Friday, February 24, 2006

West End a goldmine for parking fines

The Scotsman

GLASGOW parking wardens patrolling the West End have handed out £500,000 worth of fines in one small area, after issuing 14,000 tickets over six months.
The fines have accrued since parking restrictions were introduced last summer to the area straddling Great Western Road, between Belmont and Kelvingrove.
The meters and permit bays were designed to clamp down on the number of commuters leaving their cars on the streets.
However, more than 300 people have attended a protest meeting amid claims that it has made parking for residents even more difficult.
It is understood that tickets amounting to £420,000 were issued in the first six months, but the amount will be higher because the £30 charges double if not paid within two weeks.

200,000 drivers defy parking fines

The Scotsman
by Craig Brown

211,000 parking tickets remain unpaid in Scottish cities
Change in law has made drivers less concerned about enforcement
Councils insist that they are still pursuing unpaid fines
Key quote
"Nowadays, many people feel that they're filling a council's coffers, and we have research that shows private parking attendants, like the ones many councils employ, come bottom of tables in terms of trust among motorists." - Paul Hodgson of the RAC

Story in full
TENS of thousands of parking tickets carrying fines totalling £14 million have gone unpaid in Scotland's four biggest cities since the offence was decriminalised there.
In 1997, parking enforcement was changed from a criminal to a civil matter in some local authority areas, with teams of council attendants replacing police traffic wardens.
Since then, a total of 211,000 tickets from Aberdeen, Dundee, Edinburgh and Glasgow have not been paid.
Figures show 62 per cent of unpaid tickets were issued more than a year ago. The initial cost of unpaid tickets is £30, but this fine doubles if motorists fail to pay within two weeks.
However, drivers are increasingly taking advantage of the limited powers held by councils to enforce the tickets. Previously, the threat of criminal action and a potential prison sentence ensured prompt payment of fines.
But it is now down to councils to recover them by raising a civil action, an expensive and time-consuming process.
As a result, in Edinburgh there are 72,140 outstanding tickets worth £5.7 million to the council, and of the 1.4 million fines slapped on motorists in Glasgow since 1999, 71,315, worth £5.6 million, remain active.
In Dundee, 10,303 tickets worth £500,000 are still uncollected, and in Aberdeen 57,000 fines totalling more than £2.1 million remain outstanding.
But, despite these figures, all four authorities insist they are vigorous in their pursuit of outstanding fines.
Glasgow City Council said: "The council pursues charges through a series of statutory measures, including surcharging the ticket with 50 per cent of its original value. Thereafter, if remaining unrecovered, the cases are passed to a contracted debt recovery agent for further enforcement."
In Edinburgh, where the council said unpaid tickets were dealt with by a firm of sheriff officers, it was shown last week that motorists parking illegally in the city's George Street paid out more than £600,000, making it the most ticketed street in Scotland.
Dundee City Council said sheriff officers were used to collect outstanding fines, and a spokeswoman said: "In more serious cases, arrestment of wages and impounding of vehicles may be considered."
Aberdeen City Council denied there was any issue over unpaid fines. "On average, 75 per cent of all fines are paid immediately and in some months the figures is as high as 80 per cent," it said in a statement. "Despite this high recovery, the council is always looking at options that will improve debt collection.
"Discussions are ongoing regarding the possible appointment of an external debt collection agency to pursue unpaid parking fines."
In Inverness, where illegal parking is still the responsibility of police traffic wardens and classed as a criminal offence, only 294 tickets worth £5,880 are still outstanding.
The Auditor General, who monitors council finances, may be called in to deal with the issue.
Paul Hodgson, from the RAC, said the problem highlighted a lack of trust. He said: "If you feel a parking attendant is working to hit targets and get bonuses, then it develops an attitude that it's a cat-and-mouse game, and so if you've been hit unfairly, then you'll try to get away with it. This is very different from ten or 20 years ago, when police issued tickets, because then you felt it was a 'fair cop'.
"Nowadays, many people feel that they're filling a council's coffers, and we have research that shows private parking attendants, like the ones many councils employ, come bottom of tables in terms of trust among motorists."


McGregor fronts school parking campaign

Contact Music News

Actor EWAN McGREGOR is spearheading a campaign against his local council after they unveiled new plans to scrap 'drop-off' zones outside schools.

Those with special permits can currently park for 15 minutes outside schools in Camden, North London, but council bosses intend to phase them out before 2008 - leaving parents risking parking fines of up GBP100 ($180) a time.

The STAR WARS actor, who lives with wife EVE and daughters CLARA, eight, and ESTHER, four, insists the new plans will make it impossible to safely drop his children off at school in the morning.
He says, "My children go to different schools and there is no adequate pay and display meter system at either school.
"Without the permits Camden can target the schools and make thousands in
fines.
"People should have a right to deliver and pick up their children from school without being fined."

