Edinburgh parking fines reach almost £7m
More than £328m was collected in parking fines across the UK last year
Almost £7m in parking fines were collected in Edinburgh last year - the highest of any city in the UK apart from London, a report has claimed. The Taxpayers' Alliance study said the figure for the Scottish capital was £1.4m higher than in the much larger city of Glasgow.
The campaign group said the figures were the equivalent of £11 in fines per head of population in Edinburgh.
The city council said it only penalised motorists who were illegally parked.
Every local authority in the UK was asked by the Taxpayers' Alliance to provide details of how much money it collected through parking enforcement regulations in the year 2008-09.
The £6.91m collected by City of Edinburgh Council - which also provides parking enforcement in Midlothian - represented a £170,000 rise on the previous year, the study said.
The results showed that Edinburgh collected far more than Birmingham (£4.1m), Manchester (£4.5m) and the whole of Northern Ireland, where a total of £4.1m in parking penalties was collected last year.
The Taxpayers' Alliance said a total of £328m was collected by the local authorities who responded to its request.
It claimed the figures showed parking fines had become a "massive cash cow" for local authorities, who are allowed to keep any money they collect.
Peter Roberts, chief executive of the Taxpayers' Alliance, said: "Parking enforcement has become a massive money-making industry and we are seeing unscrupulous and target-driven enforcement of parking laws where the penalties far outweigh the offence.
"This report shows that some local authorities are treating drivers unfairly and cashing in on parking fines."
Councillor Gordon Mackenzie, convener of Edinburgh's transport committee, said parking attendants "perform a key role in maintaining safe, steady traffic flow throughout the city, whilst ensuring a good turnover of parking spaces."
He said tickets were only issued to vehicles parked in contravention of the parking regulations.
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Thread: Parking Fine money maker
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25-11-2009 01:35 PM #1
Parking Fine money maker
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25-11-2009 04:54 PM #2This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteFollow the Hibs podcast, Longbangers, on Twitter (@longbangers)
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25-11-2009 05:38 PM #3
I know, lets refund all the inconsiderate parkers their fines, thereby depriving Edinburgh of millions of pounds of funding for essential services
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25-11-2009 06:15 PM #4This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
"Gridlock" by Ben Elton puts it into perspective. Imagine the chaos and mayhem there would be without parking wardens.
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25-11-2009 07:05 PM #5
Imagine if Edinburgh were like Moscow and people just kinda park wherever they like! Ever had to jump out of the way of a car driving along the pavement in Edinburgh before?
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25-11-2009 07:12 PM #6
If you think 'parking enforcement' is about traffic management and not revenue raising then you are blind to the reality.
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25-11-2009 07:15 PM #7This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
It IS about stopping chaos in our streets. If people are daft enough to break the law, then tough. Fleece them.
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25-11-2009 07:40 PM #8
So - as an example - how do you explain 4 parking attendants inspecting one dead end street in stockbridge between 4.50 and 5pm while the main street has cars parked blocking the bus lanes and are ingnored.
The side street had a private nursery where parents were trying to pick up kids at the end of the day. Only 4 non resident bays in the whole street. It was obvious that this was seen as easy potential pickings, rather than anything to do with keeping traffic moving (which I whole heartily agree with - should tow them if blocking bus lanes etc)
I was doing a job there over a few days and the pattern was the same every day. this is one of many examples i could mention
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25-11-2009 07:43 PM #9
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I dont know if they do or not, but taxi drivers and bus drivers should be reporting said parked cars and the attendants for that area should be getting a bollocking.
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25-11-2009 07:48 PM #10
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25-11-2009 07:50 PM #11
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Sounds like a points based system is required then.
10 points for a bus lane car, 0.5pts for a car at a nursery
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25-11-2009 07:55 PM #12
Last time I looked Edinburgh drivers were not any worse than Glasgow drivers at parking illegally, so why does Edinburgh raise so much more in parking fines?
