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Home / Northern Advocate

Illegal parkers face shaming

By Peter de Graaf
Northern Advocate·
6 May, 2015 08:12 PM3 mins to read

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Cars using disabled parking spaces need to display this CCS mobility card. Photo / Michael Cunningham

Cars using disabled parking spaces need to display this CCS mobility card. Photo / Michael Cunningham

A new Facebook page aims to shame able-bodied drivers misusing parking spaces reserved for the disabled in Northland.

Called Naughty Northland Parking Offenders, the page has been set up by Whangarei disability advocate Kim Robinson.

Mr Robinson was inspired to set up a "mobility parking wall of shame" during a visit to the Tikipunga shops when he found three vehicles without permits parked in clearly marked mobility spaces. To make matters worse a security van was parked on the access strip next to one of the spaces, blocking wheelchair access to the footpath.

"I mentioned this to one of the store owners and it turns out they're too scared to ask the drivers of those vehicles to move, out of fear of being assaulted."

Mr Robinson said misuse of mobility parks was a worldwide problem caused by ignorance. Northland was no exception.

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Despite nationwide campaigns and regular media coverage - such as a recent case where a property developer left his $400,000 Lamborghini in a mobility parking space at an Auckland mall - people continued to misuse the spaces.

Some countries used heavy fines to deter misuse while others offered only a slap on the wrist. New Zealand needed to consider raising the fines it imposed, he said.
Mr Robinson said illegal parkers usually moved when asked though some offered excuses.

He recommended calling the local council about cars parked illegally in council-owned spaces; for private car parks, such as malls and supermarkets, a store owner should be informed.

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People could also submit photos to his Facebook page together with the location, date and time. The photo should show the car, including registration plate, company name if any, and the top of the dashboard to show the driver had no permit. He urged people to take photos only if it was safe to do so.

"Don't leave abusive notes on the windscreens of non-mobility permit holders. This doesn't help. And remember to check for the permit, not the person. Some people have hidden disabilities that genuinely require the need to use those mobility spaces," he said.

Mr Robinson said he was also setting up a group of Mobility Parking Ambassadors, members of the public who would keep an eye on their local parking spaces and educate drivers who were tempted to misuse them.

Not only does misuse of mobility spaces prevent disabled people from going about their daily errands, it is also unfair because they pay for the right to use them. Illegal parkers don't pay so are freeloading on the disabled. People who need a mobility parking permit have to get a doctor's approval then apply to CCS, which administers the scheme. Short-term permits cost $35; long-term permits are $50 for five years. Go to http://mobilityparking.org.nz for more information. Go to www.facebook.com/northlandparking (or type Naughty Northland Parking Offenders into Facebook's search bar) to post a photo. So far the page has shamed two delivery trucks blocking muliple mobility parks - one at ASB Stadium in Whangarei, the other in McDonald's carpark in Kerikeri.

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