Britains parking space obsession

BBC News
By Martha Buckley


Few topics raise tempers on Britain's streets like driving and parking, with disputes over a few square metres of concrete even ending occasionally in violence.
And with car ownership rising and town centre space at an ever greater premium, it is a headache which is not going away.
Whether facing cries of too much regulation or too little, inconsiderate parking or over-zealous attendants, prohibitive charges or abuse of disabled bays, it seems impossible for parking planners to please everyone all the time.
The problem is obvious - too many cars vying for too few spaces - but the solution is far from clear.
Councillor David Sparks, chair of the Local Government Association's environment board, says: "We have the obviously massive and unpredicted growth in car ownership in the latter part of the 20th Century combined with the fact the vast majority of this country was not designed to accommodate the car.

'Confusing' rules
"Even where provision has been made it has frequently outstripped supply."
Adding to the tension is intense frustration at how parking restrictions are drawn up and enforced.
Complicated rules which vary widely between towns, or within towns, can make it hard for drivers to work out when and where they are allowed to park.

Fighting for free parking
Sheila Rainger, of motorists' group the RAC Foundation, says: "In London this can mean different rules on different sides of the same street.
"Even if you do want to park fairly and lawfully, it's sometimes very difficult to know what to do."
Enforcement is even more controversial, with councils accused of levying disproportionate penalties for those who break the rules and employing over-zealous private operators to hand out tickets.
Ms Rainger says: "We get a lot of calls from people who feel they've been treated unjustly. People want to park within the limits but find themselves falling foul of them by accident and the penalties can be very harsh.

'Cowboy operators'
"There's a lot of feeling among motorists that controls have moved from straightforward enforcement of parking to being a revenue source, which we feel should not be the case."

Mr Sparks says most councils do not make a profit from parking.

"A financial distortion has crept in some councils where, because of financial pressures, parking has been used as a revenue earner but in the majority, this is not the case."
However, he says some "cowboy" enforcement firms have brought the whole system into disrepute.
"Clearly we need parking regulations to be enforced and there's nothing more annoying than people who park on double yellow lines or in disabled parking spaces when they don't have a disability.
"But equally we don't want it to be a form of exploitation."
He suggests the best way to solve arguments over enforcement might be to let local people decide.
"It's something that should be very much part of David Miliband's neighbourhood management agenda - parking should be enforced how people want it to be enforced."
Annoying though it is to get a parking ticket, it does not explain why passions run so high over parking in a way they do not over bus routes or cycle lanes.
Mr Sparks thinks the answer is bound up with personal space and the "unique" role cars play in people's lives.
Personal space
He says: "When people get into their car, they are getting into a psychological bubble and when they get a parking charge it is not like being charged at a cash machine or supermarket, it is as if it is a personal blow to them.
"Equally, when people park in the wrong space, like outside someone's house
, they also see it as an invasion of their personal space."
Parking rules can affect an area's development from encouraging or discouraging shoppers from visit town centres to changing the character of streets as front gardens are paved over to create driveways.
But with so many needs to balance, can local authorities ever hope to get it right?
Ms Rainger thinks the answer lies in more research and a recognition that people will keep using cars.
"We've got to accept that for most people the private car is important to the way they live and work.
"We encourage people to use public transport but for a lot of people, that can be quite difficult.
"Our poll found a lot of people would rather change their job than go there by public transport. It is something people feel very strongly about."

Parking victory: Fines appeal will set precedent, says campaigner

Edgeware and Mill Hill Times
By Alex Galbinski






Victory for the motorist': Barrie Segal, left, and Hugh Moses following their succesful appeal against two parking tickets K11955-002






Hundreds of thousands of motorists who have received parking tickets from Barnet Council are entitled to ask for their money back, after a tribunal ruled that the tickets were 'invalid'.
In a test case on Saturday, an independent adjudicator from the Parking and Traffic Appeals Service (PTAS) said that two tickets given to Hugh Moses in Golders Green last year were not issued in accordance with Section 66 of the Road Traffic Act 1991, which says the penalty charge notice (PCN) should state the date of issue.
The tickets only stated the date of the parking infringement not the date on which the ticket was issued. The adjudicator, Timothy Thorne, argued that this was against the law even though PCNs are almost always issued while the car is illegally parked.
Referring to a previous case in Bury, Mr Thorne said: "I agree with the reasoning of the Bury decision and I am satisfied that the PCN issued to Mr Moses in this case is invalidated by its failure to specify the date of issue (as opposed to its contravention)."
Parking campaigner Barrie Segal, who helped Mr Moses overturn his two £80 fines, said the tribunal ruling meant that parking fines issued by the council worth £5 million a year were invalid, and anyone who had received a PCN could successfully appeal.
Mr Segal, founder of the AppealNow.com web site, said he was very pleased with the ruling. "It's a legal precedent and a victory for the motorist against the unbelievable arrogance of local authorities in dealing with parking tickets," he said. "They are absolutely entitled to a refund and people have to make the decision of whether they are going to fight it or knuckle under it only takes a letter or an email to appeal. This has given them the power to ask for their money back."
Mr Moses, who lives in Buckinghamshire, said: "This has dragged on for so long but it is quite a relief to get rid of it. I'm just thrilled. Barnet Council must be really worried. It would be interesting to know how they are going to deal with the other people that have received tickets."
A council spokeswoman said it would be contacting PTAS for a review of the decision.
"The Road Traffic Act does not state that a PCN must contain the phrase date of issue'," she said, adding that the council's tickets do state the date of the offence. Section 66 of the Road Traffic Act 1991 refers to motorists paying fines within 14 or 28 days of the date of the notice'.

