Councilman wants to stop giving tickets at broken parking meters
The L.A. City Council’s newly minted Transportation Committee chairman used his first motion Tuesday to deride a controversial policy that allows the city to ticket motorists who park in spaces monitored by what turns out to be a broken meter.
“As a candidate, I heard a lot of people who were highly annoyed about this,†said Councilman Mike Bonin. “Even if the impact is a small one, it still sends this horrible message that the city isn’t on your side.â€
Before 2010, motorists could park at broken meters across the city without fear of reprisal. But a new policy adopted that year made it illegal for cars to park in spaces where the meter is broken.
Since then, city officials have replaced their stock of old, coin-only meters with newer models that accept credit/debit cards and coins. The new meters also send a signal if there is a malfunction so a technician can quickly come and fix it.
“Since we adopted this policy ... the city has been instituting new technology,†Bonin said. “The policy isn’t necessary.â€
Bonin wants the council to rescind the policy but how easy that will be remains unclear. Nevertheless, a bill that would end with the same result in L.A. is working its way through the state Legislature.
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Twitter: @aribloomekatz
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