A few weeks back cabinet member Seema Chandawani explained that the Council is "abolishing" daily visitor parking permits on the basis of evidence of their abuse. A proposal to this effect was part of measures approved by the council cabinet last month.
I was contacted this morning by Haringey journalist Gabriella Jozwiak with a copy of her Freedom of Information request about the decision and Haringey's response to that request.
Haringey Council's email to Gabriella shows that apparently the basis on which the daily parking decision was made was hearsay so vague that, as their answer clearly states, it is not even held in formal council records. The email is reproduced below.
Should our council be making decisions on our behalf on the basis of information so anecdotal that the Council feel it unworthy to even be included in its records? This sounds like a slippery slope.
Sent on behalf of Ann Cunningham – Head of Highways & Parking
Dear Ms Gabriella Jozwiak,
Re: Freedom of Information Act Request ref: LBH/15659824
Thank you for your request for information received on 7th August 2024, in which you asked for the following:
Please can the council provide the full "circumstantial evidence" upon which it has based its recommendation to discontinue the option for daily visitor parking permits in the borough. This is referred to in the council's recent Parking Strategy and Policy/Changes Review, Appendix D, section 4.3.
Please give all the evidence you have collected that proves: "daily visitor permits are open to being used for purposes other than intended - typically by commuters using permits to park for the day, or by those residing in properties without entitlements to resident permits".
The Cabinet report stated circumstantial evidence for the proposal, and this is in the form of anecdotal information which has been brought forward from a range of sources over a number of years. While various sections of the council may hold information, it is not held in a format, nor was it intended to be documented, in manner to be used to supply for such a response. The Freedom of Information Act gives people the right to access records held by public authorities, but it does not extend to a right to have records created in order to provide information that is of interest to members of the public. We do not hold this information and are therefore not able to provide it to you.
If you are unhappy with how we have responded to your request you can ask us to conduct an Internal Review. If so, please contact the Feedback & Resolutions Team. (Please note you should do so within two months of this response.)
Yours sincerely,
Ann Cunningham
Head of Service, Highways & Parking
See also below: my addition to this post - concerning Haringey's April 2023 "Parking Schemes – Resident Engagement Policy" and its implications for this issue.
Tags for Forum Posts: daily parking permits, parking, visitor parking, visitor parking permits
Replies are closed for this discussion.
Hi All,
I have just sent the email below to the Haringay Scruity Comittee requesting that they call-in the decision on daily permits. I urge you to do the same, you can reach them on scrutiny@haringey.gov.uk.
I have also emailed my councillors requesting that they ask the Cabinet to call-in the decision.
There is also a scrunity survey running until September 8th LINK HERE - I suggest we all also use this mechanism to raise the points outlined in this thread, plus any other concerns. Question 11 has an open- end box where these issue can be raised.
***email***
Dear Haringey Scrutiny Committee,
I am writing to request that the Scrutiny Committee call in the decision to ‘Discontinue the option for daily visitor permits’ made by the Haringey Cabinet on July 16th as part of a broader Parking Strategy Review. A Statutory Consultation on the matter is planned for Autumn.
This request is made for the following reasons:
1. Inequity
This policy change has significant financial implications for residents, and will only affect the poorest areas of the borough. The analysis below clearly illustrates the huge discrepancy in daily parking charges that this policy will introduce. The darker blue the ward, the more deprived, according to the Haringey 2024 state of the borough report.
You can see from this graphic that this cabinet-endorsed decision will disproportionately impact the poorer parts of the borough. Full analysis is attached.
It is of great concern that the Equality Impact Assessment did not identify this issue, and this illustrates that the cabinet was not provided with sufficient information to make an informed decision.
2. Lack of Evidence
The decision was made based upon ‘circumstantial evidence’ of daily parking permit misuse. This evidence was not presented to the Cabinet. Upon receipt of a Freedom of information request, Haringey Council have admitted that that have no record of this problem:
“The Cabinet report stated circumstantial evidence for the proposal, and this is in the form of anecdotal information which has been brought forward from a range of sources over a number of years. While various sections of the council may hold information, it is not held in a format, nor was it intended to be documented, in manner to be used to supply for such a response’.
You can see the full response here.
Why is a decision with such meaningful, borough wide, impact being taken to consultation to solve a problem that has not been robustly documented or analysed by the Council?
Given that there is no understanding of the scope or nature of permit misuse, how can an assessment of alternative options have been conducted? This is a requirement of a policy change, and no details of alternative options considered were presented in the policy package. Again, this illustrates that the Cabinet was not provided with sufficient information to make an informed decision.
