Thousands of ‘school run’ parking fines could be void because of inadequate signage

Published 2 hours ago
Source: metro.co.uk
General view of Richmond road one of the many where the local council has restricted access to the road and has issued 24,669 penalty charge notices (PCNs) from March 2024 to October 2025. Gillingham, Kent // A council has raked in nearly ??680k in fines after introducing 'school gate' driving restrictions aimed at making roads safer - but some locals say it's just a "money-making" scheme. Medway Council has issued almost 25,000 fines to drivers since bringing in its Safer Streets scheme outside 11 schools across Kent in March last year. The scheme prohibits motorists from using the road outside schools at pickup and drop-off times; between 8:15 and 9am in the morning and 2:45 and 3:45pm in the afternoon. The Penalty Charge Notices (PCNs) have since raked in a small fortune of ??678,690 for the council. Photo released 19/11/2025
Hundreds of thousands worth of fines could be challenged (Picture: SWNS)

A driving scheme which prohibits motorists from using roads outside 11 schools in Kent could be challenged for the £680,000 worth of fines it has imposed, after one penalty was overturned.

Medway Council’s School Streets initiative, which hits motorists for driving in designated roads in Kent at the start and the end of the school day, saw resident Chris Lee fined in September.

But the 56-year-old has now had his fine revoked after taking the council to a tribunal, which ruled in his favour on ‘signage grounds’.

The driving scheme, launched in March last year, prohibits motorists from using roads outside 11 schools between 8:15 and 9am and 2:45 and 3:45pm.

Since it was brought in, more than 25,000 Penalty Charge Notices (PCNs) have been issued – making £678,690.

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Since his tribunal over video call last month, Chris says he has seen lots of locals commenting on how they now wish they did the same rather than paying the fine. His result has brought into question whether all the fines could be void.

METRO GRAPHICS Burnt Oak Primary school
The school roads are often shut in the mornings (Picture: Metro)
Thousands of fines issued while enforcing a road safety scheme could be void after a tribunal overturned a driver's penalty because of inadequate signage. / Medway Council's 'School Streets' scheme, which fines motorists for driving down designated streets around the start and end of the school day, launched last year. / Chris Lee was one such driver fined for entering a designated school street on Richmond Road, Gillingham, Kent, during its hours of operation in September. / The 56-year-old appealed to Medway Council, saying it had been unclear he was approaching the zone until it was too late and he had no option but to drive on. / The authority rejected his appeal and insisted he pay the (pnd)35 fine, which increases to (pnd)70 if not paid after 21 days. / However, Chris took his appeal to a traffic penalty tribunal, an independent adjudicator of the fines issued by local authorities who overturned the council's decision. / They ruled he should not have to pay the fine as there was insufficient warning as he was approaching the pedestrianised zone and signage was unclear. / Chris, who runs a carpet and upholstery cleaning business, believes the authority is issuing fines hoping motorists won't challenge them all the way to tribunal. / He said: "There's no way in the world anyone could remember all the locations of all the school zones, so people are reliant upon the signage and it is not good enough. / "There's two signs warning about the zone, one right as it starts and another 200 yards up the street at a busy junction. / "I was turning right from Saunders Street onto Richmond Road; it's a very busy street, so when you're pulling up at the stop sign, you are more interested in avoiding oncoming traffic coming at you from the left and the right and across the road. / "So I didn't notice that there is a sign straight across that's not actually facing the junction, it's facing up Richmond Road." / Chris says it "can't be just a one-off" and he doesn't believe he's the only person who's been fined. / "Medway Council must surely be aware of this but they are definitely banking on people not taking it further," he added. ...
Chris Lee fought back against his fine (Picture: SWNS)

Chris, a carpet business owner, received his £35 fine for driving down Richmond Road in Gillingham, one morning in September. He immediately appealed to the council, having not spotted any signs telling him that he couldn’t access the road.

After this was rejected, he escalated the matter to a tribunal, which overturned the fine.

Chris said, ‘You literally blink, and you miss the signs. It was a total mystery to me. It is too wordy. The road I got caught in is pretty much a main road, and yet for two hours of the day, cars and motorbikes can’t go down there.’

Chris’s success in his tribunal has seen others begin to question their own fines, even as the council has said it successfully defends itself from other appeals.

A Medway Council spokesperson said: ‘We have successfully defended a number of appeals at this location, and this is the first in which an adjudicator has found against us on signage grounds.

‘While we will review the adjudicator’s decision, we remain satisfied that signage at this site is adequate and compliant with the relevant legal standards.

‘We will continue to review feedback, including comments on signage, to ensure the scheme operates effectively.’

General view of Richmond road one of the many where the local council has restricted access to the road and has issued 24,669 penalty charge notices (PCNs) from March 2024 to October 2025. Gillingham, Kent // A council has raked in nearly ??680k in fines after introducing 'school gate' driving restrictions aimed at making roads safer - but some locals say it's just a "money-making" scheme. Medway Council has issued almost 25,000 fines to drivers since bringing in its Safer Streets scheme outside 11 schools across Kent in March last year. The scheme prohibits motorists from using the road outside schools at pickup and drop-off times; between 8:15 and 9am in the morning and 2:45 and 3:45pm in the afternoon. The Penalty Charge Notices (PCNs) have since raked in a small fortune of ??678,690 for the council. Photo released 19/11/2025
Richmond Road, seen above, is one of the streets affected (Picture: SWNS)

Other citizens are trying to fight back against fines imposed by yellow boxes, with Sam Wright, 48, saying authorities are misleading some road users into thinking they’ve broken the law.

Sam has successfully got hundreds of fines overturned in the last 18 months alone. He told Metro: ‘At the moment a lot of drivers are being ripped off and it is a very unfair system.

‘A lot of people are getting tickets when they are not guilty. Authorities are misquoting the law to them in a way that makes them think they are.’

Yellow box junctions are designed to stop drivers blocking the meeting point when traffic ahead isn’t moving, but some supposed yellow box offences appear ridiculous.

This includes a motorcyclist who had his wheel just centimetres over the yellow box and a car that was caught inside one for just seconds.

Both faced £160 fines in London, or reduced to £80 if paid within 14 days.

Sam got the authorities to backtrack on these fines, but only after they first rejected the appeals with ‘template letters’.

It took a further appeal to an adjudicator for the councils to pull out, but Sam says these tickets should never have been issued in the first place.

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