A few reasons why I haven't been
blogging lately.
Firstly, a letter to the Morpeth
Herald got published, which rather took the righteous wind from my
indignant sails; the raison d'etre of this blog being that the Herald
is a supine mouthpiece for vested car-centrism, censoring alternative
views in pursuit of a fawning, car-favouring agenda. Letter's here:
Sir,
with calls for 'free' parking a regular feature of your front page it might be even-handed of you to remind your readership that it costs to provide car parking.
with calls for 'free' parking a regular feature of your front page it might be even-handed of you to remind your readership that it costs to provide car parking.
How
much it costs is moot. The Department for Transport in their
“Essential Guide to Travel Planning” page 17, estimates the national
average annual cost to the provider of a single car parking space to
be around £400: “A study of 21 organisations with travel plans
showed that their average annual spend on maintaining each space was
£400”.
A Northumberland specific figure
is more elusive. The total cost to the Council of providing free
parking to car commuting staff county wide, divided by the number of
spaces this gift comprises, would give us a reasonable yardstick.
But the Council doesn't keep count. Even in times of eviscerating
austerity this perk goes unaudited.
North
Tyneside General Hospital does keep count. Actual and projected costs
of providing their circa 1100 space car park for the five years
2004-9 give the average annual cost for a single space of £505.
Accepting
£400 as a working figure, the Council's parking permit - access to
all municipal car parks county wide, valid for a year, cost £110
(£82.50 concessionary) or £2.12 (£1.59) per week - represents an
annual subsidy to the private motorist end-user of car parking in
Morpeth of £290. Not enough?
Alternatively, we might take the
cost of renting a wedge of central Morpeth hard standing for
purposes other than storing heavy machinery, as our marker. The
space required to park a single car would cost you circa £7,500 a
year if instead you wanted to stand a market stall on it. You can
park a car in central Morpeth for 68 years for what the same space
would cost a stall holder for a year. The heart of even the most
kvetching motorist must be warmed by being able to rent £7.5K worth
of resource for £110.
Calls for 'free' parking are
disingenuous. What's being demanded is that private motoring receive
public subsidy, that non car users (which includes conscientious car
owners who leave the car at home for journeys that allow active and
sustainable alternatives) subsidise the habitual motorist, either
through their Council Tax, through increased business rates
manifesting as higher prices at the tills, or through cuts in public
services.
Secondly, the week after this got an
airing on their letters page, several column inches were given to
reporting a local politician (Labour this time) raging against
parking charges as a tax on motorists. So there seems no point
contending with this sort of willed idiocy.
Finally, I'm not sure I'm very good at
this. Consider:
We must undermine
motorists’ current monopolisation of road space. We must
fundamentally challenge motorists’ sense of entitlement to that
space. We must pursue a radical programme of civilising motorised
traffic. And if/where we’re not as a society prepared to do those
things, we must build separate space for cycling.
Now I might, with
a following wind, after a good night's sleep and a few livening
micro-doses of EPO, be capable of writing something similar. But
though sincere and strongly felt it would be in some sense hollow,
would rest on emotion. For the author Dave Horton, whose excellent
blog I urge
you to follow, it's a conclusion that follows patient research,
rigorous academic process, assiduous reflection, and is all the more
persuasive for it.