Medical staff fined £150,000 over charges in car park that was rigged against them

Last Updated: July 18, 2017By

Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond recently said public sector workers like nurses were overpaid, according to a Cabinet leak. Perhaps he also sees the imposition of a £150,000 car parking fine as a triumph for private enterprise [Image: Ben Jennings].

No doubt Philip Hammond thinks a £150,000 fine is no big deal for a nurse – what with public sector salaries being so far ahead of the private sector. Right, Spreadsheet Phil?

This particular nurse – along with other medical staff at University Hospital of Wales in Cardiff – has been ordered to pay a huge amount of money to a private car parking firm that has failed to provide enough spaces for staff at the hospital.

Didn’t anything seem fishy about that, to the judge examining the case?

Isn’t it a rigged system? Staff have to attend their place of work, and must park somewhere. If the car park managing company doesn’t provide enough spaces, they end up parking in places set out for members of the public – and incur a fine. It seems like a perfect scam, to This Writer.

Add in two more elements: Firstly, the fact that parking at the hospital will become free next year, in line with the Welsh Government’s 2008 announcement that all hospital car parking charges would be scrapped.

Secondly, the fact that a new deal was forged between Cardiff and Vale Health Board and Indigo Park Services, which runs the car park, in April 2016, making it possible for the company to take staff to court over unpaid parking tickets. Previously they were legally unenforceable.

Put all those elements together and there seems a definite method to this meanness.

Despite Mr Hammond’s alleged beliefs, staff at the hospital don’t have the money to pay the fines and a crowdfunding bid has been set up to help them.

A nurse says she is facing a bill of about £150,000 in charges to a private company for parking at the hospital where she works.

The unnamed nurse is just one of 75 members of staff at the University Hospital of Wales in Cardiff who lost a court battle against Indigo Park Services, which manages car parks on the site.

The doctors and nurses have been ordered to pay an initial £39,000 in outstanding parking charges and £26,000 in court costs after a judge at the civil justice court ruled they must pay £128 per ticket.

Indigo brought the case against the NHS staff who parked in visitor parking while at work because there is not enough space for them all to use the allocated staff parking.

Cardiff and Vale Hospital Trust issues more than 8,500 car parking permits to staff but there are about 1,800 employee parking spaces on the entire site – meaning there is not enough space.

(Source: NHS nurse ordered to pay £150,000 in fines to private firm for parking at hospital where she works)


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No Comments

  1. marcusdemowbray July 18, 2017 at 6:44 am - Reply

    Scandalous.

  2. damo July 18, 2017 at 7:06 am - Reply

    I cant imagine the pressure these nurses and doctors are under working long hours under such pressure for low wages takeing care of people acts of kindness to finnish a long shift exhausted to come out and find a parking ticket……..a parking ticket…..publicly shame indigo parking services…publicly shame them expose them …shame and expose hammond …..but i wonder if it would have any impact ….vampirs have tough skins ive heard

    • Zippi July 20, 2017 at 12:20 pm - Reply

      damo, please, don’t demean vampires!

  3. Dez July 18, 2017 at 12:00 pm - Reply

    I suppose this is another example of outsourced privatisation taking advantage of a captive audience. In this particular case it is not clear if this bandit Health Trust was on one of those incentive privatisations where they flog off their car parks for an upfront large lump sum and for a 20 year contract that sum would have been substantial. However no matter how substantial a sum those self same alleged leaders of this Trust must have known all about the free parking mandate that was nearly upon them and immediately closed down the contract conversation….or maybe in this case fast tracked their agreement on the deal rubbing their hands and their windfall. If these Health Trust managers knowingly fast tracked this deal they need to attend their own hospital to have their heads examined, or better still resign asap..

  4. Rusty July 18, 2017 at 3:59 pm - Reply

    You can’t shame the shameless! No parking then the staff should turn around and go home! Then the hospital management would have to act! Play hard ball with these aholes!

  5. wildswimmerpete July 18, 2017 at 5:39 pm - Reply

    Looks like Indigo is a French multinational outfit. In other words we’re faced by a company with deep legal pockets that’s greedy for profits at any cost. Remind you of a certain British outsourcer whose moniker begins with a “C”?

  6. Thomas July 19, 2017 at 1:17 am - Reply

    Greedy private company pigs. Don’t get me wrong, private companies can be very good in some ways. But when they get a monopoly, they vastly take advantage of it. Selling monopolies was one of the things that got Charles the First into trouble.

  7. John Spencer-Davis July 19, 2017 at 5:58 am - Reply

    If the facts of the case are as stated, then I find the judge’s decision astonishing. In fact, I find the whole situation Kafkaesque. You mean to say, that the hospital employees have been issued parking permits which entitle them to park free of charge at their workplace, but there is only parking space for less than a quarter of the staff? What are the rest of the staff expected to do with their parking permits? I am not surprised that the staff have been refusing to pay fines. Why should they pay fines? They have permits. Whose fault is it that there are no spaces? Rather than victimising the staff, the judge should have been denouncing the administration and the fining company for this farcical situation. So should the media. J

  8. Zippi July 20, 2017 at 12:30 pm - Reply

    I have read dome very unsympathetic letters, in the Metro, regarding this and am astounded. Do these people not understand the consequences of these nurses not getting to work on time? I’m sure that these are the same people who shouted down the junior doctors, when they went on strike. What I don’t understand – perhaps, you can verify this, Mike – is why the land was private and not hospital land. unless, of course, like at Stoke Mandeville Hospital, much of it has been sold off by the stupid Tories! Why is a private firm carrying out these duties and not hospital employees? On what planet was the judge? I’m sure that people would have had something to say, had lives been lost, as a result of these nurses not being able to get to work on time, or at all.
    Since when did we become such an intolerant society? What happened to compassion? Empathy? Understanding? Community? Human decency? Have all of these been sold? now, it seems, we have to pander to the whims of individuals, for fear of being labelled a bigot yet when it comes to shared responsibility, this is a dirty concept. It is all about ME. We, us…? No. They and them are not my concern.

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