Why is parking at a hospital different from parking anywhere else in the City? Sick people get delivered to the door. Disabled people have stickers entitling them to special privileges. There's no discount when an outpatient goes shopping, why would there be one when they go for their regular physio? The pro-tax-paid parking lobby just seem to assume we all feel as they do, and offer only abuse not reasoning when faced with those who don't.
It's not that I think these folks going to hospital—guys like me go quite regularly and often—should be inconvenienced or put to extra expense, but the pro-discount parking posters here haven't said why they think the rest of us should subsidize parking at hospitals, although FAST has finally said how: Once you have been admitted and added a hospital card to your over-fat wallet, you get a discount if you show the visit-slip the hospital staff now must find time to print and validate for you. The guy who walked or took the bus, not so much, even though he pays the same taxes as the fat-assed parkers.
So why is hospital parking worthy of tax-support?