The British Parking Association Ltd is a private company which amongst other things manages the independent motorists appeals service, POPLA, which is available to all motorists in England and Wales. POPLA is currently being run by London Councils on a 3 year stint due to expire in October 2015.
It appears that the right authorities were not put in place to allow London Authorities money and resources to fund POPLA and there is therefore an emergency meeting of London Councils this Thursday to vote on the matter.
The Prankster does not live in London and is ambivalent on the matter. On the one hand he recognises the great pressure Henry Greenslade must have been under to resist pressure from parking companies to pass though obviously fake cost calculations. On the other there is a huge conflict of interest with Nick Lester being both a director of the BPA Ltd and also overseeing POPLA. This is important because Nick Lester has an unfortunate habit of being biased towards the parking operators when any complaints are raised about POPLA, and gives fatuous and dismissive replies when complaints are raised.
If you live in London you should therefore give thought to whether you want your money to fund a service for motorists country-wide, and should communicate your wishes either to your council. Due to the short timescale, phone and email is reccomended. Three councils are not even a member of the BPA, so there is little reason for them to agree public money and resources being used to aid a private company they are not even associated with.
In any case, it is not remotely possible that London Councils will be re-awarded the contract when it expires. Parking companies are not happy so many decisions are going in favour of the motorist and so will take their chances with another organisation who may be more likely to favour them.
London
Councils’ TEC Executive Sub Committee
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TEC Agreement – POPLA Amendment
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Item No:
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04
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Report
by:
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Nick
Lester
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Job title:
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Corporate
Director, Services
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Date:
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11
September 2014
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Contact
Officer:
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Nick
Lester
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Telephone:
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0207
934 9905
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Email:
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Summary:
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This report seeks the agreement
of the TEC Executive to recommend to all councils that they each formally
resolve to expressly delegate the exercise of section 1 of the Localism Act
2011 to the TEC joint committee for the sole purpose of providing an appeals
service for parking on private land for the British Parking Association under
contract, confirming for the avoidance of doubt that the existing
arrangements are and have been delivered on that basis to-date, and that the
TEC Governing Agreement be formally varied accordingly. The service has been provided on a cost
recovery basis by London Councils since October 2012 and it is proposed that
it should continue in this way until the end of the contract period in
October 2015. An express delegation of the exercise of section 1 for this
purpose by individual councils, and the variation of the TEC Governing
Agreement to reflect this, would remove any legal doubt as to TEC’s authority
to deliver the service and allow London Councils’ auditors, PWC, to conclude
an outstanding issue in relation to an objection to the accounts.
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Recommendations:
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Members
are recommended to:
·
Recommend to all 33 London local authorities that they:
formally confirm that the functions delegated to TEC to enter into the
arrangement with the British Parking Association were and continue to be
delivered pursuant to section 1 of the
Localism Act 2011; resolve
to expressly delegate the exercise of section 1 of the 2011 Act to the TEC joint committee for the sole purpose of
providing an appeals service for parking on private land for the British
Parking Association under contract; and that the TEC Governing Agreement be
varied to this end.
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Background
On
15th March 2012 TEC agreed that London Councils should provide an
appeals service for parking on private land for the British Parking Association
under contract. This was on the basis that this would complement the service
provided by PATAS which deals with appeals made against parking enforcement on
the highway. It was considered at the
time that providing the service on a cost-recovery basis would be in the public
interest as: restrictions on parking within London on private land would have a
direct impact upon London local authorities, their resources and residents; a
significant proportion of the public affected and inclined to avail themselves
of the POPLA service were likely to come from the Greater London area; and,
having regard to those matters, as TEC was the only interested, qualified
bidder. On 14th June 2012,
TEC received a report to say that the basis for providing such a service had
been accepted by the BPA and agreed that a contract should be entered into to
provide the service.
The
service, known as POPLA (Parking on Private Land Appeals) started on the 1st
October 2012 and has since provided the appeals service to more than 25,000
motorists. The service operates on a
full cost recovery basis and at no cost to the London Council Tax payer.
An
objection was raised on the London Councils consolidated accounts by an
interested person (residing within London) that TEC did not have the legal
power to provide the service. London Councils’ auditors, PWC, have, for some
time, been investigating this and numerous other objections submitted by the
same individual.
PWC
has informed London Councils of legal advice it has had from the Audit
Commission on the Commission’s view on the power of London Councils to provide
the POPLA service. In essence, the Audit Commission advice accepts that the London
local authorities have the power under Section 1 of the Localism Act 2011 to
provide the service and that the exercise of these functions could be delegated
to TEC. London Councils agrees with this conclusion.
The
Audit Commission advice, however, questions whether the exercise of those functions
has been properly delegated to TEC. The issue turns on whether the Committee could
be said: to have existing delegated authority under the terms of the TEC
Governing Agreement; alternatively whether it made or confirmed such a delegation
by virtue of the decisions it made to provide the service in 2012; or whether
each individual authority should have expressly resolved to delegate the
exercise of section 1 of the 2011 Act to the joint committee for the purposes
of TEC’s delivery of the POPLA service with the TEC Agreement being formally
varied accordingly.
PWC
has asked for London Councils’ view on this advice in advance of making a
formal determination about the objection. London Councils and its legal
advisors remain of the view that the service is currently being delivered by
TEC on a lawful basis on behalf of all the participating authorities with their
consent and proper authority under the existing terms of the TEC Governing
Agreement, and confirmed by the Committee resolving to provide the service in
2012 with these matters having been raised with local authorities prior to
those decisions being taken in the normal way in respect of TEC business. However, it is accepted, that there is room
for argument as to whether individual councils had to state expressly that they
agreed that the arrangement with the BPA was pursuant to exercise by TEC of their
powers under section 1 of the 2011.
Next Steps
Taking
active and expedient steps to expressly clarify the authority of TEC to deliver
the POPLA service is intended to satisfy London Councils’ auditors and inform
their determination in respect of the objection raised by the interested member
of the public on the consolidated accounts for the 2012/13 year. Further, this
would help PWC to sign off the TEC and the consolidated accounts for 2013/14 by
the statutory deadline.
Accordingly,
for the avoidance of doubt and to facilitate a conclusion to the issue with the
Auditor PWC and the objector, it is recommended that all authorities be asked
to:
(a)
formally
confirm that the exercise of functions delegated to TEC to enter into the
arrangement with the British Parking Association were and continue to be
delivered pursuant to section 1 of the
Localism Act 2011;
(b)
formally resolve to expressly
delegate the exercise of section 1 of the 2011 Act to the TEC joint committee for the sole purpose of providing an appeals
service for parking on private land for the British Parking Association under
contract; and
(c)
take all relevant
steps to give effect to the matters set out in (a) and (b) above through a
formal variation to the TEC Governing Agreement
Legal Implications for London Councils
The legal implications are set out in the body of the
Report.
Financial implications for London Councils
There are no financial implications
for London Councils from this recommendation
Equalities Implications for London Councils
There are no equalities implications for the boroughs
or London Councils arising from this reportHappy Parking
The Parking Prankster
This motion is proposed by Nick Lester, a BPA Ltd Council member. Is it right that a private company board member proposes a council measure which benefits his private sector company?
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