Hospital parking
The costs of hospital parking in the United kingdom have been widely criticised for many years. In Scotland and Wales car parking fees were largely abolished in 2008.
Proposals to scrap charges have been criticised on several grounds. The cost of running secure car parking is substantial. If a surplus is generated it is used to pay for healthcare. In many hospital sites there is a shortage of car parking space and making it free will encourage people to come to hospital by car without generating any extra space. Where hospital parking is already free it may be used by people who are not visiting the hospital, and it does nothing to discourage the inappropriate use of cars.[1] T
England
A third of hospitals in England increased their care parking charges in 2019. The total raised from parking fees was £254 million. A survey of 7,800 people found 86% said parking added to the stress of their hospital visit and they described the fees as a "rip-off", "extortionate" and "astronomical". Car parking fees were an issue in the 2019 United Kingdom general election.[2] After the election Matt Hancock announced that all the 206 NHS hospital trusts in England would be expected to provide free car parking from April 2020 to people that may be frequent hospital visitors, or those disproportionately impacted by daily or hourly charges for parking, including blue badge holders, frequent outpatient attenders, parents staying overnight with sick children in hospital, and NHS staff working nightshifts.[3]
Scotland
Claims by the Scottish National Party in 2019 that parking fees have been removed from all NHS hospitals in Scotland have been contested because there are still fees at Ninewells Hospital, Glasgow Royal Infirmary and Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, set up as part of the private finance initiative deals.[4]
Wales
There have been attacks on cars in the car park at Wrexham Maelor Hospital which apparently is not adequately supervised. Local residents have called for charges to pay for better security.[5]
Cardiff and Vale University Health Board permit free parking for four hours and an additional four hours free by entering their registration into electronic screens in the hospitals. From February 2020 they are proposing to reduce the additional hours to two, to "reduce inappropriate parking on hospital sites". The Community Health Council say that problems are caused by administration and non-clinical staff abusing the system when they should be using the park and ride system.[6]
Northern Ireland
From 2016/17 to 2018/19 the Northern Ireland health trusts collected £15,673,977 from hospital car parking charges. More £2.8 million of that was charges for staff parking. Charges are decided individually by the trusts. The campaign group Patient Voice NI said no patient or employee should have to pay to park at a hospital.[7]
Financial help
People who do have to pay charges may be eligible for help under the Healthcare Travel Costs Scheme.
References
- Ramanauskas, Ben (28 November 2019). "It may be popular, but scrapping hospital parking charges would be a total disaster". City AM. Retrieved 26 February 2020.
- "A third of hospitals 'increased parking charges'". BBC. 10 December 2019. Retrieved 26 February 2020.
- "Free hospital parking for thousands of NHS patients, staff and carers". Building Better Healthcare. 23 January 2020. Retrieved 26 February 2020.
- "SNP bosses urged to withdraw 'offensive' claims party has scrapped parking charges at all NHS hospitals". The Courier. 30 August 2019. Retrieved 26 February 2020.
- "Leader readers had their say on ongoing safety issues at Wrexham Maelor car park". The Leader. 12 February 2020. Retrieved 26 February 2020.
- "Cardiff and Vale hospitals". Wales Online. 15 January 2020. Retrieved 26 February 2020.
- "Northern Ireland hospital parking raises £15.5m- including £2.8m from NHS staff". Belfast Telegraph. 29 January 2020. Retrieved 26 February 2020.