Could it be that the wardens, or whatever title they use this month, are over zealous in dishing out tickets? I know of a bus driver who parked his car for a quick getaway after his nightshift and got a ticket at 3.50am for being 2 feet into the bus stop at Canonmills.
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25-11-2009 07:58 PM #13This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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25-11-2009 08:01 PM #14
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25-11-2009 08:04 PM #15This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
All of us complain when we receive a parking ticket. But, there are a lot of misconceptions out there about parking attendants in Edinburgh. Top of the list? “The most common misconception is that we are on commission,” says Stuart, a long-time attendant. “Whether I issue one ticket or 100 tickets, I get a salary.”
---------- Post added at 09:04 PM ---------- Previous post was at 09:03 PM ----------
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25-11-2009 08:05 PM #16
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Is their salary performance related? If so, then the number of disputed tickets must be taken into account.
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25-11-2009 08:09 PM #17This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Again, from the CEC site:-
They visited 98.3% of the streets scheduled. Streets are scheduled to be visited a minimum number of times a day, depending on the type of street (main traffic route, residential, etc) and location (central or peripheral zone)
The number of parking tickets that had to be cancelled due to parking attendant error fell by 50% last year, from 1.4% to 0.7%
The percentage of tickets which people wrote a letter of appeal about fell from 11.2% to 9.8%. We keep track of this to measure the quality of penalty notices issued
Edinburgh now has one of the highest rates of parking attendants with a nationally recognised qualification in parking control in the United Kingdom.
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25-11-2009 08:10 PM #18
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So - if we believe Stuart, the long-time attendant, then we have hard working attendants and lots of illegally parked cars.
A shame Stuart, the long-tome attendant, can't explain why parents are targetted rather than bus-lane parkers.
I'm sure there's some logical, and reasonable explanation.
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25-11-2009 08:17 PM #19This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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25-11-2009 08:34 PM #20This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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26-11-2009 12:00 PM #21
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I can't remember the last time I brought my car into the city centre to go shopping and probably won't again. No doubt the enforcement and pettiness of parking fines has damaged what was once one of the major shopping streets in Britain. Now filled with mobile phone shops, coffee shops and burger bars with a fair few second rate shops thrown in.
Example of this pettiness, Glenogle Road, a mini had parked in the last bay and their rear wheel was just over the end of the bay. Parking ticket.
No obstructions, danger to traffic, blocked views etc etc. Strictly accurate but for parking a couple of inches out the back of the bay FFS. I should add it was not my car.Last edited by Woody1985; 26-11-2009 at 12:09 PM.
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26-11-2009 12:06 PM #22
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I went to Cav one night and parked my car where the parking spaces are, straight ahead when you come in from the meadows way. All the bays were full, there was a large fence to the right but there was enough room to park my car so I put it there thinking that I couldn't get a fine even though it was a double yellow.
I wasn't obstructing anything and was parked perfectly safe but because there was a double yellow between the last car and the roadworks I got a fine. I suspect they had caught others out because it looked like a genuine space and unless they specifically decided to walk around the car to check for a double yellow then they wouldn't have noticed.
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26-11-2009 12:19 PM #23This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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26-11-2009 01:40 PM #24
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26-11-2009 04:30 PM #25
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Quite apart from the fines for parking illegally, which to a large extent are fair, what I believe entirely reprehensible is the actual cost of parking in Edinburgh, which has grown exponentially in recent years and is set to go up again. No wonder the city centre cannot attract business...
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26-11-2009 05:50 PM #26This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The decline of the city centre as a shopping area is much more complicated than just parking charges. Rents, rates, competition from out of town malls are, IMO, much more of a factor.
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26-11-2009 08:39 PM #27This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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27-11-2009 12:20 PM #28
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That's understandable in those situations. However, if they were that concerned about people's safety they would surely have the cars taken away.
If they put a ticket on the car they probably won't park there again. However, what if there was a fire, accident etc there that night then it's too late.
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27-11-2009 02:21 PM #29This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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27-11-2009 03:46 PM #30
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