Friday 28 December 2012

Pay by phone cost me parking ticket


It’s not often I feel compelled to write a letter of complaint but Horsham District Council offers a pay by phone service and I’ve had the recent misfortune to discover that unless you are fully familiar with how this system operates you can end up with a parking ticket! As I did.
The park by phone system relies on the 
driver/parker to contact the number provided.


Read the full article here

Motorist's ticket fell off windscreen at Changegate car park


A motorist is celebrating after beating Haworth’s notorious car clampers in court.
Adam Bolam-Peel, from Oxenhope, won back the £90 he had to pay for a clamp to be removed from his vehicle in the Changegate car park.
Mr Bolam-Peel, who appeared last year on TV reality show Come Dine With Me, said he was also awarded his court costs.

Read the full article here

'I'm not paying unfair Purley parking fine'


COUNCIL parking chiefs have performed a U-turn after a carpenter threatened to take them to court.
John Meliniotis had pledged to "fight tooth and nail", over the Purley High Street tickets which had accumulated a cost of nearly £400 after the council sent them to the wrong address.
Mr Meliniotis first heard of the fines when a summons from a court in Northampton landed on his doormat last month, after the case was escalated to the courts.

Read the full article here

Suspension for security firm boss


A DIRECTOR of a Cornish security firm has been suspended.
It follows a series of complaints levelled against Armtrac Security Services, which have been revealed by the West Briton.
The firm is also being investigated by the security business regulator, British Parking Association (BPA) and has been brought to the attention of the transport minister.

Read the full article here

Pictured: The moment traffic warden slaps parking tickets on two minibuses carrying disabled children after they sang at charity carol concert


This is the moment a traffic warden slapped £70 parking tickets on two minibuses carrying disabled children after they raised hundreds of pounds for a homeless charity by singing in a carol concert.

The youngsters, many in wheelchairs, were being lifted into two specially-adapted ambulances in Nottingham when the enforcement officer wrote out two penalty notices before walking away.

The twelve children from Oak Field School and Sports College in Bilborough, Nottinghamshire, were returning from the concert on Monday afternoon which raised £370 when they were hit with the fines.

Read the full article here

We’re taken for £1.3bn park & ride


MOTORISTS were stung for a record £1.3billion in parking 


charges by town halls last year — £160,000 AN HOUR.



An estimated 10,000 tickets were dished out a day by councils, 

despite warnings from the Government not to treat drivers as “cash 

cows”.


The official figures do not even include charges in privately-run car 

parks — meaning the full toll will be even higher.



Read the full article here

Firm refuses to refund tickets to Hyndburn residents


A COUNCIL has slammed town centre car park operators for refusing to refund ‘unfair’ tickets.
Hyndburn Council, and the borough’s MP intervened after hundreds of tickets were issued on Accrington’s Eastgate car park.
The tickets were issued when time limits were changed from three hours to ninety minutes.

Read the full article here

Scottish Parliament car park barrier’s £7,000 compensation bill


THE Scottish Parliament’s £250,000 anti-terror car parking barrier has created terror of its own – by damaging MSPs’ cars.
The security barrier has dented five vehicles since it was installed, forcing parliament bosses to pay £7,000 compensation.
It has also emerged that the barriers have been out of action completely almost one day in ten this year.


Read the full article here

Record-breaking driver racks up 88 parking tickets in just two years


The driver of a luxury 4x4 has racked up an astonishing 88 parking tickets in the city centre in just two years, making the vehicle the most ticketed in Cambridge.
On average, more than one ticket every 10 days has been slapped on the Audi Q7 – which is worth about £45,000 – for flouting city centre parking rules since November 2010.
Read the full article here

Council trial new number plate recognition at car park


Bedford Borough Council is trialling new camera technology at one of its car parks that scans drivers’ number plates.
St Peter’s Street car park is the first in Bedford Borough to be fitted with the function. The council says it won’t cost any extra to run.
The system is called Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) and records vehicles in and out of the car park, 24-hours-a-day.