Saturday, February 18, 2006

Parking is a nightmare says former Lord Mayor

Belfast Telegraph
By Dan McGinn

CAR parking in Belfast is 30 years behind the rest of Europe because of poor city planning, a former Lord Mayor claimed today.
Alliance Party councillor Tom Ekin said residents, shoppers and workers in the south of the city were exasperated by a piecemeal approach to planning.
"People are wondering who on earth is in charge of planning," he said.
"Parking is 30 years behind the rest of Europe, a total nightmare.
"Yet all we get are 'pilot studies' with no obvious outcome on behalf of residents and local businesspeople.
"We build new buildings to house new hospital facilities, new health administrative centres, new housing developments, new apartment blocks, new shops, and yet there is no new effective method of addressing the parking problem other than let people park wherever they want."
Parking in Belfast's university area, in the streets around Botanic Avenue and off the Lisburn Road has been described as chaotic as people working in the city centre try to avoid paying charges.
Mr Ekin said it was grotesque that around 1,000 new employees would be commuting to a 100-yard stretch along the Lisburn Road with no obvious mention of extra public transport or parking.
"Do residents have to simply watch as the parking creep continues to ruin our lives?" he said.

Friday, February 17, 2006

Car owners protest at cynical parking swoop

ic Berkshire

By Sam Matthews

MOTORISTS have accused parking attendants of issuing dubious tickets in a cynical bid to increase profits.
Residents called the Express with tales of parking woe amid reports that the town's wardens have been ordered to issue more tickets to boost revenue.
Slough Borough Council and Central Parking System, the company paid by the council to enforce parking restrictions, both deny the claims.
This week the Express was contacted by drivers like retired 62-year-old Nassar Ahmed of Goodman Park, whose ticket was eventually cancelled on appeal.
He was stunned when a penalty notice arrived in the post because he could not recall getting a ticket.
The ticket said he had been observed parking without a ticket behind Boots in the High Street for 40 minutes.
But on the day in question, he remained in the car while his wife ran some errands and a ticket was never placed on his wind-screen.
When he complained about the £60 ticket, he was told if he paid £30 it would be cancelled. But he fought on and, at the end of last month, the ticket was quashed.
Mr Ahmed said: "They claimed that the warden saw my vehicle parked for 40 minutes and had placed a ticket on my windscreen. This just was not true. I never left the car. I think that wardens are deliberately ripping people off and something should be done about it."
And a 41-year-old teacher from Langley High street, who asked not to be named, is also contesting a ticket for an offence he claims 'does not exist'.
Like Mr Ahmed, the first he knew of his alleged offence in a slip road parallel to Langley High Street, was when a penalty notice arrived in the post.
It is claimed his car was parked in a controlled zone on a Saturday afternoon in November last year, where parking was forbidden Monday to Saturday, 8am to 7pm.
Included with the penalty was a picture of the yellow ticket on the car windscreen and a picture of a sign appearing to show the restricted parking hours.
But THREE other signs which were closer to the parked car say parking is restricted Monday to Friday between 8am and 5pm.
The furious teacher said: "The fact they can persecute someone for an offence which does not exist beggars belief and is a gross waste of public resources."
Recently, the Express reported how Claudio Ferri got a ticket in the Herschel Street multi-storey car park for parking outside the white lines of the bay.
It was cancelled after the council accepted it was unfair as the car was up against a wall and not into another parking bay.
As the Slough Express went to press yesterday (Thursday), requests for a comment from the borough council and Central Parking System had not been answered.

£600,000 in fines on just one street

The Scotsman
Alistair Dalton
Transport Correspondent





Officials said that George Street clocked up more fines than the next four streets combined because it has the most parking in Edinburgh and it is the most popular: (Picture: Ian Rutherford)




MOTORISTS paid out more than £600,000 in parking fines on a single Scottish shopping street last year.
George Street in Edinburgh earned the title of the nation's most ticketed street when 19,642 fines were issued in 2004.

