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As Leicester drops Workplace Parking Levy plans, Nottingham says it has ‘revolutionised’ transport there

10 years on the only European city with a workplace parking levy says emissions are down and public transport is better

Canal Street, Nottingham(Image: Joel Moore)

Nottingham City Council’s leaders say 10 years of Workplace Parking Levies in the city have brought a raft of benefits and played a key part in putting the brakes on congestion.

The council is singing the praises of the scheme – which makes bigger companies pay for their parking spots – just as neighbouring Leicester City Council scrapped its own plans to avoid burdening businesses with added expense during the cost of living crisis.

in place, with companies which have 11 parking spaces or more for employees, visitors, students or pupils . The council said 100 per cent of companies affected had paid their share.

As well as encouraging people to stop driving to work, money raised has helped improve the city’s transport network to an extent which, it says, hasn’t been possible in other parts of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

The council said that since it was brought in in 2012 it has raised £90 million to put into public transport or travel improvements – including the city’s trams, Nottingham Station and the Linkbus network.

And while congestion has got worse, the council said it is not as bad as it might otherwise be, while CO2 emissions are also down, contributing to Nottingham’s ambition to become the first carbon neutral º£½ÇÊÓÆµ city by 2028.

Nottingham transport portfolio holder Coun Audra Wynter said the scheme had revolutionised how people travel around Nottingham and connected residents with jobs, education and healthcare.

The council said initial fears that businesses would choose to leave the city to avoid the charge did not play out, saying 2,600 new companies had been created there in the last decade and there was “no evidence” that any had left due to the WPL.