Four in 10 vehicle parking and bus lane fines overturned on appeal

local councils across the UK overturned 40 per cent of all bus lane and vehicle parking fines following appeals from motorists, new data has revealed.
Figures obtained via a series of freedom of information requests sent to every local authority in Britain show 4.3 million appeals for vehicle parking and bus lane fines were lodged between 2012 and 2017, with 1.8 million appeals being successful.
Advertisement – article continues below

• local councils make £819 million from vehicle parking fines
Basingstoke and Dean council overturned the highest proportion of tickets, with 90 per cent of 12,804 appeals lodged over the five-year period proving successful.
This meant a quarter of all vehicle parking and bus lane tickets issued by the council were eventually cancelled, although the installation of new vehicle parking machines in 2017 has since reduced the rate of successful appeals.
Christchurch Borough council, meanwhile, overturned 83 per cent of tickets on appeal, while Nuneaton and Bedworth overturned 81 per cent.
Aberdeenshire Council, which overturned 70 per cent of tickets on appeal, said they “generally take the view that the cost of pursuing payment is not the best use of resources” when dealing with first-time offenders.
The figures, obtained by the BBC from 245 local authorities in Britain, found 84 councils overturned more than 50 per cent of all tickets on appeal.
• surge in driver details sold to private vehicle parking firms
The results were deemed “frightening” by RAC spokesman Simon Williams, because: “They reveal that in a very high proportion of cases drivers have been right to appeal. Councils should learn from this.”
Martin Tett, the local government Association’s carry spokesman, told the BBC: “As these figures confirm, people who want to challenge a vehicle parking fine have access to a clear and effective appeals process.
“Councils have to strike a difficult balance when setting vehicle parking policy, to make sure that there are spaces available for residents, high streets are kept vibrant and traffic is kept moving. They also need to ensure that emergency vehicles can get access to incidents quickly.”
Have you ever escaped a vehicle parking penalty? In February 2018, a London motorist managed to avoid a £130 fine because he needed the toilet…

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *