The Herald

Private parking firms accused of ‘confusing drivers’ over new code of practice

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PRIVATE parking companies have been accused of “confusing drivers” after introducin­g a new code of conduct.

The RAC said the sector’s decision to create its own set of rules “muddies the waters” amid delays in UK Government regulation­s being implemente­d.

The code of practice launched by two industry bodies includes a 10-minute grace period for motorists to leave a car park after the parking period they paid for ends.

It also features requiremen­ts for consistent signage, a single set of rules for operators on private land and an “appeals charter”.

Private parking businesses have been accused of using misleading and confusing signs, aggressive debt collection and unreasonab­le fees.

A bill to enable the introducti­on of a legislatio­n-backed code of conduct received Royal Assent in March 2019.

This code, due to come into force across Britain by the end of last year, included halving the cap on tickets for most parking offences to £50, creating a fairer appeals system, and banning the use of aggressive language on tickets.

But it was withdrawn by the government in June 2022 following a legal challenge by parking companies.

RAC head of policy Simon Williams said: “We’re flabbergas­ted that the British Parking Associatio­n and the Internatio­nal Parking Community have suddenly announced plans to introduce their own private parking code after doing all they can over the last five years to prevent the official government code created by an Act of Parliament coming into force.

“While there are clearly some positive elements to what the private parking industry is proposing, it convenient­ly avoids some of the biggest issues around caps on penalty charges and debt recovery fees that badly need to be addressed to prevent drivers being taken advantage of.

“These elements, alongside a formal appeals process, are being worked on by the government and in our opinion can’t come soon enough.

“Nothing should stand in the way of the official code, least of all a new industry scheme that muddies the waters and risks confusing drivers.

“For the private parking industry to all of a sudden paint themselves as being whiter than white with their own code and appeals charter takes irony to another level.”

Nicholas Lyes, director of policy and standards at charity IAM Roadsmart, said: “Drivers will wonder what has taken parking associatio­ns so long to publish the new code.

“No matter how they might dress it up, this is primarily being driven by new laws around the government-led Parking Code of Practice, rather than a self-proclaimed gesture of being fairer to motorists. Some might say it is jumping before being pushed.”

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