Three tickets - and you're clamped
by RAY MASSEY
Last updated at 09:04 18 January 2007
Motorists who clock up just three unpaid parking tickets could find themselves clamped anywhere in the country.
Parking attendants are to be issued with computers with access to a national register of persistent offenders.
But critics fear the unreliability of the DVLA database will lead to thousands of cars being incorrectly clamped.
The plans are contained in the Traffic Management Act, which comes into force this year.
Ministers want to extend the current database, which covers London, to the rest of England.
The move follows a report by the Government last July which said wheel clamping should be used only for the most persistent offenders.
Labour ministers claim they want parking enforcement to be "fairer". They say councils should use their powers to keep traffic flowing - not to raise money.
Parking costs have soared by 82 per cent in England since 1997, with councils raising £1.2billion a year.
The Commons Transport Select Committee has called the current system "seriously flawed" and "a mess".
Most watched News videos
- New video shows Epstein laughing and chasing young women
- British Airways passengers turn flight into a church service
- Epstein describes himself as a 'tier one' sexual predator
- Skier dressed as Chewbacca brutally beaten in mass brawl
- Two schoolboys plummet out the window of a moving bus
- Buddhist monks in Thailand caught with a stash of porn
- Melinda Gates says Bill Gates must answer questions about Epstein
- Police dog catches bag thief who pushed woman to the floor
- Holly Valance is shut down by GB News for using slur
- JD Vance turns up heat on Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor
- China unveils 'Star Wars' warship that can deploy unmanned jets
- Sarah Ferguson 'took Princesses' to see Epstein after prison
