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Seaside town locals win fight against £70 permit to park outside homes | UK | News

A council engraved plans to see that residents have been collected £ 70 to park out their own homes. The draft proposal put forward by Bournemouth, Christchhurch and the POOLLE (BCP) Council responded by some tourists to the issues containing the “Wild West” park, but the proposal angered many local residents.

The local authority, led by Lib Dem, wanted to establish parking meters along the roads, 0.6 miles of the seaside, and the inhabitants offered £ 70 permission. He wanted to use the money produced from new meters to pay more attractive to remove illegal parked cars. Intense summer days, many visitors struggling to park, dual yellow lines, grass edges, and even intersections, including leaving.

Millie Earl, a member of the BCP leader who explained that the plans have been stopped, said, “We listened to and I would like to give some assurance that we will not support these draft offers as stated in the survey.

“They are very big and they cover a lot of ways, and we understand that there is no solution to paid parking space through the permissions of the inhabitants.

“Without our support, draft offers will not be applied.”

He talked about the maximum of £ 35 pound parking penalties that the councils outside London could give as “ridiculous” and added that he wrote to ministers and deputies to address it.

Cllr Earl said: “We need a fine for a thoughtless and dangerous park to collect money to act as a deterrent and to invest in the first place to invest in an illegal parking space. But we are ignored.

“We want a really simple solution to the park chaos – and this is to properly and deter of those who think it is appropriate to block the sidewalks and carways and park on intersections and donkeys.

“But the central government must change the rules.”

Mark Davison from BCP and Dorset Campaign Group, Telegram The Council “accepted defeat and employs the white flag”.

“They noticed that the public’s tsunami was angry about it,” he added.

Bournemouth Mayor George Farquhar, who is contrary to the plans, told the newspaper that the council was “very pleased” that the council was u.

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