South Tees increases car park charges

The James Cook University Hospital and the Friarage Hospital have seen their car parking charges increase in a bid to enable further improvements to be made to car parking facilities.

South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, which runs both hospitals, has been carrying out a wider review of car parking to address concerns raised by both staff and patients in relation to parking.

The predicted investment from the increase in charges, the first increase in over three years, will be spent on replacing car park barriers and introducing new pay machines that accept card payments. A 1,100 space car park for staff has already opened at Prissick Base which, in turn, allowed an additional 236 patient and visitor spaces to be created closer to hospital buildings.

Kevin Oxley, director of Estates, Procurement & ICT, said: “The money raised from car parking charges supports the significant costs to run, maintain and secure our hospitals car parks and to meet costs in line with increased inflation. Anything we raise over and above that is reinvested back into the trust for frontline services. Over the next two years we will invest an additional £600,000 on improving our car parking facilities and while it is never a popular choice to increase our charges, it is necessary.”

The new patient and visitor charges were implemented on 1 November.

Event Diary

This story was first published in digitalhealth.net

Supplier Profiles

CDC success at Victoria Infirmary, Northwich creates ideal model for future patient pathway reforms

Northwich’s Victoria Infirmary (VIN) Community Diagnostic Centre (CDC) has enabled more patients

Gain valuable insight with Adveco for gas to electric decarbonisation projects

Adveco, the commercial hot water specialist, announces the launch of live metering of domestic ho