Archive | January, 2011

More cheaper parking = bliss?

4 Jan

Eric Pickles, the communities secretary has just announced that developers can now build housing with more parking spaces for cars and that towns can compete with each other to provide cheaper parking in town. Is that good news for pedestrians? I don’t think so because it is yet another message from the government that they are favouring motorists over other road users and some much more useful legislation could have been proposed.

More cheaper long term parking in town centres will result in one or two additional journeys during the busiest time of the day per parking space and cheaper short term parking will lead to more people flitting in and out of town during the day which will generate more journeys per day increasing congestion and air pollution etc. More space for cars in new housing projects will make no difference to places that are already built up which is the majority.

It is inevitable that more cheaper town centre parking will lead to complaints from motorists about congestion on the radial routes with associated demands for more roads, wider roads and for the claiming of bus lanes, cycle lanes and re-timing of traffic signals etc etc. Increased congestion will affect public transport, slowing journeys and increasing costs making them less competitive and will result in a loss of services. Park and ride services are already under threat from the cuts to local authority funding. Where services are cut, such as one of Ipswich’s park and ride sites which will close imminently then people will be ‘forced into their cars’ rather than out of them.

Many people now understand that cheap or free car parking paid for by employers and other facilities is a subsidy for drivers paid for by everyone else. Public transport users are not able to ask for a refund for their fares which would be considered as a benefit in kind, however this is exactly what motorists get when they are provided with free or cheap parking by their employers or elsewhere. Cyclists are lucky if they even get a secure cycle rack to leave their bike. Support for workplace parking levies and charging for use of car parks at out of town centres would have reduced the incentive to drive. Strong policies to support sustainable travel options and car clubs would have reduced parking pressures and congestion in all parts of out towns.

Luckily many local authorities support the previous policies and with the severe Local Government cuts it is likely that councils will continue to need their income from town centre parking and will resist cutting a major source of funds. Indeed Leicester is planning to increase town centre parking charges to support park and ride services and Winchester is planning to close a city centre car park at the same time as opening a park and ride site.

The Coalition seems to been setting off back in the old direction of  ‘predict and provide’. This will inevitably end in tears as we can tell from a brief review of recent of history. As an example. In the 1970s the government compulsory-purchased all the houses along this section of the Archway road when they intended to widen the road to motorway standards. They sold them off again only in the mid 1990s after many  severely disrupted public inquiries. This was originally part of the proposed Ringways scheme with 4 motorway standard roads through and around London which were never built (except for the M25 which was a cobbling together of Ringway 3 and Ringway 4).

The houses along the Archway Road were to be buldozed in the 1970s

There were others, including the long and messy M11 Link road protest followed by numerous robust protests by Reclaim the Streets in towns and cities across the UK. Then in 1994 and 1997 landmark Royal Commission Reports on Transport and the Environment were published supporting what the environmentalists had been saying about the folly of responding to congestion by building more roads. In 1996 the Conservative government took notice and launched a ‘great transport debate‘ shortly before they were kicked out and Labour took up the reins.

Luckily we are not going to end up back there again for a number of reasons:

  • Rising oil prices, which are approaching $100 a barrel but are still no where near its previous peak of $150 or the predicted $200. Consider that in 1998 it was $10 per barrel. Rising fuel prices will cause a lot of bother for the government and they can’t respond by lowering taxation on fuel in any meaningful way.
  • Most of our towns are already in place can more parking can’t be provided without demolishing peoples homes which is not going to be considered.
  • Sustainable transport modes such as cycling, car clubs are growing fast at a time that the car industry is on its knees and isn’t about to come up with a dream electric vehicle.
  • Smart phones and other devices and capturing people’s interest and their use is incompatible with pointing a metal box in a straight line. Just look at the people using these devices on trains and buses etc.
  • And then there is the tricky issue of ‘passive driving‘, which is where the consequences of someone decision to drive ends up with someone else dying or getting ill, be it from a traffic collision or poor air quality. There is a very clear parallel between this and passive smoking. Road traffic casualties are at an all-time low but are still far too high with over 2,000 people killed directly by traffic collisions (many of them pedestrians and cyclists) and many more by poor air quality caused by other people’s decisions to drive.

