A TAUNTON man has expressed his frustration after being fined for parking with a blue badge on double-yellow lines outside an ‘incomplete’ taxi rank on East Street.

Nigel Freeney and his wife were fined after they parked on the double-yellow lines on the road outside outside Argos on Friday, November 25.

He was fined £75 but told the charge would drop to £35 if paid within two weeks. 

However, he has challenged the fine through Somerset County Council's online system on the basis that fresher tarmac has ‘obliterated’ the end of the taxi rank, and the car was not within the boundaries of the taxi rank.

He also complained that the enforcement officer should have known that their car was parked outside of the limits of the taxi rank.

Pictures show that two-year-old tarmac has been laid over the taxi rank's boundaries, making it appear to not have an end. 

Now, the council has encouraged other drivers to challenge fines if they believe there are “mitigating circumstances” such as unclear signs and lines.

Mr Freeney, an IT consultant and Google Maps photographer, says pictures he has taken show the taxi rank has not been complete since at least November 2020.

Somerset County Gazette: A two-year-old strip of tarmac ‘obliterates’ the taxi rank (marked by the striped, yellow lines).A two-year-old strip of tarmac ‘obliterates’ the taxi rank (marked by the striped, yellow lines). (Image: Tom Leaman)

He believes other drivers who have been fined for parking there, or in any places where the signage or markings are unclear, should be entitled to a refund.

He believes the majority of fines will have been issued to blue badge holders and says another driver, who was parked behind his family's car, was fined at the same time, despite staff from a local business challenging the enforcement officer.

“There’s a strip of tarmac that goes over the end of the pavement and it obliterates the taxi rank,” he said.

“The taxi rank, if it was completed, would only partly encroach onto Argos.

“If Somerset County Council aren’t maintaining the road properly, it’s conceivable that other people are paying for tickets they don’t need to.”

He says the enforcement officer took seven photographs of his car, but they made were taken facing towards the road and made it “difficult to ascertain where the car was parked” in relation to road markings and signs.

Somerset County Gazette: Mr Freeney was fined for parking in a taxi rank outside Argos, which he has contested on the grounds that his car was not within the boundaries of the taxi rank.Mr Freeney was fined for parking in a taxi rank outside Argos, which he has contested on the grounds that his car was not within the boundaries of the taxi rank. (Image: Tom Leaman)

“I find it frustrating that I’ve wasted my time challenging a ticket that shouldn’t have been issued,” said Mr Freeney.

“It’s not the cost; it’s the issue of going through and making a challenge.

“It’s two years since the taxi rank was complete. That’s the bit that bothers me, and the enforcement officer not knowing it was not complete.

“It seems inconceivable that nobody else has received a ticket. How many people have received a fine for road markings that haven’t been maintained?”

Mr Freeney also said the process for challenging a fine is “really not user-friendly”, such as only allowing complainants to upload three files to make their case.

A Somerset County Council spokesperson said: “Drivers who receive a penalty and consider there are mitigating circumstances are encouraged to contact the council and challenge the penalty as detailed on the penalty.

“Where signs and lines are unclear we will arrange for them to be refreshed.”