Drivers who use disabled parking bays inappropriately in NHS car parks will soon be liable for a hefty fine.

Ayrshire and Arran’s NHS Board members have agreed to create a traffic regulation, which would make it an offence for anyone not displaying a blue badge to park in designated disabled parking bays at its main hospital sites.

The regulation will also apply to those who park longer than the stated time in the drop-off areas at hospital entrances.

NHS Ayrshire & Arran will work alongside the Ayrshire Roads Alliance to create the regulation, which will encourage behaviour change by those who misuse the disabled parking bays and free these up for people who have a genuine need to park closer to hospital entrances.

John Wright, Director for Corporate Support Services, said: “Across our sites, we have almost 5,500 car parking spaces, 261 of which are dedicated disabled parking bays. Despite this, we receive a high number of complaints from service users and visitors to our hospitals that these disabled parking bays are often filled with cars not displaying a blue badge.”

The Disabled Persons’ Parking Places Act (Scotland) 2009 gives local authorities the power to create a traffic regulation which would make it an offence for anyone not displaying a blue badge to park in disabled bays. Regulations can also include time-limited spaces such as drop-off spaces.

Ayrshire Roads Alliance, acting on behalf of East and South Ayrshire Councils, would ‘police’ these spaces and issue any relevant penalty notices in line with the Act.

Enforcement in North Ayrshire remains with Police Scotland at this time, so any penalties would be issued by police.

Currently a parking penalty fine for the misuse of a designated Blue Badge parking space is £60, collection and management of which would fall within the remit of the local authorities. Any income from the penalties would go to the relevant local authority and would cover the enforcement of the statutory instrument.