http://news.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/04/20/npark20.xml

The parking spy that tells wardens when you are due a ticket
By David Millward, Transport Correspondent
(Filed: 20/04/2005)

A parking enforcement device that sends messages to alert traffic wardens
that a driver should be given a ticket was put on show yesterday as plans
were announced for a professional qualification for parking attendants.

The ParkingEye looks little more than an ordinary pay and display machine at
first sight. But one day it will instil as much fear into motorists as speed
cameras.
Traffic warden and ParkingEye
ParkingEye alerts traffic wardens by text messages

Even Andrew McKerney, the managing director of the manufacturers, said the
machine was "evil" - before correcting himself and describing it as merely
"very efficient".

The on-street version of the six-foot tall device spots a car as it parks
and sends a text message to a traffic warden within seconds if the motorist
either doesn't pay or overstays.

"Traffic wardens won't roam any more," Mr McKerney said with evident glee,
"They will respond."

The version of the machine designed for car parks notes number plates on
entry and, should the motorist fail to leave on time, issues a fine
automatically.

The device was among an array of Orwellian technology on show at Parkex
2005, the parking industry trade show which opened in Birmingham yesterday,
demonstrating that there is a lot of money to be made in an industry which
is worth an estimated �3 billion a year.

It was all rather different from the days when Carl C Magee unveiled the
world's first parking meter in Oklahoma City in 1935 or when they appeared
on the streets of London in 1958.

ACPOA, which runs parking in a number of London boroughs, was particularly
proud of its new hand-held computer for parking attendants.

It takes a picture of the offending car and sticks a picture on the parking
ticket.

"There are always people trying to get out of paying fines, making all sorts
of excuses," said Malcolm Daughtrey, the company's head of business
development.

"This will prove an offence has been committed. If someone has parked on
double yellow lines, this will prove it. So the collection rate will
increase."

Such new technology will make parking attendants efficient, but it will
hardly make them popular.

So perhaps it was just as well that the British Parking Association
announced plans yesterday to offer Britain's 15,000 attendants a
professional qualification.

An angry motorist will at least have the consolation of knowing that his or
her ticket has been issued by an attendant in possession of a National
Vocational Qualification.

The first student parking attendants are expected to enrol in the voluntary
scheme within days. The course, which will also include basic parking law,
is designed to improve the status of the job.

Perhaps it is just as well it will include instruction in how to spot signs
that the driver's protests are about to turn physical.

"We will teach them awareness of people's behaviour and how to assess risk,"
said Rob Roseveare, who will be running the course. But even the angriest
motorist will be rendered impotent by the latest wheel clamps.

The TMP Pro Mark Four was the talk of the show yesterday. "When that goes
on, it stays on," said David Newman, general manager of Traffic Management
Products, the manufacturers.

"It covers a whole range of cars, from a Mini to urban tractors. You
wouldn't like to mess with one of those, it is a beast."

The fearsome contraption comes in two pieces. First there are a set of
yellow steel jaws which fix themselves on to the rim of the hubcap and that
is in turn secured by a foot-long rod.

While the industry talks of improving its image, the presence of nine
different bailiffs' firms at the trade show suggests that what really
matters is collecting the money.

"Everything is done electronically now," said Nick Bradley, managing
director of Philips, a Darlington-based firm which deals in "debt recovery
solutions".

As his staff offered small rubber clamps to passers-by, he explained how his
men could be on somebody's doorstep within minutes.

"I have been a bailiff 15 years now. People have a different attitude to
debt nowadays. At dinner parties they used to talk about their mortgage, now
it's about how much they owe," he said with a certain amount of disgust.




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