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A fine mess as enforcer gaffes cost NCP £62k



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Published Date: 03 May 2008
EDINBURGH'S parking enforcers have been hit with a £62,000 fine after thousands of tickets had to be cancelled because of mistakes.
NCP Services had the cash deducted from its annual payment from the city council because more than 3000 parking tickets – worth at least £90,000 – were scrapped due to errors by attendants.

New figures also revealed today that NCP is missing "tar
gets" for the number of tickets handed out, with each enforcer issuing 1.2 an hour.

While the council has always insisted targets do not exist, it has emerged "performance indicators" agreed with NCP when it took over the contract in December 2006 stipulated that 1.5 tickets would be issued every hour.

Today's figures show council chiefs raked in £5.6 million from parking tickets in the first year of NCP's contract, and also collected just under £10m in pay-and-display revenue at the same time.

Edinburgh's transport leader, Councillor Phil Wheeler, today insisted the council was "more than happy" with the service being provided by NCP. He said:

"NCP Services are expected to meet a series of key performance indicators every month as a measure of good service. I am pleased to report that the vast majority of the most important of these were met regularly.

"One of the least important indicators to the council, the activity level, was based upon the number of tickets that NCP said that they would issue every hour, as well as the historical average of vehicles which are parked incorrectly in the city each day.

"I can guarantee that they were never penalised for not issuing a certain number of tickets."

As well as the number of cancelled tickets, however, other areas where NCP was penalised financially by the city council included staffing levels and the number of illegally parked cars removed from the city's streets.

The figures show that of the 215,653 tickets issued in the first year of the contract, 75 per cent were paid in full. Of 12,000 tickets that were cancelled, parking attendant error was responsible for a quarter of them. The introduction of new handheld computers in May last year is thought to account for most of the errors.

Driving groups said motorists are unlikely to see the indicators as anything but targets for the enforcers. Last year attendants told the Evening News they were under pressure to ticket at least 60 cars a week in the Capital.

Neil Greig, head of policy in Scotland for the Institute of Advanced Motorists, said: "I am surprised at the activity levels, it does sound like theses are targets but the council are just using management speak to describe them.

"It is right that NCP are held to account by the council but I think a lot of Edinburgh drivers will be a little uncomfortable to hear the parking attendants have these figures to work towards."

A spokesman for NCP Services said the city council used a "wide range of performance indicators" to ensure that it was doing its job. He added: "If we fail to meet the standards they have set for us, then quite rightly financial penalties are incurred.

"That is a perfectly sensible way for the council to ensure it is getting value for money."

www.edinburgh.gov.uk



The full article contains 557 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Dileas,

03/05/2008 11:40:42
It's ludricrous that we are still discussing whether NCP has targets - of course they do. That fines are falling is a mark of the lower footfall in the city centre, already reported in The News. Lower footfall means fewer cars coming into the city centre means fewer parking fines.

The eventual result will be an empty and derelict city centre with developing shopping in out of town malls and, particularly, Glasgow where parking provision is much better.
2

Alfred E. Neuman,

03/05/2008 12:31:20
Targets/resources for detecting and fining anti-social behaviour, violence, boorishness and intimidating drunkenness = none.

Labour union ape mentality targets to raise more tax, erm, fines from the middle-classes = plenty.

Municipal carparks non-existant virtually, necessity for having these very high. What would happen if our council used the peoples land to meet the peoples needs? Less excuse to tax, erm, fine us for doing the best we can in the absence of resources needed.
3

Angry PA Edinburgh,

03/05/2008 12:54:24
slow news day was it!!!!!!!!
4

,

03/05/2008 12:58:48
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
5

Euan,

Edinburgh 03/05/2008 13:52:52
It says that of 12,000 tickets cancelled, one quarter of them were cancelled due to attendant errors.

That means 9000 tickets were cancelled because more and more people are(correctly)appealling badly-issued tickets - and having them overturned as a result.

Well done to the people who do this. I encourage ANYONE who gets a ticket to appeal it, regardless of it's legitimacy or not.

Make the people at NCPs claims department work as hard as possible, after all, it is NCP themselves who are out to try and rob every single motorist in this town at any given opportunity.

6

Jenny MacArthur,

03/05/2008 14:58:43
The only people who object to targets are the selfish idiots who want to leave their lumps of metal in everyone else's way where they're not allowed to, for good reason. Stop whining you self-regarding morons. Parking regulations are there to keep your anti-social habits within tolerable limits. You occupy far too much of our city as it is.
7

,

03/05/2008 15:32:44
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
8

,

03/05/2008 15:44:22
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
9

Dileas,

03/05/2008 16:00:07
Sorry Mario, I am not clear - which part is difficult - walking the streets or placing the tickets?
10

Dragonlord,

03/05/2008 16:41:49
So lets get this straight. The council withhold £62,000 because they lost £90,000 due to attendant errors. Why not fine the company the full ammount lost, and all is square? Ticket on vehicles illegally parked but use some common sense in doing so. As for targets, what ( I know) IF, no-one illegally park for one day, how would they be expected to meet targets?
11

PrairieBoy,

03/05/2008 17:11:56
They have quotas to prove that they are actually working, not sitting around coffee shops all day. If their income was based on their conviction rate rather than volume of paper produced the system would improve.
12

Scotish Exile,

03/05/2008 19:15:18
#6
Jenny my dear, not being able to afford to buy a car; not being capable of passing a driving test and being a bitter and twisted person does not give you the right to think that we are in your intellectual league i.e. "morons", I will park where I want, and it feels just great, get used to it dear, cars are here to stay, if you don't like it, get out!, or does your bru money not allow you to travel very far??
13

undercover pa,

edin 03/05/2008 21:23:13
yes we have targets and if you dont make them you are taken out the back and your fingers are broken hahahaha get the news to find out about the 4 pa assaulted on street in the past 4 weeks nothing in the news about that and not alot about from ncp managment
14

,

03/05/2008 22:05:05
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
15

Justmasel,

edinburgh 03/05/2008 23:30:44
What a surprise! the council insist they dont have targets,more lies from the council,instead of targets just do the job properly if people park within the rules they wont get a ticket,if you have targets that must be reached there are bound to be incorrect tickets.
16

Julian,

EDINBURGH 04/05/2008 02:03:11
Could anyone please tell me, if we didn't have targets/indicators then how would we know if these wardens were actually working? After all, it's us who are paying their £10m a year wage bill.
17

Exact,

Edinburgh 04/05/2008 10:50:03
Just a wee correction. It is not your's, who pay the wages. It is NCP on behalf of the Edinburgh Council.
18

Exact,

Edinburgh 04/05/2008 10:50:56
Just a wee correction. It is not your's, who pay the wages. It is NCP on behalf of the Edinburgh Council.
19

Exact,

Edinburgh 04/05/2008 11:06:50
#13

It is obviously not very popular to write about that subject. A PA attacked in Newington, a serious illness sufferrer, who finished in a blood bath with a broken finger, after an ex-banker's attack. This would sound too positive for the guys in yellow uniforms.

 

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