But motorists failed to take heed and last year the ticket haul surged 7 per cent to 21,027, Edinburgh City Council revealed yesterday.
George Street accounted for more fines than the next four most ticketed streets in Edinburgh put together.
The council said this was because it was the most popular street for parking in the city centre and has the most spaces.
But motoring organisations warned that the council was at risk of driving visitors away.
The £60 penalties are halved if drivers pay within two weeks.
Parking on the street costs £1.80 an hour - or 3p a minute, with charges in operation between 8:30am and 6:30pm.
More than half the fines on George Street were issued to drivers who failed to return to their vehicles in the allotted time.
St Andrew Square was in second place, with 5,408 tickets issued compared with 5,771 in 2004. It was followed by Chambers Street, where fines increased by nearly 40 per cent to 5,082 - because of roadworks in 2004. Fines in fourth-placed Melville Street dropped from 4,717 to 4,370, while the Grassmarket was fifth with 4,297. The council was unable to provide a figure for 2004 or say why it had increased.
Charlotte Square, which was fourth in 2004 with 3,701 tickets, dropped out of the top five last year because of roadworks.
Andrew Holmes, the council's director of city development, said: "We hope motorists return to their cars before their parking vouchers expire. However, we realise it's easy to misjudge by a few moments, so we do give motorists a five-minute grace period after their pay-and-display voucher expires.
"We don't want to give parking tickets, but we need parking regulations to manage the limited parking spaces we have in the city centre."
Sue Nicholson, of the RAC Foundation, said the increase in tickets could discourage people from shopping in Edinburgh. She said: "If Edinburgh wants to avoid sending the message that it is anti-car, it needs to make provision for people who want to drive into the city centre."







Thursday, February 09, 2006

Ban on parking would hit our trade

Feb 9 2006
ic Coventry
By Stephen Hallmark

PLANS to stop illegal parking on a wide stretch of pavement outside shops in Coventry have led to a backlash from traders.
Coventry City Council says the parking abuse is cracking the pavement and making it dangerous for pedestrians.
But the proprietors of shops around a busy crossroads in Beech Tree Avenue, Lime Tree Park, fear that if bollards are erected, they will lose custom.
Chip shop owner Jim Hadjtofi said: "I'm disgusted with the council. Its plans will destroy this area".
Sisters Jenny Stretton and Joy Barnes, who run hair salon, Beyond the Fringe, agreed that the lack of parking provision was a threat.

Mrs Stretton said: "These shops are all thriving, and that can't often be said for small premises like ours because we all face stiff competition from out-of-town supermarkets where people park free."

Paul Egan, who owns Paul's Barber Shop, added: "Customers that stick with us will be forced to park in nearby streets - I'm sure residents won't approve of that."

The shop owners were due to air their concerns to council representatives today.

Cllr Kevin Foster, cabinet minister for city services, said: "We're investing significant amounts of money in imrpoving the roads and footpaths in this area, as for many years they have been in a poor condition.

"There are currently no legal parking spaces in the area so we are consulting with traders, residents and local councillors to see if we can safely provide parking.

"We are looking at one option of providing parking bays with spaces for about nine cars, but the safety of pedestrians and road users is a priority."


Police admit parking ticket error

BBC NEWS

Police have illegally issued parking tickets to motorists in Wells because they did not know a traffic regulation order had been lifted.
The tickets were issued in Market Place, Sadler Street and High Street.
Anyone who thinks they have received such a ticket is asked to write to the Central Ticket Office at New Bridewell police station in Bristol.
Police are working with the city council and highways authority to resolve the mix-up.
Sergeant Andrew Pritchard said there had not been an enforceable traffic regulation order on the three roads for some time.
"Police were not made aware of this and some tickets may have been issued illegally but were done so in good faith," he said.
"As soon as we were made aware of the problem no more tickets were issued."
He added that where traffic regulations orders do apply, police would continue to robustly enforce them.

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

Breaking Point: the parking fightback

The Times Online

One man’s anger over his exorbitant fines is set to trigger a test case that has sent councils running for their lawyers. Will the Human Rights Act finally tame the parking police, asks Emma Smith of The Sunday Times


Alex Henney is an angry man. In the past two years he has been the victim of parking fines in Camden, north London, for offences he says “had nothing to do with parking management and everything to do with making money”.
On one occasion his car was towed away from a quiet side street three minutes after being ticketed, while another time he was fined £100 for not displaying an up-to-date residents’ permit, even though his permit had expired only two days before and the local authority had received the £90 payment for it to be renewed.
Now he’s fighting back using a legal weapon that has never been tested but has alarmed local authorities to the point where they are scurrying to seek legal advice.

