Parking charges in Honiton will rise 20 per cent from April 2022

By Hannah Corfield

17th Sep 2021 | Local News

Sign for Lace Walk car park in Honiton
Sign for Lace Walk car park in Honiton

Controversial plans to hike car parking charges by 20 per cent in Honiton's main three car parks have been agreed – but the rise won't kick in until April 2022.

East Devon District Council voted, on Wednesday night, in favour of rising car parking charges for the first time in a decade, with the hourly tariff to go from £1 an hour to £1.20 per hour.

In Honiton, the car parks affected are:

Lace Walk

King Street

New Street (North and South)

The recommendation had initially come from the council's car parking TAFF and scrutiny committees with a proposal that the charges were introduced from April 2021.

Wednesday's full council meeting decided to delay the rises until 2022 in order to help town centre's recover from the coronavirus pandemic, as they felt that price hikes just as the area comes out of lockdown would be a mistake.

But the decision to delay the rise by a year will leave a £300,000 black hole in East Devon's finances that will either have to be filled by cutting back on other services, or reducing the reserves to the bare minimum level that they can hold.

Cllr Paul Millar, who had called the recommendation of the scrutiny committee for debate, proposed that the rise in parking charges be agreed, but for them not to take effect until April 1, 2022, rather than the initially planned 2021 introduction.

He said: "For the last 12 months, we have given grants to keep businesses alive.

"At this crucial stage when businesses have narrowly survived going under and gone through a mountain of hell, why would we let them fall the moment they approach the finish line, and why would we nudge people out of the town centres?

"We need to encourage them back to high streets and town centres after the year of getting into the routine of online shopping.

"For the next year, the savings should be made elsewhere and this can be done, for one year only.

"Raising the charges has to happen, but doing it in less than two months' time is the wrong thing to do, and we can delay the increasers until April 1, 2022."

Cllr Jack Rowland, the council's portfolio holder for finance, said: "It is important to remember why we are doing this.

"We are having to fill a gap of £300,000 which will diminish our reserves to the absolute minimum. We have to do this but doing it this year is not the best way forward – next year, we will have to."

He said that he realised the inherent risks of reducing the council's reserves and said the danger was if they are hit with emergencies or extraordinary requests, they will have to look at how the money is raised or defer services.

But he added: "I feel this is wrong time because of the highly unusual circumstances we are in to increase car parking charges.

"There will be a certainty about next year, reserves are there for a reason and ideally are not taken to a minimum."

Cllr Sarah Jackson added: "Unfortunately, I appreciate that there will have to be rises in car parking, as we haven't put them up for years, so we are at the point where we have to generate some revenue somewhere to support our services.

"But I welcome the deferral for people to get back to some normality and back into work and they were face additional financial pressures, so it is sensible to defer it but we need to be clear there do need to be some rises."

But Cllr Ian Thomas felt that delaying the rise for another year 'bordered on irresponsible' due to the fact it would cut the reserves of the council down to the absolute minimum they can hold.

He said: "This a shortfall of £300,000 in a £9m budget – over three per cent of the total budget.

"How does the administration intend to make £300,000 this year, or is it taking the reserves down to the absolutely minimum? I think that borders on irresponsible and is a risk too far.

"We bottled the car parking issue 12 months ago and it was a great disappointment. We have sailed close to the wind and on this we are sailing close to the wind into the eye of the storm, and that is irresponsible for a public body.

"In a time of enormously uncertainty, it doesn't take much of a jolt to put a significant threat to the revenue budget."

Other East Devon car parks affected are:

Sidmouth – Roxburgh, Ham (East and West), Manor Road, Mill Street and Manor Pavilion

Exmouth – Imperial Road, Imperial Recreation Ground, London Inn, Beach Gardens, Queens Drive, Queens Drive and Queens Drive Echelon

Beer – Central and Fore Street

Budleigh Salterton – Rolle Mews and Lime Kiln

Proposals over the introduction of an evening parking charge of £1 and for a Sunday parking charge to be introduced in Ottery St Mary, Honiton and Axminster will go before the council's cabinet next week.

     

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