I believe that in time privately owned cars in cities will in the future be as out-of-date as ‘immobile phones’, the ‘Soviet Union’ are becoming. Check out ‘After the car‘ for details.

£234m repair bill for damage to pavements by illegal parking

3 Jan

Cambridgeshire County Council estimates that the cost of repairing damage to pavements from illegal parking amounts to £3 million each year. Based on the population of Cambs this comes out at about £234 million per year for the country. This does not cover the cost of policing, installing bollards and other devices to stops vehicles parking illegally or the cost of compensation claims for trips and falls caused by this damage.

So.. when the motoring organisations complain about the £300m raised by councils from parking fines each year one can remind them that this only just pays for the damage caused to the pavements without considering the cost of collection!

Damaged pavement – photo by Alan Stanton

Broken pavement – Poynton Road London N17 Photo Alan Stanton

Broken pavement – Park View Road N17 – Photo Alan Stanton

Confrontation and conflict

1 Jan

Why is the violence towards traffic wardens accepted? In Bradford there were about 80 incidents of violence against wardens in 13 months with the police being called in on 26 occasions including 16 incidents of physical assault. In 2009 Channel 4 reported on ‘shocking levels of racist abuse and violence inflicted on London’s parking wardens’ and even death threats. Back in 1996 a row over a parking ticket near the centre of Birmingham turned into a full-scale riot involving 200 stone-throwing youths and 80 police officers. In 2010 traffic wardens abandoned issuing tickets in one part of Southampton because of fears of their safety. What is the figure nationally I wonder and what it is cost in police time?

This state of mind is well presented by the sorry tale of ‘celeb’ Ingrid Tarrant’s outburst after being challenged by a police officer for parking in a bus stop. Unfortunately… she didn’t help herself by then driving off and resisted arrest. She was convicted of an impressive collection of offenses including: unnecessary obstruction, wilfully obstructing a Pc, resisting a Pc and failing to stop. She was fined £2,700 with £1,200 costs. Not content with that she appealed, lost and received a further £750 costs. The appeal judge said “She has been able to persuade herself that she was in the right and the officer was in the wrong and that self-deception enabled her to believe what she had said.”

Self deception seems to be a big part of this, encouraged no doubt by the way that cars are sold as symbols of virility, power and status.

On a lighter note, one driver who had been fined again and again for parking offenses unwisely told the world via a windscreen sticker that ‘he hated traffic wardens just like everyone else’. He found that it only resulted in more attention from wardens and yet another ticket!

I hate traffic wardens sticker

Personally I get the impression that the pressure on this one is building up year by year with the relentless rise in the number of vehicles on the road.

Does my arse look big in this?

1 Jan

The phrase when I was young was ‘you have eyes bigger than your stomach’. In this case the phrase might be ‘your have aspirations longer than your parking space’. Possibly car dealers should provide free tape-measures prior to purchase…  Mentioning arses, I notice that Renault were recently reprimanded for their ‘I see you baby, shaking that ass’ adverts and indeed seem to have created a whole string of offensive adverts.

Here are some examples of protruding arses and noses near where I live. I was encouraged that the Volvo owner in the first picture, who was very unhelpful with me when I first challenged her, has since parked much more considerately. Also that the owner of the BMW in the same photo moved her car immediately after I pointed out the issue and she hasn’t parked back there since then to my knowledge. We are storing up problems by not sending out cleared signals to car owners that they really should buy a car that actually fits in the space they have available. A clear message should be sent out to people who install dropped kerbs for off-road parking that overhanging vehicles will be penalised. However… to achieve that legislation will be required.

Long Volvo

This one has a nice tow hook to catch ankles!

Snookered by a Parcelforce van

Just go back a little further please

Long Mercedes

I can see you!