Read the full article here

‘Parking officers in Grantham are using their power in the wrong way’


Civil parking enforcement (CPE) in Grantham is coming under fire as residents - and even a doctors’ surgery - are being hit by what they believe are unfair fines.
Parking officers have been out in force in the town centre since CPE came into play at the start of the month.
The Journal has received a number of reports of instances of rude officers and unjust fines.

Read the full article here

Blue badge disabled parking to be extended in Wales

The blue badge parking scheme for disabled people is being extended to those with conditions such as autism, the Welsh government has announced.

The badges will now be offered to those with 'severe cognitive impairments'.

They will also be automatically available for those on the new system of personal independence payments (Pip) which come into force next spring.

Read the full article here

Friday 14 December 2012

Lake District National Park Authority ditches Parking Eye at car parks


AN UNPOPULAR parking management system which netted a private company nearly half a million pounds is to be replaced by the Lake District National Park Authority (LDNPA).
Car park contracts with the firm Parking Eye, which currently enforces fees at some Lake District car parks, will not be renewed as they come to an end, say LDNPA bosses.

Read the full article here

Unions call for council control of parking

UNION leaders today called for Glasgow's troubled City Parking to be brought back under direct council control.

The arm's-length external organisation, or Aleo, has posted successive losses since it was created five years ago. Last night we revealed the business is to receive further financial aid from the council – to the tune of £500,000 – on top of several previous rescue packages.
Now Unison, which represents City Parking's workers, says it believes the experiment with semi-privatisation should be brought to a halt.
Chairman of the union's Glasgow City Council branch, Brian Smith, said: "We've always been sceptical about the Aleos. You only need to look at the continual bailouts the council gives to City Parking."
The business provides both on- and off-street parking and is responsible for issuing parking fines.
Unison suggests much of this work is a vital public service rather than a commercial business: without parking attendants keeping yellow lines clear, the city could grind to a halt.

Read the full article here

Parking fines issued in Falmouth 'without permission'


PEOPLE hit with parking fines in one Falmouth car park are being urged not to pay – by its owner.
Discovery Quay Car Park is at the centre of a row between its owner, New Cornwall Development, and Armtrac Security Services.
New Cornwall Development claims Armtrac has been issuing £60 fines to drivers without permission for more than a month.
Motorists initially complained about being fined by Armtrac while the ticketing machine was broken.

Read the full article here

Blue badge impact on parking revenue questioned


MORE than six months after a move to charge disabled people in Aldershot and Farnborough to park their cars, the council has suffered a fall in income from parking revenue.
Rushmoor Borough Council introduced changes to the area's blue badge parking scheme in April, which meant disabled motorists have had to pay full fees to use council car parks if they are not automatically entitled to a badge.
Read the full article here

Prolific traffic warden clocks up £256k in fines


A traffic warden has issued more tickets than any of his colleagues handing out an incredible 4,266 fines in one year.
That means the Cambridgeshire enforcement officer has given out  £256,000 in fines to motorists by issuing one in 10 tickets last year outstripping his fellow wardens.

Read the full article here

Plymouth City Council admits fine error after police diverted drivers


Hundreds of motorists who followed a diversion during serious flooding have been sent fines.
Police directed traffic down a bus lane when an overflowing sewer closed Gdynia Way in recent deluges.
But new enforcement cameras were left switched on – and £60 fines are now landing on outraged drivers' doormats.
Council workers have now been told to write to everyone who was issued a penalty charge notice (PCN) during the Gdynia Way flooding fiasco.

Read the full article here

DMUK reveal shocking results of car parking survey


With discussions over the transport legacy left by the Paralympics at a high and heightened awareness of the difficulties facing disabled travellers, there is no better time for DMUK to reveal the results of its car park survey.
The specially commissioned survey involved an audit of 20 city centre car parks from across England, Scotland and Wales to discover how accessible the UK’s car parks are for disabled people. The survey was divided into 3 areas of investigation: driver access; pedestrian access and general provisions and management of the car park. Shocking results

Read the full article here

Monday 10 December 2012

Crass council incompetence - A sign of the times



This is a great example of council incompetence in action.

