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PARKING METERS
Derby City Council has raised £665,000 -
£40,000 more than expected from controversial parking
meters and the cash is being spent on 14 items such as
repairing street lights and improving roads. A total of
73 solar-powered pay and display machines were installed
in 40 city centre streets in February 2002 and protesters
at the time accused the council of devising a new
"stealth tax". But cabinet member for planning
and prosperity, Councillor Sara Bolton, had offered
reassurance that the cash would help public transport in
the city. "The extra revenue will be put into
improving public transport," she told the full
council at its October meeting in 2001 before the meters
were introduced. The same month, she told the council's
policy committee that she hoped it would encourage more
people to use park-and-ride schemes or the bus.
Director of development and cultural services, Jonathan
Guest, said the council was fulfilling its promise
because the money was still being spent on items related
to transport such as improvements to roads. He said,
"In a way they are revenue costs. It is fair to say
they are not brand new additional works but we are not
using this money to meet base budgets. There are certain
inflationary pressures such as extra contractual costs,
rises in staffing costs and re-tendered contracts, which
have to be met. And, if we had not been able to use the
on-street parking income to maintain standards, it would
have meant a bigger council tax increase."
How Derby City Council has spent or plans to spend the
revenue from on-street parking meters:
£15,000 from the first two months of parking meter
revenue was spent on costs associated with car parking
facilities, such as power and rates.
£10,000 for plants and refurbished street lights to
boost Derby's chances in the Britain in Bloom
competition.
£12,000 restoring vandalised bus shelters and a further
£12,000 on school transport caused by longer terms.
Increased electricity and rates costs for council car
parks accounted for £20,000.
Traffic management works - refurbishing pedestrian
crossings and traffic lights - cost £10,000.
Trimming roadside trees cost £20,000.
Improvements to roads and footpaths cost £201,000.
A study into ways of encouraging children to use public
transport to get to school cost £30,000.
CCTV cameras to monitor on-street parking cost £20,000.
£30,000 was spent on clearing drains to help avert
flooding.
£30,000 on a hit squad dedicated to clearing graffiti
from bus shelters and tackling dog-fouling.
£50,000 on lighting and security systems at car parks.
£38,000 to be spent on clearing drains in the coming
year.
£167,000 will be spent on meeting increases in highways,
street lighting and transport contracts.
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