Cardiff NHS hospital staff lose parking tickets case

  • Published
Media caption,

Nurse Felicity Richards said finding a parking space could add up to an hour to her working day

Seventy-five members of staff at a Cardiff hospital have been left "broken" by a court ruling that means they owe thousands of pounds in parking tickets, a campaigner has said.

On Friday, a judge at Cardiff Civil Justice Centre ruled private company Indigo could collect the charges from University Hospital of Wales staff.

This means 75 people with outstanding tickets must pay the debt.

Sophie Round, a healthcare support worker, said she was "gutted".

"It's not really the outcome that we wanted and what we earn doesn't really cover the fines," she added.

Campaigner Sue Prior said: "It's horrendous. Some of them [staff] are broken. They're scared stiff, petrified, they feel sick. This affects everyone from cleaners to doctors."

She said staff had permits which allowed them to park in designated areas for £1.05 a day, but a lack of spaces meant staff had been forced to park in unauthorised areas.

It had been claimed that one nurse owed £150,000 but it has since been said this is not the case.

Indigo said as a "gesture of goodwill" in April 2016 it cancelled all parking charge notices up to the end of March 2016 and reduced the charge to £10 if paid within 14 days.

Image caption,

Healthcare support worker Sophie Round (centre) said she was 'gutted' by the judgement

A spokesman said Friday's court hearing related to three "persistent offenders" who had accumulated in excess of 100 tickets between them since April 2016.

He added: "As the company responsible for managing parking and ensuring the free flow of traffic at Cardiff UHW, we have an obligation to ensure enforcement of parking restrictions... the court's ruling has justified our decision to take this action."

Staff nurse Felicity Richards said: "I have to allow 45 minutes to an hour extra to park my car every morning.

"By the time I get into work there are usually no parking spaces and I have to park off site and quite often I have to park a 20 to 25 minute walk away."

But Cardiff and Vale University Health Board said more than 98% of staff complied with parking regulations and it was "disappointing" some had "chosen to refuse to co-operate".

Len Richards, the board's chief executive, said: "People have known what the potential outcome could be and I don't think there's anything we can do, as an organisation, to defend them from that."

Media caption,

The health board's chief executive Len Richards said parking controls were brought in "for health and safety"

He said the parking controls were brought in for health and safety reasons, and the board had been "working very hard" to increase parking and create sustainable travel plans.

"The park and ride started in May this year... we also changed the flow of traffic through the site to make it more controlled and safer and, in doing that, we increased the amount of parking that was available by about 50 car parking spaces.

"We are working with the council around creating a public service hub for vehicles and buses to transport people and make that easier for staff, and we are working on a cycle hub to encourage people to cycle to work."

In 2015, it urged staff to pay any parking fines,, external saying they had been correctly issued and it did not intend to dispute them.

Indigo has had a contract to manage and maintain the hospital's car parks for several years and has 1,250 spaces there.

Tina Donnelly, the director of Royal College of Nursing Wales, said it was hoped car parking charges at the hospital would be scrapped from June 2018.

But, in the meantime, she said: "Due to the current cap on pay, nurses are contacting us with hardship issues, and car parking charges only add to their financial problems. A solution to this issue needs to be found."

Ms Prior said she had been campaigning on behalf of staff because two of her children were born blind at the hospital, but after medical intervention now have some sight.

"I had to help. Without those people and the NHS my children would be blind," she said.

Image source, Mick Lobb/Geograph
Image caption,

Seventy-five cleaners, doctors and nurses have outstanding tickets