Here is a photograph of a sign recently installed by Coventry City Council at their civic offices.

Please forward any other examples to info@nmag.co.uk

More than 150 councils barred from DVLA database after breaching motorists’ privacy


More than 150 town halls have been blocked from accessing the DVLA database after breaking rules protecting motorists’ privacy.
In dozens of cases, councils were caught making unauthorised access to the database - which contains personal details of every licensed driver in the UK.
In others, officials were barred because they hadn’t kept proper records of who was accessing the database, how often and for what reason.

Read the full article here

DVLA tackles 294 public organisations for database abuse


In the past three years, 294 public organisations have faced action over their use of the database containing details of car registrations and driving licenses.
In response to a Freedom of Information Act request from Big Brother Watch, the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Authority (DVLA) disclosed that the organisations were overwhelmingly local authorities, but included Sussex Police and Transport for London.

Read the full article here

Wednesday 5 December 2012

£170,000 fed into unenforced parking meters


MOTORISTS have fed more than £170,000 into Bournemouth parking meters in the last three months, even though they had no chance of receiving a fine.
Bournemouth traffic wardens stopped handing out tickets to motorists in parts of the town on September 7 because of a problem with legal documentation regarding enforcement, which has still not been sorted out.

Read the full article here

Yarm Mayor wins appeal after deliberately landing himself with parking fine


A MAYOR who deliberately landed himself with a fine to test the legality of parking charges in his home town has secured a partial victory.
Jason Hadlow, chairman of Yarm Town Council, parked without a disc on Yarm High Street in March and received a £60 fine.

Read the full article here

Firms leave Nottingham 'over Workplace Parking Levy'

Nottingham is losing businesses to other cities over its         workplace parking tax, the Chamber of Commerce has warned.

In April, Nottingham City Council introduced the Workplace Parking Levy (WPL), which charges companies with 11 spaces or more, £288 a year per bay.

Read the full article here

£6,000 owed to ‘illegal’ parkers

A crusading retired policeman claimed this week that motorists may have been wrongly fined a total of up to £6,000 over four years for parking in an Exmouth town centre street.

Mr Percy Prowse, the Conservative county councillor for Duryard and Pennsylvania in Exeter, told the Journal that legal documents drafted for Victoria Road in 2008 had been botched by county traffic officers.

Read the full article here

South Lakeland car parking machines will no longer need registration numbers


DRIVERS will no longer have to key in their car registration numbers into new South Lakeland District Council parking machines come the new year.
The pay and display machines have been controversial since they were introduced at 38 car parks in the area earlier this year at a cost of £340,000.
There was an outcry from residents, visitors and traders because motorists were forced to enter their registration details to get a ticket.

Read the full article here

Anger over parking tickets in Tewkesbury during floods


TRAFFIC wardens in Tewkesbury have been accused of lacking compassion after ticketing cars stranded due to flood water.
While some residents and businesses in the town have battled to prevent their premises from flooding, they have had to park their vehicles where they can.
But that has, at times, meant leaving them in areas not normally allowed.
Borough council traffic wardens have handed out a number of parking tickets as a result.

Read the full article here

Latest scam spam ploy: Bogus pay-by-phone London parking receipts

Mundane cloak hides malware dagger


Bogus "pay by phone parking receipts" doing the rounds by email and targeted at UK users are actually designed to spread malware, security watchers warn.
The spam campaign is designed to trick recipients into viewing a fictitious list of parking transactions, contained in a malicious attachment. "Upon executing the malicious attachment, the malware opens a backdoor on the affected host," Dancho Danchev, a security researcher at Webroot explains.

Read the full article here