The Welsh Government is to give Local Authorities the power to fine
people parking on pavements.
Ministers are backing the recommendations of an independent
expert group to give Councils additional civil enforcement powers
to fine problem parkers.
“The current law is not as clear as it could be” said Deputy
Transport Minister, , who set
up the taskforce. “There is no specific offence of parking on
pavements, and though the Police can enforce the existing
criminal offence of causing ‘unnecessary obstruction of any part
of the highway’, it is rarely enforced”, he added.
The Welsh Pavement Parking Taskforce rejected the outright ban
being pursued in Scotland, which is set to take five years to
implement, as overly slow and complex. Instead it has set out a
plan to equip local authorities to act from July 2022. The UK
Government has only recently begun to consult on a way to tackle
the problem in England.
“We want more people to walk for short journeys and yet we
tolerate an environment that is often not pedestrian friendly;
too many routes are cluttered or blocked. A recent survey found
that 83% of people in Wales view it as a real problem” Lee Waters
said. “We recognise that in some streets there are too many cars
for the space available and we don’t want to penalise people who
have no alternative. This approach lets Councils target hot spots
and vary its approach depending on local circumstances” the
Deputy Transport Minister added.
All ten recommendations of the Welsh Pavement Parking Taskforce
are being accepted by the Welsh Government. The independent panel
was set up last summer under the leadership of respected
transport engineer , who in parallel
also chaired the taskforce on 20mph local speed limits. In July
the Senedd backed proposals for a 20mph default speed limit in
residential areas, which the Welsh Government intends to be in
force by April 2023.
“Taken together these two initiatives have real potential to save
lives, and rebalance the environment in favour of pedestrians to
create communities that put people before cars” Lee Waters said.