According to the Human Rights Act a punishment must be proportionate to the offence and Henney argues this is not the case with towing charges of more than £150 in London. “My punishment has been excessive and unfair,” said Henney. “People will support sensible parking management but not the enforcement of trivial infractions, and traffic attendants who descend like vultures ticketing motorists who are no more than a minute or two late back to their car.”
Henney is taking his case to the Parking and Traffic Appeals Service, which adjudicates parking fines in the capital, and says if all else fails he plans to apply for a judicial review in what could become a test case for appeals against overzealous clamping and towing. Some legal experts say Henney, who has helped form the London Motorists Action Group to fight similar cases, stands a good chance of succeeding.
“There is no reason why the man in the street couldn’t use the Human Rights Act to appeal against a towing and if more people are aware of it I suspect more people would appeal,” said Toby Halliwell, a Bristol-based lawyer and former adjudicator for the National Parking Adjudication Service (NPAS).
Henney’s frustrations are echoed in towns and cities across Britain, where revenue from parking increased by 71% between 1997 and 2004. Eight million parking penalties were issued in England and Wales in 2004 — one for every three cars — and motorists are paying more than £1 billion per year in parking fines and charges.
Volunteers trying to save the stricken whale that strayed into the Thames last month were handed parking tickets amounting to £300, despite having vehicles marked “marine medic” or “marine ambulance”. In Bury, Greater Manchester last week a traffic warden slapped a ticket on a van and digger being used to resurface a street.
Laws passed in 1991 allowed local authorities to take control of parking enforcement from the police. London was the first to adopt the new system in 1993-94 followed by Winchester in 1996, and 174 local authorities (140 outside London) have now adopted the powers that allow them to keep some of the revenue from fines to invest in other local services.
Before 1994 a few traffic wardens employed by police pounded the streets from 9am to 5pm. Today’s traffic “attendants” are usually employed by private contractors who compete for lucrative local authority contracts and frequently set benchmarks (in reality, targets) for the number of penalty charges their staff should hand out per shift.
There are attendants on duty in many areas from early in the morning until well into the night and many are armed with clamps and a tow truck to remove cars that have overstayed their allotted time by only a few minutes. In Bristol a motorist recently had his car towed away after underpaying a parking fee on a meter by £1.50, the sort of tow-happy response that was last month criticised by NPAS, which considers appeals against fines outside London.
NPAS appears to support the principle behind Henney’s case. Caroline Sheppard, the chief adjudicator for England and Wales, wrote in a recent report to the Commons transport select committee: “The European convention on human rights places greater duty on councils to have regard to proportionality. It is for the council to prove that the removal (of a vehicle) is proportionate and necessary.”
In some areas the revolt against parking fines has gone further. A group of residents in the northeast is bringing into question the system of parking enforcement, demanding councils refund thousands of pounds in illegitimate fines.

Sunderland city council has been forced to return about £34,000 to motorists wrongly fined because the council did not have the right to impose fines in some areas. An internal review, completed last month, found more far-reaching problems.
Since taking over parking enforcement from the police in February 2003 the council had issued tickets that did not include the date on which the offence took place, and it had failed to maintain proper signs and road markings.
Neil Herron, a former fishmonger and founder of the People’s No Campaign, which crusades against what it views as “unacceptable or unaccountable governance”, began investigating the council’s errors in 2004. “Sunderland city council has handled parking management with complete incompetence,” he said. “What we’ve discovered could mean every parking ticket issued since February 2003 is invalid.”
Herron believes he has unearthed similar mistakes in councils including Blackburn, Accrington, Rochdale and most recently Westminster, which issues more tickets than any other local authority — just under 820,000 in 2004-05. “There are mistakes like this cropping up all across the country,” he said. “The implications of the Sunderland case may produce a massive domino effect. This is a shambles.”

The Department for Transport was concerned enough to begin a consultation process on parking enforcement and policy in October and is drawing up new statutory guidelines for local authorities. Keith Banbury, chief executive of the British Parking Association, a trade body whose members include companies that employ wardens, has called for fundamental reform in the contracts between contractors and councils.
Last year a London tribunal heard that parking attendants are expected to write 1.4 tickets per hour, although NCP, the country’s largest provider of parking attendants, says it no longer offers ticket-related bonus schemes or targets for the number of tickets that attendants should issue. “It was just too damaging for the company’s public image,” said a spokesman. “We now think all such schemes should be banned.”
NPAS upholds just under two-thirds (62%) of appeals against parking fines. Two councils — Islington and Trafford — lost more than 90% of motorists’ appeals against fines. But less than 1% of fines are challenged.
A recent Birmingham University study, commissioned by NPAS, found more than half of those questioned did not know about the appeals process.
Paul Watters of the AA Motoring Trust believes some parking enforcement is “verging on the obsessive”. “Sometimes common sense is lost,” he says. “Then it becomes a battle between the enforcers and the motorist. Only a few days ago we heard about a case of a man who tried to stop a tow truck removing his car. The dispute went on for hours and it was ridiculous, because the driver was even offering to pay the £200 tow fine, he just didn’t want to have to stand there while his car was carted away.”
In a recent report to the Commons transport select committee, the trust criticised the use of “random and untargeted wheel clamping and towing”, councils who ignore or automatically reject appeals and bailiff companies who are employed by local councils to collect unpaid fines but can end up hounding “innocent victims of car cloning or false registration”.
“Bad practice continues routinely on a day-to-day basis,” it said. “Authorities do not respond quickly enough to inquiries, fail to adequately maintain signs and road markings and allow attendants to issue harsh or unjustified penalty notices. It is a huge business and in some areas it seems to be out of control.”