3. Failure to follow due process
The Parking Schemes – Resident Engagement Policy provides (quote) “ a framework for future residential parking scheme design and review”. The Framework requires the following steps:
Pre-public engagement
Public Engagement (co-design stage)
Statutory Consultation
Decision
This policy process has not been followed as part B Public Engagement (co-design) did not occur. An online Parking Policy Review consultation took place. This did not meet the criteria of “Public Engagement” because:
Letters and public engagement packs were not provided to all registered properties within the defined area
No street notices were erected
Ward councillors were not be notified of the outcome and the proposed recommendations
Furthermore, the policy states that “The Council will need a minimum response rate of 10% to the public engagement, before any decision can be considered.” Only 100 individuals responded to the online consultation. This does not represent 10% of the adult population affected by this decision.
Given that due process has not been followed, and the Cabinet have been badly advised on this particular issue, it is the duty of the scrutiny committee to call back this decision.
Thank you for your time and consideration of this request. I urge the Scrutiny Committee to exercise its authority to call in the decision for further review, to ensure that any changes to the parking policy are equitable, evidence-based, and follow due process.
Best Regards,
Caitlin
Thank you Caitlin - such a well argued case,
as i said on the other thgread, well done for the email caitlin and for the excellent graphic and well done to hugh for the excellent work in rasing the issue in the first place and pinpointing the issues of inequity and due process and to journalist gabriella jozwiak for sending in the foi.
thank you all.
Have just heard back from one of our Harringay Councillors, Anna Alba. It seems they will be meeting with the Assistant Director for Director Services and the Cabinet Member for Resident Services at the beginning of September to put the concerns residents raised - and alternative ideas to abolishing the Day Parking pass.
I asked if our councillors can request the Scrutiny Ctte to call in the decision? If so, will they do so? I said that this seems preferable to the Statutory Consultation process - which, as I understand, can only ask for a binary YES/NO response to the original proposal. If that is rejected, we are back to considering alternatives in any event.
Will update when I hear further - but it is good our councillors are taking these concerns seriously
thank you
There's a Scrutiny Cafe event on Sept 20, to which I was exceptionally invited. I wondered if that invite was related to this issue. I think anyone can attend, but they ask you to send an email to het them know you want to go. It's an option for people who want the Council held to account on this issue.
Thanks for the update Hugh. Are you able to attend? And have they given you any insight as to why you have been invited?It's on a Friday afternoon so unfortunately won't be able to join. I have not heard anything back from my communications with members of the scrutiny committee.
No. No clue. Maybe its random or perhaps it’s related. I’ll try and go.
Hi all,
An update here. I have been in touch with Ayshe Simsek, a member of the Haringey Scrutiny Committes. She let me know hat this topic was discussed at the recent scrutiny committee. Full details not yet available, as the minutes are awating approal, but she has confimed that that the decision is "not implemented and will come to cabinet on the 10th of December" i.e. will be referred back to cabinet for determination (bit in yellow below)
Thanks Caitlin. That's reassuring, but Democratic Services and Scrutiny Manager, Ayshe Simsek who acts as secretary to the Scrutiny Committee, seems to have an understanding of the situation that is different to that given by the extract of the published minutes you posted. That extract shows that the decision ONLY needs to be referred back to the Cabinet in the event that the Head of Highways recommends changing it. In this case that would mean that it would go through on the nod of Highways if they see fit to retain the decision to abolish daily parking permits. Only if a change to that decision is recommended will it be referred back to cabinet.
As I've said before, my hope is that the attention drawn to this on HoL and in particular by the BBC makes it almost impossible for the decision to proceed unchanged. Thank goodness for mandatory legal safeguards such as the stautory consultation.
Hi hugh
That extract is not the minutes, it is from the original public reports pack. I send that image to Ayshe and asked:
"To confirm my understanding, does this mean that the head of highways and parking has decided to refer the matter back to the Cabinet for determination following the consultation? (i.e .the bit in yellow below from the public reports pack?)"
and her response was
"Yes the decision is not implemented and will come to cabinet on the 10th of December. "
Will confirm this again once the minutes from the scrutiny session are released - will also keep an eye out for the agenda of the December 10th meeting as details are not available yet.
Thanks, I'm not disputing your reporting of the exchange with the Democtraic Services Manager, but I am raising the question yet again the way the Council is explaining the Cabinet's decision. Minutes or reports pack, the words in your extract are what the Cabinet agreed to (I assume that's why you posted them?) and their meaning is what I explained in my last reply.
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