logo
New car park charge to be introduced - with cameras ready to catch motorists

New car park charge to be introduced - with cameras ready to catch motorists

Yahoo07-07-2025
Automatic number plate recognition cameras (ANPR) will be used to fine motorists that haven't paid a soon-to-be-introduced charge at a car park.
Liberal Democrat-led Didcot Town Council has voted in favour of introducing charges to Civic Hall car park in Britwell Road.
Three companies put forward their proposals to operate the ANPR cameras in the car park.
National Parking Control (NPC) offered to have parking wardens patrol the car park five times per week.
READ MORE:
It also said all parking fares will go to the town council's pockets while all fines collected would go towards the company.
There will also be the option to pay by cash or on a RingGo app with NPC being the ones offered the 12-month contract with Didcot Town Council.
Support would also be available to those struggling to pay on a 24/7 basis.
The pricing of the car park's fares is to be determined at a later date once a report has been written for councillors to decide.
Minutes published by deputy town clerk Lucy Blake said: 'The committee would like a policy and procedure to be prepared for the car park to help with a conflict regarding car parking and charges.'
Help support trusted local news
Sign up for a digital subscription now: https://www.oxfordmail.co.uk/subscribe/
As a digital subscriber you will get:
Unlimited access to the Oxford Mail website
Advert-light access
Reader rewards
Full access to our app
Meanwhile the other two unnamed companies that came with proposals to operate the cameras would have made less financial sense for the council.
They both asked for 20 per cent of each parking ticket goes to them while collecting the income from the parking fines.
One company didn't even have any wardens available, but said it would train some while the other would have patrols at 'regular intervals'.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

William and Kate moving to new home in Windsor
William and Kate moving to new home in Windsor

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

William and Kate moving to new home in Windsor

The Prince and Princess of Wales are to move into a new home in Windsor. William and Kate are moving to eight-bedroom Forest Lodge in Windsor Great Park, with their children George, Charlotte and Louis. A Kensington Palace spokesperson said: 'The Wales family will move house later this year.' According to The Sun, the royal couple are paying for the property and renovations themselves, avoiding any extra cost to the taxpayer. The paper reported that work has already started on minor renovation at the Grade II-listed property. The move will be a short one from their current main home at Adelaide Cottage in Windsor, and the children attend nearby Lambrook School. They also have homes at Anmer Hall in Norfolk and Apartment 1A in Kensington Palace in London. As heir to the throne, William inherited the Duchy of Cornwall estate, a portfolio of land, property and investments valued at more than £1 billion, when his father became King. According to The Sun, Forest Lodge would be worth about £16 million on the open market. The freehold is owned by the King.

Eli Lilly raising GLP-1 prices abroad raises more questions about US pricing: BofA analyst
Eli Lilly raising GLP-1 prices abroad raises more questions about US pricing: BofA analyst

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Eli Lilly raising GLP-1 prices abroad raises more questions about US pricing: BofA analyst

Eli Lilly (LLY) raised prices of its GLP-1 weight-loss injectable in the UK this week, with plans to do the same in other European countries, in response to President Trump's push to normalize pricing in peer developed nations. The effort, known as Most Favored Nations pricing, has been a goal of Trump's since his first term. He has doubled down on the efforts this year, giving pharma companies 60 days to implement changes in pricing in what he deems "freeloading" nations. The US drug economy differs from European and other developed nations, which rely on the government to negotiate prices with drugmakers, resulting in lower prices globally. "While we agree that the costs for breakthrough medicines should be more fairly shared across developed countries, we must also address the underlying structural issues in the US that have contributed to high drug prices. The US system is complex and opaque," Lilly said in a statement Thursday. The stock was up 1% in trading Friday. Eli Lilly raised the price of its GLP-1, Zepbound, from about $125 to $165 and plans an additional hike next month that would almost double its price. In a note to clients Friday, Bank of America Securities research analyst Tim Anderson questioned who would actually be impacted by the raised prices. "LLY has announced it will raise GLP-1 pricing in the UK by a healthy margin (a doubling of price, but it's unclear to whom this higher price realistically applies). It expects to do something similar in other European countries (but worth appreciating: in most European markets, there aren't price agreements in place between GLP-1 manufacturers and governments, meaning these are out-of-pocket spending markets)," Anderson wrote. Ultimately, whether or not the move results in lower US prices remains a question, though Anderson believes it likely will not. "Does this mean it will actually cut the price on the GLP-1s in the US (and on other medicines)? To us, the answer is quite likely no, or at least, not in a way that creates P&L [profit and loss planning ] risk," he wrote. Anjalee Khemlani is the senior health reporter at Yahoo Finance, covering all things pharma, insurance, provider services, digital health, PBMs, and health policy and politics. That includes GLP-1s, of course. Follow Anjalee as AnjKhem on social media platforms X, LinkedIn, and Bluesky @AnjKhem. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

‘Alarming' drop in UK consumer confidence over last year – Which?
‘Alarming' drop in UK consumer confidence over last year – Which?

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

‘Alarming' drop in UK consumer confidence over last year – Which?

Consumer confidence in the future UK economy has plummeted over the last year, figures suggest. Confidence has tumbled by 31 points over the last year, from an average of minus nine between May and July 2024 to an average of minus 40 between May and July this year, Which?'s Consumer Insight Tracker shows. On average between this May and July, 56% of people thought the economy would get worse and just 16% thought it would get better. Which? said the figures showed a 'significant fall' to some of the lowest levels seen since early 2023, when the cost-of-living crisis was in the headlines and inflation was in double figures. Confidence in the future economy declined sharply last autumn and was particularly low between February to May, when global events such as the US tariff policy contributed to the pessimism. Confidence had recovered a little since, but remained considerably lower than 12 months ago. Pensioners have been the most pessimistic group, with their confidence in the future UK economy falling dramatically from an average of minus five between May and July last year to a current average of minus 63. Pensioners' confidence dropped dramatically in autumn last year – shortly after the Government's first announcement of scrapping the winter fuel allowance for most pensioners – and has remained low since, in spite of the Government U-turn on fuel payments. Which?'s figures suggest that financial difficulties from the height of the cost-of-living crisis are yet to return to the pre-crisis levels. In the month to July 18, an estimated 2.1 million households missed at least one essential payment such as rent or mortgage payments, utility bills, credit card or loan payments. An estimated 13.9 million households (49%) also made at least one adjustment to cover essential spending such as utility bills, housing costs, groceries, school supplies and medicines in the last month – such as cutting back on essentials, dipping into savings, selling possessions or borrowing. Rocio Concha, Which? director of policy and advocacy, said: 'Our research shows consumer confidence in the future of the UK economy has dropped alarmingly over the last year. 'The Government has rightly focused on growing the economy and raising living standards but in doing so, it must not overlook the importance of consumer protections in restoring confidence. 'People are sick to the teeth of having to dodge fraudsters when shopping online, watching out for rogue traders when making home improvements and needing to keep an eye out for dodgy pricing practices which mean that offers aren't as good as they first appear. 'The right consumer protections give people the confidence to spend and the Government must place these protections at the heart of its plans to grow the economy.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store