hairyben wrote:
Peyote wrote:
I suppose it could be argued that giving any employee a parking space is effectively a tax free perk anyway.
Given that the journey (regardless of mode of transport) is essentual and business related, how is a parking space a tax free perk?
Sometimes I have to pay the meter, or buy permissions to park for my van, these are tax deductable expenses.
I was under the impression that a commute isn't a "business related" journey form a taxable perspective. It's certainly a journey I've never been able to claim for. The free parking space is just that, it's a benefit that is free. Many businesses operate car parks that users have to pay for, in these cases, it isn't a perk.
hairyben wrote:
Peyote wrote:
It could also be considered unfair on those who choose not to commute by single occupancy car in that they are missing out on this perk.
And it's unfair that some people get a desk by the window, and it's unfair that the floor upstairs have a better coffee machine, etc etc etc. Life isn't "fair", concentrate on the things that matter. Sometimes it seems we're a nation of people jealous of others for having things we ourselves don't need or want.
Oh come on! If you're going to come out with that kind of argument, then I can just turn around and say "Well, you've got no choice but to drive to work, so tough luck, you've got to pay the parking tax. If you don't think that's fair, well? life isn't fair!"
hairyben wrote:
Peyote wrote:
I'll try and dig out the stats, but I believe the cost of actually providing a parking space for an employee is somewhere around £3 a day anyway!
I would imagine that Nottingham, being quite a large town (or is it a city?) would have relatively good public transport links, so (and I appreciate I'm speculating wildly here) it could be the case that a significant number of those who do currently commute in a single occupancy car have other options available to them. Of course a decent Travel Plan to actually provide information and incentives would be a damn good idea to run in conjunction with the tax-parking-space scheme.
Perfect public transport will never exist, and right now it's often not evan adequate. London has a great deal of public transport, so it's fair to make the sweeping generalisation that those who live here and work in an office shouldn't drive at all right? but heres two examples:
My flatmate is PA for someone tremendously important. She often works 14-16 hour days, and uses her car to ferry clients about, and can you blame her for not wanting to share public transport with drunks and bums after a long hard day?
Someone else I know lives in muswell hill and works in swiss cottage. thats sub-15 mins by car, sub-£10 of fuel per week, or 1hr+ on several busses or trains, and about £25+ for a pass.
Hey, I never said a perfect public transport system did exist! I've never believed everyone has a choice in how they get to work, hence me saying that "a significant number" could have other options other than single occupancy vehicle travel. It's not a case of one (private transport) or the other (public transport), it never will be without ridiculous (and practically impossible) investment in a public transport system. That doesn't mean the current status-quo isn't in dire need of changing though...