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'Idling' motorists in Westminster to face £20 fines | 'Idling' motorists in Westminster to face £20 fines |
(about 2 months later) | |
Motorists in Westminster who sit in a stationary car with the engine running and refuse to turn it off are to be fined £20. | Motorists in Westminster who sit in a stationary car with the engine running and refuse to turn it off are to be fined £20. |
The move reflects concerns from local residents and businesses about air quality, Westminster City Council said. | The move reflects concerns from local residents and businesses about air quality, Westminster City Council said. |
A team of traffic marshals will patrol the borough and ask car idlers to switch off their engines, it said. | |
The London Taxi Drivers' Association (LTDA) said the move would not help abate London's air pollution problem. | |
'Ironic' move | |
The penalties will come into force on 1 May, as a "last resort". | The penalties will come into force on 1 May, as a "last resort". |
The new policy follows Camden Council's fines for buses which idle for too long, introduced in 2011, and Islington Council's fines for idling vehicles introduced in August last year. | |
Westminster has the highest proportion of deaths attributable to air pollution, excluding the City of London, in the country, a report by the council said. | |
An air pollution monitoring station in Oxford Street, in the borough, recorded the acceptable limit set for air pollution - 200 micrograms per cubic metre - was broken 1,503 times in 2014. | |
A comparable station in Sutton did not break the limit at all last year. | |
Steve McNamara, general secretary of the LTDA said the fines were "absolute tosh" and a public relations and money raising exercise from the council. | |
He said: "It is not going to do anything constructive to tackle the pollution crisis in London. When was the last time you saw someone idling in the city? It doesn't happen. | |
"One of the real problems is cars stuck in traffic - research has shown pollution is up by 30% in areas of heavy traffic. Do something to help get the traffic moving." | |
Mr McNamara said another key factor was the number of diesel cars in the capital which emit greater levels of nitrogen oxides - which can cause health problems. | |
He said the move was "ironic" considering Chancellor George Osborne's incentives to diesel vehicles which were exacerbating the problem. | |
Neil Greig, director of policy and research at the Institute of Advanced Motorists, said the "key issue" would be how the marshals enforced the fines. | Neil Greig, director of policy and research at the Institute of Advanced Motorists, said the "key issue" would be how the marshals enforced the fines. |
He said: "If they target private car drivers pulling up for a moment in relatively clean, modern cars in a draconian way - whilst ignoring old buses, coaches, large trucks, utility company vans or taxis idling for long periods - then it will quickly be seen as yet another revenue-raising exercise." | He said: "If they target private car drivers pulling up for a moment in relatively clean, modern cars in a draconian way - whilst ignoring old buses, coaches, large trucks, utility company vans or taxis idling for long periods - then it will quickly be seen as yet another revenue-raising exercise." |
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