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Home News Local Council Fenland District Council

Fenland’s £1.5m parking fiasco: chaos, costs, and a crisis in the making

With pressure mounting and funds draining, councillors face a critical choice

John Elworthy by John Elworthy
11:33am, August 5 2025
in Fenland District Council, News
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Civil Parking Enforcement (CPE) transfers the powers and responsibilities for on-street enforcement from the police to the highway authority. FENLAND

Civil Parking Enforcement (CPE) transfers the powers and responsibilities for on-street enforcement from the police to the highway authority. FENLAND

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A parking enforcement plan years in the making has exploded into a multimillion-pound mess – and it could soon hit drivers right in their wallets.

Fenland District Council’s long-awaited Civil Parking Enforcement (CPE) rollout is in serious trouble, with costs spiralling past £1.5 million, signage in ruins, and a gaping £914,510 funding black hole.

Last month councillors gave it a tentative green light even though they don’t yet know exactly how much it will all cost.

And you thought parking was already a pain?

WHAT WENT WRONG?

Back in 2021, officials surveyed Fenland’s roads and discovered a shocking 86% of road markings and signs were in poor or fair condition – making parking enforcement virtually impossible. Fast forward four years and things have only gotten worse. Now, even those signs once considered “fair” are likely dangerously degraded.

That means before a single parking ticket can be issued, over £1.1 million worth of repairs are needed just to make the system legal.

And here’s the kicker: those estimates are already out of date. Updating them alone could cost another £50k to £100k. That’s just to figure out how bad things are.

WHEN WILL THIS NIGHTMARE END?

Don’t hold your breath.

Even after Fenland Cabinet approved the next steps last month, the earliest go-live date for CPE is September 2027 – more than two years away. And that’s only if everything goes to plan.

A tangled web of bureaucracy, legal red tape, and red-flagged agreements between Fenland and Cambridgeshire County Council have brought the project to a crawl.

 WHO’S PAYING?

Well… not enough people.

So far, Fenland has secured £860k in grants – with over £190k already spent on surveys and consultants. That leaves just £665k, far short of the £1.58 million needed to implement the system.

That doesn’t even touch the annual operating deficit of £70,703, which will continue to bleed council funds for years after launch.

Officials are now hoping for more cash from the Combined Authority, but there’s no guarantee.

SIGN HERE, OR ELSE!

At the heart of the stalemate? A power struggle over who manages the messy day-to-day of parking permits, waivers, and suspensions. Cambridgeshire County Council insists FDC must take it on – but Fenland says the extra workload and cost is a dealbreaker

SO, WHAT HAPPENS NOW?

With pressure mounting and funds draining, councillors face a critical choice:

  1. Continue with the flawed plan and keep spending in hopes the system will work eventually…
  2. Hold the line and risk losing everything to impending local government reform in 2028, when a new unitary authority might take over the project entirely.

Until then, the streets of Fenland remain a wild west of yellow lines, worn signs, and unenforced parking chaos – and the meter’s still running.

What started as a simple plan to crack down on dodgy parking is now turning into one of Fenland’s most expensive fiascos in recent memory.

The long-delayed Civil Parking Enforcement (CPE) scheme — meant to wrest parking control from overstretched police — has turned into a financial black hole, sucking in over £1.5 million in costs… with no end in sight.

THE NUMBERS THAT’LL MAKE YOUR EYES WATER:

Let’s break it down:

💥 £1,580,171 – That’s the latest estimated bill for setting up CPE across Fenland.

💣 £538,539.39 – The original 2023 estimate for fixing broken signs and lines.

📈 +10% Uplift – Inflation alone has added £53,853 to that cost.

📉 +50% Work Scope Increase – Degrading road markings not included in the original count could add another £537,912.

⚠️ £56,515 – Contingency fund for unexpected defects.

🏁 £1,186,821 – Final repair bill for all four market towns before enforcement even begins.

  • 💰 £172,000 – Just for 43 solar-powered timing machines for car parks.
  • 📝 £20,000 – Consultants’ fees for implementation advice.
  • ⚖️ £10,000 – Estimated legal costs.
  • 🪧 £40,000+ – For lining and signage in council-run car parks.
  • 📉 -£70,703 per year – That’s the annual deficit expected once the scheme is up and running.

TOTAL GRANT FUNDING AVAILABLE: £860,000

  • CPCA Grant: £400,000
  • County Council: £150,000
  • Potential GCP Top-Up: £150,000
  • Possible Extra CPCA Boost: £160,000

SPENT SO FAR: £194,339
That leaves £665,661 to play with — meaning the funding gap is a gaping £914,510.

WHAT DO YOU GET FOR £1.5 MILLION?

Not much — at least not yet.

So far, all that money has paid for consultants, strategy documents, agency draft agreements, software licences, survey maps, and endless rounds of meetings. Meanwhile, road signs continue to fade, lines peel away, and illegally parked cars continue to go unchallenged.