IT'S A TESTING JOB
If you’re thinking of becoming a parking attendant you might assume that a willingness to wear a uniform and be unpopular with drivers are the two vital qualifications, writes Roland White.
In fact there is surprisingly brisk competition for a job that can now pay up to £8 an hour and many employers insist applicants pass an aptitude test. Don’t expect anything too rigorous, though. Typical is the written exam set by NCP, which employs 3,000 attendants on behalf of councils across the country. Its questions include:
Copy out the following sentence in capital letters: “If you are asked to work on a public holiday you will receive holiday pay plus your regular earnings.” (There’s no catch — you just copy the sentence.)
What is the difference between meters and metres? There are 18 questions, all similarly challenging, and candidates have 20 minutes to complete the test. One in three people fail.
Despite such exams the National Parking Adjudication Service says 9% of appeals are made by motorists who say they found mistakes on their ticket or no ticket at all.
NCP insists its standards are high. “The test is to see if applicants can go through to the interview stage,” says Tim Cowan, a spokesman.
“If they pass the test and the interview they are taken on as a trainee. They then have one or two weeks of classroom training followed by a written exam and a three-month probation period. They go out initially with a supervisor and are only allowed out on their own when the supervisor is sure they can do the job.”
After being approached by The Sunday Times, NCP said it would make its aptitude exam available on its website (http://www.ncp.co.uk/) for those who want to test their brain power.

Parking: Take the sting out of fines

The Independent
It's easier than you think to beat a parking fine. Robert Verkaik gives the lowdown on winning the appeals process
Published: 07 February 2006

Conventional wisdom has always cautioned against challenging a parking ticket. Even if you can be bothered to fill in the paperwork and embark on a lengthy correspondence with council officials, the chance of overturning the original decision is about as remote as a traffic warden complimenting you on your expert parking.
But new evidence shows that councils do get it wrong, and that more and more motorists are winning appeals.
A league table published by the National Parking Adjudication Service (NPAS) this month reveals that some councils lose as many as nine out of 10 cases on appeal. Even the very best performers in the table can only claim to be successful in three out of four appeals. The message is loud and clear: perseverance pays.
The latest figures show that a record eight million parking penalties were issued in England and Wales in 2004. Of those, only 60,000 were taken to the independent adjudicators by drivers whose initial appeal had been rejected by the council. However, when drivers did take matters further, nearly two-thirds (62 per cent) of them were successful.
Caroline Sheppard, Britain's chief parking adjudicator, says she is concerned that such a high number of motorists simply accept the council's rejection of their appeal.
A study commissioned by Sheppard shows that one of the reasons for this reluctance is that councils are not informing motorists that they have a further right of appeal to the NPAS.
Now, a pilot scheme in Manchester aims to take the pain out of the appeals process by letting motorists challenge their parking fines online. At present, only Notices of Appeal against Penalty Charge Notices issued by Manchester City Council can be lodged online, but if the trial is a success the service will be extended across the country.
On-screen guidance notes assist appellants to complete and transmit the appeal form, and each request receives an automatic confirmation e-mail message from the NPAS.
But NPAS research, conducted by the University of Birmingham, showed that even a personal appearance before the tribunal need not be an intimidating experience.
In 2004, Professor Raine and Eileen Dunstan of the University of Birmingham's School of Public Policy conducted a survey of NPAS users, monitoring, in addition to the tribunal's performance, perceptions of the appeals process of both appellants and council parking managers.
Their findings confirmed that appellants who had taken the trouble to attend a hearing in person were confident that they had had a fair hearing and recognised that the adjudicator was both independent, and a lawyer.
But there was a marked contrast in the perceptions of appellants who had attended a hearing and those who had requested that their case be decided on the documentary and photographic evidence only. Motorists who had attended a hearing were very positive; not all those who had elected for a "postal" decision were so sure about the ways in which the tribunal worked.
This could explain why more than half of those who question councils' original decisions decide not to take it a step further when their first appeal is rejected.
A much more determinative factor is the knowledge that drivers who pay within 14 days are offered a 50 per cent discount whereas those who pursue the case through to an appeal and lose will have to pay the twice as much. In this way, the system is weighted against the appellant and works in support of a more bureaucratic process.
This is confirmed by Professor Raine's research, which examined both the perceptions of the adjudicators and the council parking officials. He noticed that there was a marked difference in mindset between the council officers, who see the challenge process principally as administrative, and the adjudicators, who see their task as judicial.

