The decision by the red-green-red Berlin Senate to increase parking fees has met with clear criticism from the opposition. Anyone who promises relief for Berliners in the energy crisis should not rip them into their pockets with higher parking fees, said the transport policy spokesman for the CDU parliamentary group, Oliver Friederici. “More and more people now have to turn the euro twice, additional burdens don’t fit in at the time.”
On Tuesday, the Senate passed the long-awaited change to the parking fee regulation, which is to apply from January 1, 2023. The parking fees per hour in Berlin will increase from one, two and three euros to two, three and four euros, depending on the fee level.
A general exemption from the obligation to park is planned for parking bicycles, pedelecs, cargo bikes, light motorcycles and motorcycles in parking lots in order to encourage users of these types of vehicles to make greater use of these traffic areas, according to the press release from the Senate Department for the environment and mobility.
Friederici criticized that unnecessary conflicts between drivers and cyclists were inevitable. This is an example of the fact that the red-green mobility policy is thought and made in opposition to each other instead of together.
The traffic policy spokesman for the FDP parliamentary group in the House of Representatives, Felix Reifschneider, criticized the fact that the Senate was failing to build bicycle parking spaces and parking garages at S-Bahn and U-Bahn stations if mass car parking spaces were to be converted into bicycle parking spaces. “The left-green Senate and the green-dominated districts are continuing their ideological fight against the car here,” says Reifschneider. “One gets the impression that the green transport senator is deliberately fueling the conflicts in order to distract attention from her failures.”
Mobility Senator Bettina Jarasch (Greens) told RBB: “It is the case that bicycles, but also electric and other small vehicles are actually vehicles and that means they can be parked in parking lots.” The goal is very clear: “I finally want that the bicycles, scooters and other small vehicles disappear from the sidewalks, where until now they have been legally tolerated.”
A spokeswoman for the Senate pointed out that the ordinance amending the parking fee regulation only regulates a general exemption from the parking fee obligation for bicycles, pedelecs and motorcycles, for example. Otherwise, the road traffic regulations apply to parking and parking, which is federal law and is not changed by the ordinance of the Senate.
“Kick-off Politics” is WELT’s daily news podcast. The most important topic analyzed by WELT editors and the dates of the day. Subscribe to the podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music or directly via RSS feed.