In 2010 my Department conducted a comprehensive review of the Disabled Parking Scheme. At that time, eligibility for a permit was focused primarily on diagnosis of certain medical conditions - regardless of the condition's impact on a person's mobility. The review report highlighted the fact that many people with particular conditions, but with no serious mobility impairments, were receiving permits. The effect of this was that people who genuinely had mobility impairments faced greater competition for the limited number of disabled parking spaces available nationally. On the basis of the above, the review recommended revising the eligibility criteria for the disabled parking permit to focus on the limitations on physical mobility. This is in line with the original intention of the scheme. I subsequently brought in Regulations to give effect to this by defining a disabled person, in the context of the disabled parking permit, as ‘a person with a permanent condition or disability that severely restricts his or her ability to walk’.
This remains the position today, and I do not intend to revisit the matter in the immediate future.