How to appeal
You have 28 days from when you received the council's decision in which to lodge an independent appeal. n Appeals made outside the 28-day deadline can only be submitted by post and you must explain on the form why your appeal is late.
You can only appeal if your parking ticket is called a "Penalty Charge Notice" and has been issued by a council enforcing parking under the Road Traffic Act 1991.
You must also have received a "Notice to Owner" form from the council claiming you are liable for payment of a Penalty Charge Notice.
You must also have challenged the Notice to Owner form and have received a letter from the council saying that your representation has been rejected.
Conventional wisdom has always cautioned against challenging a parking ticket. Even if you can be bothered to fill in the paperwork and embark on a lengthy correspondence with council officials, the chance of overturning the original decision is about as remote as a traffic warden complimenting you on your expert parking.
But new evidence shows that councils do get it wrong, and that more and more motorists are winning appeals. A league table published by the National Parking Adjudication Service (NPAS) this month reveals that some councils lose as many as nine out of 10 cases on appeal.
Even the very best performers in the table can only claim to be successful in three out of four appeals. The message is loud and clear: perseverance pays.

Friday, February 03, 2006

Parking enforcers fine crash victim

Edinburgh Evening News
Alan Roden
Transport Reporter

A CRASH victim who was injured when joyriders smashed into his car was punished with two parking fines for abandoning his battered vehicle.
Peter Bishop, who suffered whiplash after a head-on collision in the city centre, said he was told by police to leave his wrecked car at the side of the road.
But when the 37-year-old returned to pick up the vehicle, which had a "Police Aware" sticker on the window, he found Enforcers had issued two penalty notices within just two hours.
Mr Bishop said he was "completely gobsmacked" to find the £30 fines and immediately appealed to the city council.
Parking chiefs agreed to overturn one penalty, but insisted the second ticket - for leaving the car in a bus lane - should be paid. Mr Bishop, from Wester Hailes, today said it was "unfair" to make him pay for an accident that was not his fault.
"I was driving around Abbeyhill in the early hours of a Saturday morning, when a BMW came racing down the wrong side of the road," he said. "It smashed straight into my car, and the driver and passengers jumped out and ran away. The suspension on my car was completely ruined and the car couldn't be driven on the roads, so the police asked me to move it to the side of the street.
"First thing on Monday morning, I arranged for the vehicle to be picked up by staff from my garage, and they got there at 10am. But earlier that morning, Enforcers had slapped two fines on my car."

The car crash happened in October. A BMW hit Mr Bishop's Nissan Primera on Cadzow Place.
Police today said they have been unable to find the occupants of the BMW, which had been reported stolen.
Mr Bishop works in an accident repair shop and could have arranged for his car to be uplifted earlier, but waited until the Monday morning. As a result, the Enforcers were within their rights to issue a ticket.
However, Mr Bishop said the Enforcers need to use more "common sense".
It is policy for Enforcers to telephone the police if they find an abandoned vehicle. Two tickets can be issued if a vehicle needs to be towed away, but one is often cancelled at a later date.
A council spokeswoman said today: "We checked with the police before issuing the first ticket. We apologise for issuing two tickets, but we resolved this a few months ago by cancelling one of the tickets.
"Mr Bishop was advised he had to dispute the second ticket within 28 days but chose not to do so."

Press Release:Campaign group uncovers flaw in Decriminalised Parking Enforcement Legislation

Press Release:Immediate

The People's No Campaign / Metric Martyrs Campaign

Campaign group uncovers flaw in Decriminalised Parking Enforcement Legislation ... Disabled Drivers entitled to refunds running into millions

In what could become another major embarrassment for the Government and the Department for Transport, Campaigner, Neil Herron reveals how exposure of Sunderland City Council's disastrous implementation of their Decriminalised Parking Enforcement (DPE) regime should lead to refunds for tens of thousands of Disabled Motorists across the rest of the country.

The examination of DPE by the campaign team began in Sunderland as a tangential aspect to overturning the Metric Martyrs dubious convictions in the High Court. Setting the constitutional law arguments aside, the campaign also examined the technical aspects of DPE not only in Sunderland but also across the country.

DPE is expanding out of control and there are now 144 Local Authorities operating the scheme under the 1991 Road Traffic Act and the 'decriminalised' aspect has taken away the opportunity for the motorist to dispute any alleged contraventions before a Court of Law. Instead, the only right of appeal is to an 'independent' adjudicator (funded at the rate of 60p per ticket).
Many local authorities desperate to latch on to the 'cash-cow' of DPE have taken shortcuts when implementing and enforcing, and in many areas we are witnessing local authorities acting in a lawless fashion.