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Even when the system goes live (currently predicted for September 2027) the annual operating deficit of over £70,000 will keep draining council coffers year after year.

Running costs include:

  • Two full-time civil enforcement officers (CEOs)
  • External management fees
  • Vehicle costs
  • PCN processing software
  • Back-office administration

And that’s based on a lean external enforcement model. If Fenland opts to staff more officers or take more admin in-house? The costs shoot up even higher.

AVOIDABLE OR INEVITABLE?

Insiders say this runaway budget disaster stems from years of neglect. Faded lines, missing signs, and decades of underfunded maintenance have left the district with a mess so large, it now costs over a million pounds just to enforce parking legally.

Civil Parking Enforcement (CPE) transfers the powers and responsibilities for on-street enforcement from the police to the highway authority. WISBECH

The original feasibility report in 2020 suggested fixing signs and lines might cost just £140,000. But when the full scale of decay emerged in the 2021 survey, the estimate quadrupled — and it’s been climbing ever since.

“It’s like opening a tin of worms… in a bottomless pit,” one council source joked.

THE TICKING CLOCK

Adding to the pressure, grant funding from the Combined Authority is set to expire in December 2025 — unless extended again. And there’s a catch: CPE can’t proceed until Cambridgeshire County Council and Fenland agree on who runs what.

A key sticking point? Fenland’s refusal (so far) to manage highway parking permits — a “red line” for the County Council.

If they don’t make peace soon, Fenland could lose its shot entirely, and CPE responsibility might get punted to a new unitary authority under local government reform in 2028.

MEANWHILE, OTHER COUNCILS ARE WINNING

  • South Cambs launched CPE in 2024.
  • Huntingdonshire goes live this year – despite also facing massive repair costs, they’ve charged ahead, hiring two contractors and pressing on.

Fenland? Still stuck in reverse.

THE BOTTOM LINE?

This is no longer just a parking problem. It’s a funding fiasco, a bureaucratic brawl, and a textbook case in costly delays.

So ask yourself:

  • Would you pay more council tax for parking enforcement?
  • Should Fenland walk away before the costs soar even higher?
  • Is the system too broken to fix?

Will free parking remain? That’s the million-pound question — and the answer is murky.

Here’s what we know:

Will Fenland District Council continue to insist on free parking?

Officially? Yes — for now.
Realistically? It’s starting to look less certain.

Fenland District Council has long prided itself on providing free parking in all its town centre car parks, a policy that sets it apart from many other councils and is popular with residents and businesses alike. It’s even been touted as a way to boost the struggling high streets in Wisbech, March, Whittlesey, and Chatteris.

But here’s the problem:

Free Parking + Paid Enforcement = Recipe for Financial Ruin

Under the proposed CPE scheme:

  • No income is generated from the car parks themselves.
  • Enforcement of on-street restrictions only (e.g. yellow lines, time-limited bays) may not generate enough penalty charge income to cover costs.
  • The scheme is already forecast to run a deficit of £70,703 every year – and that’s with a bare-bones enforcement model.

If Fenland sticks to its free parking promise, it has very limited options for recovering costs:

  • It can’t charge for parking to offset the funding shortfall.
  • Enforcement officers will be stretched thin — with limited penalty charge revenue.
  • More pressure will fall on general council tax funds to plug the gap.

Behind Closed Doors: Is Free Parking Sustainable?

While no councillor has yet publicly proposed scrapping free parking, some insiders admit it’s “on the table behind the scenes.”

According to recent Cabinet reports:

“Any surplus income from CPE cannot be used for general spending, and any operating deficit must be absorbed by the District Council…”

Civil Parking Enforcement (CPE) transfers the powers and responsibilities for on-street enforcement from the police to the highway authority. FENLAND
Civil Parking Enforcement (CPE) transfers the powers and responsibilities for on-street enforcement from the police to the highway authority. FENLAND

That’s a growing concern in an era of tight budgets, crumbling infrastructure, and rising costs across every service.

If the scheme fails to break even (which looks increasingly likely), the pressure to introduce car park charges — even modest ones — will mount.

Political Hot Potato

Make no mistake: ending free parking would be politically explosive.
No councillor wants to be the one to introduce charges in an election year. The 2023 Conservative manifesto made no mention of scrapping free parking, and many in the cabinet remain strongly in favour of keeping it.

But if the Combined Authority or a future unitary council in 2028 takes control of CPE and car parks, the local promise may no longer matter.

The Bottom Line?

  • For now, Fenland Council continues to insist on free parking.
  • But the financial reality is closing in.
  • Unless the CPE scheme is scaled back, externally subsidised, or offset by new income streams, free parking may not survive the decade.

As one councillor privately put it:

“We can’t keep offering a Rolls Royce parking policy on a rusted Ford Fiesta budget.”

Tags: #FreeParkingForever? #CPECrisis #CouncilCatch22 #FenlandFinances #LocalGovShakeUpCivil Parking Enforcement (CPE)FenlFenland District CouncilHomepage
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