Claim inadequate signboards, manpower crunch and unavailability of seniors as the reasons for their failure to ban vehicles from parking on right-hand side of the 'important' street starting yesterday
Copspeak
Inspector Neelam Jadhav of the Deccan traffic division said, “We didn’t have enough no-parking signboards and manpower to implement the ban on Monday. Senior officials were also busy in a meeting at the police commissionerate in Camp for the upcoming Ganeshotsav festival.
We’ve now planned to install signboards on Tuesday, informing citizens about parking restrictions in the area. For the first 10 days, our staff will request citizens to follow the new norms. Action against offenders will be taken only after sufficient time is given to commuters to understand the new norms.”
Besides terror threats, parking on both sides had reduced the carriage width of the road that was turned into a one-way four years ago.
FC Road is about 24 metres wide, but four-wheelers and two-wheelers parked on either side occupy almost two lanes of the road. The proposed BRT route would further reduce the carriage width of the road. Keeping all these factors in mind, the traffic police decided to allow side parking only on the left-hand side of the road.
The decision to alter parking norms on the road was taken after the local police station asked the traffic police to ban parking on FC Road last year, as a few popular eateries and the British Council Library were located here. u00a0
