Paris residents will be asked tomorrow if they are for or against a special parking tariff for heavy, large and polluting SUVS parked by non-residents, as the French capital aims to target rich, out-of-town drivers entering the city.
In final campaigning before tomorrow's vote, the Socialist mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo, canvassed parents outside a primary school in the 10th arrondissement near the Gare du Nord, where pollution from traffic on large boulevards and small backstreets, and a lack of green space, had led many local residents to call for restrictions on cars.
"We're doing this to reduce pollution and to make our children safer, because these cars are dangerous," Hidalgo said. "Paris is transforming itself to allow people to breathe better and live better."
If Paris votes yes on parking tariffs, the cost of on-street parking for an SUV will rise to €18 (£15) an hour in the centre of Paris and €12 an hour in the rest of the city. The prices will apply to vehicles weighing more than 1.6 tonnes with a combustion engine or hybrid vehicles, and more than 2 tonnes for electric vehicles. The move will not apply to Paris residents.
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