But in Fife, the charges differ depending on which town you are in.

It is free in Glenrothes, Leven and Cowdenbeat­h.

And in Inverkeith­ing you can park all day for just £2.50.

However, in larger towns such as Kirkcaldy and Dunfermlin­e, you will pay as much as £3.80 for a four-hour stay.

But why does not Fife Council have a uniform car parking charge across the whole region?

Well, there are two answers – demand and ownership.

Basically, the busier the town and the more in demand the car parks, the more you will pay.

And if the council does not own the car parks, like in Glenrothes, it has no control over charging.

We’ve looked at parking charges in car parks in different town centres and spoken to Fife Council about the reasoning.

Parking charges in each Fife town:

St Andrews

0-2 hours £1.10

2-4 hours £2.20 More than 4 hours £3.80

Anstruther

0-1 hour 70p

1-2 hours 90p

2-3 hours £1.20

Cupar

0-2 hours 50p

2-4 hours £1.10

More than four hours £2.20

Dunfermlin­e Carnegie Drive East

0-1 hour £1.10

1-2 hours £1.70

2-3 hours £2.20

Other Dunfermlin­e car parks

0-2 hours £1.10

2-4 hours £2.20 More than four hours £3.80

Inverkeith­ing

Chapel Place car park 5am to 9.30am £2.50

Kirkcaldy

It is complicate­d. There are 12 town centre car parks with several different price structures. But the four long-stay ones charge: 0-2 hours £1.10

2-4 hours £2.20 More than 4 hours £3.80

Glenrothes

Free

Leven

Free

Cowdenbeat­h

Free

Fife Council service manager Susan Keenlyside said car parking is managed to improve the vitality of town centres and reduce congestion by encouragin­g people on to public transport.

“Many of Fife’s parking arrangemen­ts are historic and often reflect local arrangemen­ts appropriat­e to that particular area,” she said.

“While parking charges in key town centres are consistent, some have been tailored to reflect local demand and many areas of Fife have no council parking charges.

“This is either because the parking is not councilown­ed, such as areas of Glenrothes, or demand is low enough that there’s no need to manage parking through charges,” she added.

Demand for parking is regularly reviewed.

And as shopping patterns continue to change, the council is working with communitie­s to ensure measures are appropriat­e.

Income from parking charges in Fife pays for the management and maintenanc­e of car parks.

And any leftover cash is used to support sustainabl­e travel projects.

 ?? ?? TAILORED: Parking charges fluctuate across Fife’s town centres – free in some places and costly in other spots – and demand is regularly reviewed.
TAILORED: Parking charges fluctuate across Fife’s town centres – free in some places and costly in other spots – and demand is regularly reviewed.

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