Car parking strategy under review

Having inherited a mixed economy of car parking management for both on and off street facilities from the former Councils, Cheshire East Council have taken steps in their first year to ensure the whole of the Borough is now covered by the appropriate Orders under the Traffic Management Act 2004.

In addition, following pilot schemes in Macclesfield and Wilmslow, the Authority have recently agreed a borough-wide Residents’ Parking Scheme Policy and provided £480k over three years to implement these where needed.

This year the Council have announced they will be reviewing its Car Parking Strategy as part of the wider Local Transport Planning process.

A spokesman from Cheshire East said “An important element of this review will be to capture a coherent and robust evidence base and develop the strategic framework for future decisions on our priorities, the need for further controls, our rationale for tariffs and our ongoing investment needs.

“The review will be comprehensive covering on and off street provision throughout the Borough and as such will be a lengthy process but should be complete by the year end.

“In the meantime, the anomaly that exists in the rates applied to the Crewe and Nantwich area will be scrutinised as a priority. Results of this review will be implemented from 1st October 2010.

“Finally, we will actively promote retailer-led reimbursement schemes and help implement these locally where there is the necessary support from town centre traders.”

Tags:
Cheshire East Council, Parking
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Comments

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Geoff Hall
Friday 9th April 2010 at 8:52 am
The Council should start cutting its costs by firing its spokesman, since he or she appears to be unable to communicate in plain English: "Capture a coherent and robust evidence base"? "Develop the framework for future decisions on our priorities"? "Our rationale for tariffs"? Do they really think this kind of overblown language impresses us? The key words here I suspect are "further controls", "tariffs" and "our ongoing investment needs". In plain English: "We shall be making your lives more difficult, charging you more and making sure we have all the money we need. Oh, and we'll be spending a lot of time and money working out how to do it". I would prefer to be less cynical but this kind of whitewash erodes public confidence in the sincerity of our public servants and needs to be stamped out.