Free parking at north Essex streets due to be scrapped
- Published
Free-of-charge on-street parking is due to be scrapped at 19 locations in north Essex.
Councillors voted to approve the measures at a meeting at Colchester Town Hall on Thursday.
One market stallholder said free parking was "crucial" for residents.
The changes are expected to increase revenue for local councils and a North Essex Parking Partnership (NEPP) spokesperson said the plan would "improve traffic management".
The 19 streets affected are in the Colchester, Braintree, Epping Forest and Harlow districts.
Drivers can currently park free of charge for a limited period at most of these streets.
Olivia Washington, a market stallholder in Braintree, said the free parking was "crucial" to them.
"In a cost-of-living crisis you do not want to pay extra for parking if you are already going to town to spend money," they said.
James Abbott, a Green Party councillor on Braintree District Council, said the plans did "not appear to be anything other than a revenue raising exercise".
"I just cannot see the justification other than raising money for the people who have been coming to our town centres," he told BBC Essex.
A spokesperson for NEPP said: "Paid parking has proven to be an effective tool for managing traffic flow and ensuring parking availability in busy areas."
Following the NEPP joint committee meeting, external, the spokesperson said the proposals would undergo a "formal public advertising period" allowing residents and "stakeholders" to raise any concerns before the scheme was implemented in the next financial year.
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