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'GROTESQUE'

Council blasted for raking in up to £22MILLION in parking fines after handing out 183,000 charges in a YEAR

A COUNCIL has been blasted for “grotesque” profiteering after it raked in up to £22million in parking fines in a year.

Lambeth Council in London has been accused of benefiting from low-traffic neighbourhoods (LTNs) after it handed out 183,192 charges in the past 12 months.

Lambeth Council is accused of 'grotesque' profiteering from the fines (file photo)
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Lambeth Council is accused of 'grotesque' profiteering from the fines (file photo)Credit: Alamy

Each fine is £120 but is halved to £65 if it is paid within 14 days.

That means the council could have made as much as £21,983,040 in revenue from the fines, reports.

LTNs involve roads which are closed to traffic in order to give priority to cyclists and pedestrians.

The aim is to decrease emissions from vehicles while also making it safer for walkers and cyclists.

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LTNs have proven controversial with critics blasting them for causing congestion on roads where traffic diverts to.

Figures from the council - gained through a Freedom of Information request - showed that most fines were issued in Streatham, where 62,680 were handed out.

So far, £9,909,702 has been paid to the council while another £10,130,378 is outstanding, it is understood.

A spokesman for One Lambeth, a campaign group which opposes LTNs said: “It’s an awful lot of money and it’s probably more than any other council has made.

“People are struggling to pay their bills, striking because of low wages, struggling with fuel costs, so to have these fines in this excessive climate is slightly grotesque.”

Lambeth council did not respond to a request for comment from the paper.

In June, Chris Jones - an events planner - was left fuming after he missed the start of wedding because Oxfordshire County Council introduced a new LTN.

The council introduced the LTN in east Oxford the previous month with locals saying it has caused disruption around Cowley Road.

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In April, a mum was slapped with a £130 fine after she missed a ";tiny sign" while taking her daughter to a birthday party.

Katie Pennell, of Sydenham in South London, said she drives along Dermody Road "all the time" - but failed to spot a sign warning it's part of a 'low-traffic neighbourhood' scheme.

Lambeth Council could make as much as £22m from the fines (file photo)
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Lambeth Council could make as much as £22m from the fines (file photo)Credit: Getty
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