This particular aspect of DPE uncovered here relates to alleged contraventions committed by Blue Badge Holders.
TIMELINE:
In mid 2003 Sunderland City Council became aware after a complaint by a member of the public that Blue Badge Holders may be exempt from being issued with Penalty Charge Notices issued in Loading Bays. The Council sought advice on the legality of Blue Badge Holders parking in loading bays.
Counsel's advice revealed that Regulation 8 of the Local Authorities Traffic Orders (Exemption for Disabled Persons) (England) Regulations 2000 provides an exemption for Blue Badge Holders.

Similar advice was received from the Department for Transport.

Based on that advice it was decided to issue refunds to Blue Badge Holders who had parked in loading bays. (The offence is a Code 25 and it does not distinguish between Blue Badge and non Blue Badge Holders, so investigation of all photographic records and Parking Attendants Notebooks is required to ascertain who will be entitled to refunds).

Friday 27th January 2005...Clint D'Souza (Department for Transport Mobility & Inclusion Unit) has confirmed that he has not yet responded to the Freedom of Information request 26th October 2005, and passed to him on 22nd December 2005. He did confirm that it appears that the way the legislation could be read would indicate an exemption for Blue Badge Holders parked in Loading Bays. It may be necessary to redraft legislation to close the anomaly.

He expects that some local authorities may choose to follow Sunderland's line and issue immediate refunds without being challenged legally. Others may have to be challenged either through the Adjudication process or the courts.

Metric Martyr and No Campaign Director, Neil Herron, states, "Whilst we do not advocate irresponsible parking it is not acceptable for local authorities who have jumped on the 'cash-cow' of DPE to disregard the law. If motorists have been fined unlawfully then that money must be refunded without question.
What is becoming more apparent is that many local authorities are prepared to play fast and loose with legislative requirements in the pursuit of quick financial gain. It is staggering that we are uncovering so many flaws in the implementation and operation of DPE in many areas across the country yet there is no statutory guidance or scrutiny or censure, except by publicity, once things go wrong."

ENDS


CONTACT:

Neil Herron
12 Frederick Street
Sunderland
SR1 1NA
Tel. 0191 565 7143
Tel. 0845 147 2006
Mob. 07776 202045

www.thepeoplesnocampaign.co.uk

www.neilherron.blogspot.com

www.metricmartyrs.co.uk

NOTES FOR EDITORS:

1. The Offence Code for a contravention 'being parked in a loading bay' (CODE 25) does not differentiate between Blue Badge Holders and ordinary motorists. This means that all Code 25s will need to be checked manually (photographic and Parking Attendant notebook records) in order to ascertain whether a Blue Badge holder was mistakenly ticketed. In the Sunderland case this has been done and, to date, 200 tickets have been refunded.

2. The Department for Transport have been reluctant to release the advice given to Sunderland City Council, and the Freedom of Information request which will confirm the Blue Badge exemption is overdue.

3. There are many Disabled Motoring Groups. Mobilise Organisation has 30,000 members. The matter may become one of great interest to their members, many of whom will have a direct interest in receiving refunds. Mobilise Organisation is not connected in any way with the campaign but contact details are listed below:
Contact: Pamela Morrissey Chief Executive Mobilise Organisation 0870 770 33 33

4. The Sunderland City Council Decriminalised Parking Enforcement: Post Implementation Review can be seen here (see section 8.3)

5. The People's No Campaign is a subsidiary 'umbrella' campaign attached to the Metric Martyrs Campaign and is concerned with opposing and exposing all forms of unacceptable and unaccountable governance.
- Exposure of the 'out of control' Decriminalised Parking scam which the Government and Department for Transport fails to recognise can be viewed here.
- Exposure of the false 'independence' claimed by the National Parking Adjudication Service can be viewed here.and here
- Recent news on how local authorities are defying the law to rake in millions here
6. The People's No Campaign has grown out of the Metric Martyrs and the North East No Campaign (massively defeated Prescott in the 2004 Elected Assembly Referendum).
7. Neil Herron along with the late Steven Thoburn were European Campaigners of the Year in 2001 with the Metric Martyrs Campaign beating Head of the European Central Bank, Wim Duisenberg, and his launch of the Euro Notes and Coins.
8. A few examples of some Local Authorities Code 25s issued:
- Plymouth 1789 (total Code 25s)
- Blackburn with Darwen 227 (Blue Badge Only)
- Southend-on-Sea 796 (Blue Badge Only). If Average PCN is £40 ... over £30,000 in Southend alone
- Barrow 2,837 (total Code 25s)
- Neath-Port Talbot 6,146 (total Code 25s)

9. To be revealed next ... the number of Local Authorities that have enforced Decriminalised Parking on Taxi Ranks made under an Act of Parliament without DPE powers ... and the massive amount of money that will have to be refunded. Actual figures have been received following Freedom of Information requests to all DPE authorities.

10.Department for Transport Great Minster House 76 Marsham Street London SW1P 4DR
Enquiry Helpdesk on, 020 7944 8300.