Parking in Tauranga's city centre will be free on Saturdays and after 5pm on weekdays after it was found charging for it affected the number of visitors
Tauranga City Council re-introduced paid on-street parking in December 2022 to encourage a higher turnover of carparks because CBD workers were using them to park all day.
The paid parking 'may be impacting city centre footfall and average spending by those visiting the city” said a report by council parking strategy manager Reece Wilkinson.
The decision to reduce on-street paid parking hours from 6pm to 5pm and make it free on Saturdays was made at a council meeting today.
The changes will begin from Saturday June 3.
Wilkinson told the commissioners the parking rates were 'working as they should.”
He said the majority of on-street parking transactions were between one to two hours and there was a 17 per cent increase in daily parking transactions since December.
'That means that we are getting that turnover that we asked for.
'What we're also seeing, partly due other stuff going on in the city … is the business owners are starting to see a drop in footfall outside of business hours.”
Wilkinson said the parking changes were something the council could do quickly to help businesses.
Commission chair Anne Tolley said the council would "have to do more to bring people into the city on the weekends". Photo: John Borren/SunLive.
Commission chair Anne Tolley said for the commission, the introduction of paid parking was more about getting turnover in the city centre than for financial reasons.
'Our concern has been around assisting those business owners as much as we possibly can.
'We're going to have to do more to bring people into the city on the weekends and out of business hours.”
Commissioner Bill Wasley said he had watched 'cafes empty out” on weekends when a parking warden had come along, so free parking on Saturday would encourage people into the CBD.
Council director of transport Brendan Bisley said the council would have to monitor how many CBD workers parked all day on the street on Saturdays.
'A lot of the workers find it very convenient to park on street all day. It was part of the reason we originally put Saturdays in there.
'It'll be just this balance of ensuring that there's available parking for those coming in for eating out or whatever,” he said.
Commissioner Stephen Selwood asked for staff to report back on how effective the changes were in six months' time.
'It's a really important issue. We've got to do the best we can to get parking working as best we can,” he said.
Downtown Tauranga chair Ashleigh Gee said Saturday parking charges had a "dramatic impact on the ground". Photo: Supplied.
Speaking after the meeting, Downtown Tauranga chair Ashleigh Gee said the organisation had been advocating to get the parking revised.
There was a 'dramatic impact on the ground” with the return of Saturday car parking charges, she said.
'Hopefully by giving the free car parking back, it'll just help our retailers and our hospitality guys to attract people back into the city on the weekend,” said Gee.
She said there was a lot going on that was out the businesses' control including redevelopment and the cost of living crisis.
'The amount of uncertainty and current construction and development starting to happen in the city, everyone's positive in what will happen once it kicks off.
'But it's just this point between now and when the contractors and things start showing up in the city.
'It's just a bit of a waiting game.”
The city centre has been dealing with empty buildings for years and there are a number of sites under construction or being redeveloped, including the $304 million civic precinct Te Manawataki O Te Papa.
'I think everyone's pretty positive in the changes that are happening. It's just getting through it,” said Gee.
The on-street parking charges for Monday to Friday 8am-5pm is $2 per hour for the first two hours then $5 for every hour after that.
Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air
9 comments
A bit late summer is over
Posted on 29-05-2023 15:24 | By RJP
Too little too late the horse has well and truly gone. I personalty no longer do business in the CBD, The satellite suburbs are more user friendly and have a lot more on offer. It is going to take a long long time to attract shoppers to the CBD if at all.
A start
Posted on 29-05-2023 15:56 | By Andrew64
Here’s a fact. I’m not paying to park on the city when I can get everything I want elsewhere and park for free. It’s just not happening. Business owners need to lobby the Council for free parking for 2-3 hours which is ample for a meal or shopping and stop city workers parking all day. And while I’m at it listen to National and Act and ditch the ridiculous housing intensification rules (multiple multi storey units on a single section). Once democracy is returned to Tauranga the absurd proposal will disappear anyway. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again; if you can’t afford to rent or buy in Tauranga move somewhere you can, and if you’re on a benefit you don’t have the right to choose where you want to live. Tauranga’s full.
Common sense.
Posted on 29-05-2023 16:14 | By morepork
As a number of posters here pointed out at the time, this was completely predictable. I'm glad that Downtown Tauranga were "in touch" enough to recognize it. Queen Anne says it wasn't about revenue, it was about getting CBD workers out of retail car parks. And yet she ignored the obvious suggested solution of giving CBD workers car stickers that identify them and would let them park in buildings on special floors, at special times, for special rates. (Less than retail, of course...) It isn't really so important about WHO was right; it's just good to see reason prevail for a change.
No Change
Posted on 29-05-2023 16:26 | By Accountable
This tinkering with the parking is about boosting the hospitality sector and as usual the retail has to make do with the crumbs. Retail needs a major boost and one day a week is of no help what so ever! Commissioner Wasley should use the CBD more often and then he will find that the parking wardens have not patrolled the meters for quite some time being replaced by up to two number plate recognition camera cars that make very regular patrols daily including Saturdays. This proves how far out of touch the commissioners and council staff are with how the CBD actually operates and struggles to survive but there are no surprises there.
Here's an idea I've 'floated' twice.....
Posted on 29-05-2023 17:25 | By Bruja
Allow CBD workers to have slightly cheap rates in a carpark building(Council to pick the one that's least utilised) so long as they can show PROOF of where they work and that proof has to be shown - renewed - (sticker on windscreen) - every 2 months. It's not rocket science, they have to park somewhere so get them all in one place and out of the downtown parks.
Hmmm
Posted on 29-05-2023 17:33 | By Let's get real
A little too late for so many small businesses. I can't think of a single reason to go into town now, other than to drink and have a pretty average meal. But we were told that building a new university campus would "revitalise" the CBD. When will council pull their heads out of the sand and realise that pieces of worthless paper from a university doesn't mean that they have an ounce of common sense. Consulting the ratepayers should be open, honest and part of the council election system for all ratepayer funded projects over a set limit. They DON'T know better than the ratepayers, but they honestly believe that they are absolutely correct in every decision and there are no consequences for being very expensively wrong.
HOW LONG has it taken the
Posted on 29-05-2023 20:41 | By The Caveman
the council Clowns & faceless council bureaucrats to realise that they have KILLED the CBD!!! And sorry, nothing that they now do will get the "shoppers" back to the CBD.
Workers fault not Councils
Posted on 30-05-2023 11:26 | By Ghost
Maybe if workers stopped parking in the spaces for shoppers then free parking would work. I have seen workers move their vehicles, swapping with each other every two hours and then get angry when caught. Free parking doesn't work because of the actions of some and unfortunately it never will. I work in town and come in early for a free park and if I can't I pay which is still cheaper than most Major Cities in NZ. Maybe if landlords stop asking for Auckland rents will businesses actually move back into the city until then keep up the food work TCC at least I can find a park in town now.
@ morepork
Posted on 03-06-2023 16:35 | By Kancho
Of course it was a rhetorical question/ statement really . Most people have worked out the answer. Pity the government put them there and won't let ratepayers decide anything about spending our money or about anything at all
Leave a Comment
You must be logged in to make a comment.