Parisians okay hefty hike in parking fees for SUVs
PARIS—Paris voters on Sunday backed a proposal from the capital’s socialist mayor Anne Hidalgo to triple parking charges on hefty SUV-style cars, according to official results from city hall.
Parisians voted 54.55 percent in favor of charging cars weighing 1.6 tons or more 18 euros ($19.50/P1,091.65) per hour for parking in the city center, or 12 euros further out.
But only 78,000, or 5.7 percent, of the 1.3 million eligible voters bothered to vote at the 39 voting stations set up around the French capital.
Hidalgo hailed a “clear choice of Parisians” in favor of a measure that is “good for our health and good for the planet.”
Fully electric cars will have to top two tons to be affected, while people living or working in Paris, taxi drivers, tradespeople, health workers and people with disabilities will all be exempt.
Article continues after this advertisement“It’s an ecological issue, but it’s also a societal issue, and it’s about how cities need to evolve in a changing environment,” said Gregoire Marchal, a 43-year-old cinema distributor, after voting in favor of the measure at a polling station in Paris’ 10th district.
Article continues after this advertisement“I do have a car, but I think it’s great that we can ask ourselves the question and change our behavior,” he added.
Not all voters were happy.
“I’m sick of all these diktaks from Mrs. Hidalgo,” said Jeannine, 75, in the wealthier 8th district, where more of the cars appear to be SUVs.
‘Aberration’
On Hidalgo’s watch, the capital city has pedestrianized many streets, including the banks of the river Seine, and built a network of cycle lanes in an effort to discourage driving and reduce harmful transport emissions.
Environmental group World Wide Fund for Nature has dubbed SUVs an “aberration,” saying they burn 15 percent more fuel than a classic coupe and cost more to build and purchase.
READ: Bike-friendly Paris votes on raising parking fees for SUVs
City hall has further pointed to safety concerns about taller, heavier SUVs, which it says are “twice as deadly for pedestrians as a standard car” in an accident.
The vehicles are also singled out for taking up more public space—whether on the road or while parked—than others. —AFP