Revealed: Staggering sum made from parking charges at Preston and Chorley hospitals

Scale of income raised by Lancashire Teaching Hospitals Trust from parking charges last year revealed
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Lancashire Teaching Hospitals Trust raised millions of pounds through charging staff, patients and visitors to park last year, figures reveal.

Trade union GMB said it is "sickening" that nurses, midwives and cleaners in many trusts across the country have had to shell out money to park at their place of work, as it called on ministers to scrap parking charges for workers altogether.

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NHS Digital data shows Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust made around £4.3m through parking charges and penalty fines in the year to March 2020.

Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust made around £4.3m through parking charges and penalty fines in the year to March 2020Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust made around £4.3m through parking charges and penalty fines in the year to March 2020
Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust made around £4.3m through parking charges and penalty fines in the year to March 2020

Of that, £3.6m was paid by patients and visitors, while £743,728 was raked in through charging staff to park.

Figures reveal that patients and visitors paid an average hourly rate of £1.83 at the most expensive of the trust's three sites, while staff dug out 6p per hour at the priciest spot.

Across England, NHS trusts raised £289m from parking charges – nearly a third of which came from staff parking, generating £90m over the year.

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The figures represent the gross income earned by the NHS and do not take into account its own costs for providing car parking.

Workers are losing £2 or more from their pay packet every hour at the most expensive car parks nationally, the data shows.

Trade union GMB said charging NHS staff to park at work is "disgraceful".

Rachel Harrison, the union's national officer, said: "Government cuts have inflicted a heavy toll on the NHS, but trusts should not be clawing that cash back by charging the people we rely on to keep us alive."

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The Government announced last year that it would cover the costs of providing free car parking to NHS staff working in hospitals during the coronavirus pandemic. However, it said the scheme would end in all but "certain circumstances" as the pandemic eased over the summer.

Ms Harrison added that it was "sickening" to see workers forced to shell out for parking again as some trusts reintroduced charges for staff.

“Ministers must now support our healthcare heroes by enforcing free hospital staff parking and scrapping plans to reintroduce charges once the pandemic ends," she added.

Patients' rights campaigners the Patients Association said while billing people to park at NHS car parks is a "charge on people who are unwell," it provides much-needed income for trusts at a time when their finances are under pressure.

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A spokesman for the Department of Health and Social Care said: "In March, the Government committed to making hospital car parking free for NHS staff for the duration of the pandemic and is providing additional money to NHS trusts to cover the cost of implementing this.

"Any surplus income generated from hospital car parks not used to fund the provision of car parking, such as security and maintenance, must be reinvested into frontline care."

But greater clarity on the overall funding pot for free staff parking is needed, according to NHS Providers, which represents trust leaders.

In a briefing to MPs, the organisation said it is "vital" that trusts receive enough funding to pay for the measure to enable them to maintain services and put money into frontline services.

It added that some trusts had already reinstated charges for workers to ensure there were enough spaces for staff and patients as people avoid public transport during the pandemic.

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