Eastern Ontario has always prided itself on community and care. From the small-town generosity of Kemptville and Almonte to the bustling networks of support in Ottawa, people here know what it means to stand by one another in times of crisis. Yet a troubling trend is quietly eroding that sense of fairness: hospital parking fees.
In the past year, residents across our region have seen new charges introduced at hospitals once known for their accessibility. Kemptville District Hospitalbrought in a “Scan to Pay” system in July 2024, charging a flat $6 per day. This month, Almonte General Hospital, long a point of pride for offering free parking, is rolling out a gated system at $5 per day. In Ottawa, families face even steeper costs: the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario charges up to $15.60 per day, while Montfort Hospital’s daily rates range from $15 to $19, depending on in-and-out access.

For anyone who has supported a loved one through serious illness, these numbers tell a painful story. A cancer patient attending daily treatments in Ottawa could easily spend hundreds of dollars a month just to park. Families visiting sick children at CHEO or aging parents at Montfort are forced into impossible choices: pay the fee, or cut back elsewhere on essentials like groceries, fuel, or rent.
Defenders of these charges argue they are needed to cover parking lot maintenance or to discourage casual use of hospital spaces. But such reasoning sidesteps the ethical reality. The cost of public infrastructure should be borne by the public collectively, through fair taxation—not downloaded onto patients and families at their most vulnerable. To frame fees as a deterrent is worse: it implies that comforting a dying parent or spending time with a hospitalized child is somehow frivolous.
These fees are also inherently regressive. A single parent in Almonte living on Ontario Works pays the same $5 daily rate as a professional with six-figure earnings. But for the former, it may mean skipping meals or delaying bill payments. That is not just inconvenient, it is structurally unjust.
Eastern Ontario families know that healing rarely happens in isolation. Hospital visits often involve not just the patient but an entire network of care: parents, children, siblings, and friends. Parking fees act as barriers to this essential support system. They isolate patients, deepen stress, and send the message that community presence is only for those who can afford it.
Across the region, people are noticing. In Almonte, the introduction of paid parking has sparked conversations about fairness. In Kemptville, residents question why a community-driven hospital is now charging a flat rate for access. In Ottawa, families with children in long-term care quietly count the mounting costs. This is not just an inconvenience, it is a creeping inequity that undermines the very ethos of universal health care.
Eastern Ontario should lead by example. Scotland and Wales have already abolished hospital parking fees, recognizing them as barriers inconsistent with the values of public health care. We can do the same here. Local hospital boards and provincial leaders should treat these charges not as a revenue stream, but as a moral question: do we want to tax people for being sick and for supporting those they love?
Hospital parking fees in Eastern Ontario are not minor nuisances. They are hidden taxes that punish patients and families precisely when compassion should be our guiding principle. If we truly believe in fairness and universality, these fees must go.
Sources
• Kemptville District Hospital. “KDH Announces a New Barrier-Free Parking System.” July 2024.
• Mississippi Mills. “Almonte General Hospital to Implement Paid Parking.” August 2025.
• CHEO. “Parking Information.” April 2025.
• Montfort Hospital. Parking Information. 2025.
• Canadian Medical Association. “Parking Fees at Health Care Facilities.” CMA Policy, 2016.
• Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives. “User Fees: A Threat to Public Services and Equity.” CCPA Report, 2014.