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Dear fellow car drivers friends and neighbors,
The City is counting on you to park longer than 48 hours in one place, to not remember which day is street cleaning on your side, and to forget to give your out-of-town friends and relatives visitor passes instantly when they arrive at your place. I know what you're thinking, that the City wants its residents, workers, and visitors to abide by the laws, not break them.
Alas, the FY2010 municipal budget (pdf) has already been written with the expectation of approx $8.7 million from parking fines (up $1.5 million from last year) plus change in surcharges, towing fees, and moving violations. So, unless you want the city to face cut-backs in police, fire, and education, you'd better start parking within 20 feet of an intersection and leaving your car on the street during your week-long vacation. The City has even adjusted its parking policies to help facilitate this new revenue increase.
But seriously, if the City is going to rely on this regressive form of taxation, shouldn't we at least expect the burden to fall somewhat equitably around the city? And how does Somerville compare to surrounding communities in terms of its parking enforcement policies? If you'd like to help us find out the answers to these and other parking related questions, then please consider pledging what you can to our new $500 fund-raiser to hire an investigative journalist. To join our campaign or leave a comment, please head on over to the Somerville Voices blog and thanks!
Sincerely,
Barry Rafkind
The City is counting on you to park longer than 48 hours in one place, to not remember which day is street cleaning on your side, and to forget to give your out-of-town friends and relatives visitor passes instantly when they arrive at your place. I know what you're thinking, that the City wants its residents, workers, and visitors to abide by the laws, not break them.
Alas, the FY2010 municipal budget (pdf) has already been written with the expectation of approx $8.7 million from parking fines (up $1.5 million from last year) plus change in surcharges, towing fees, and moving violations. So, unless you want the city to face cut-backs in police, fire, and education, you'd better start parking within 20 feet of an intersection and leaving your car on the street during your week-long vacation. The City has even adjusted its parking policies to help facilitate this new revenue increase.
But seriously, if the City is going to rely on this regressive form of taxation, shouldn't we at least expect the burden to fall somewhat equitably around the city? And how does Somerville compare to surrounding communities in terms of its parking enforcement policies? If you'd like to help us find out the answers to these and other parking related questions, then please consider pledging what you can to our new $500 fund-raiser to hire an investigative journalist. To join our campaign or leave a comment, please head on over to the Somerville Voices blog and thanks!
Sincerely,
Barry Rafkind
no subject
Date: 2009-08-28 04:10 pm (UTC)I am merely expressing my personal preference that the City only craft its parking policies to deter parking violations and not as a revenue generator as it is doing now. I wonder how you feel about that?
no subject
Date: 2009-08-28 09:07 pm (UTC)I have not reviewed any material regarding the decision-making process for Somerville parking violation fees (including recent changes to such fees and fines), and so I do not presume to make an uninformed judgment on whether the City is, in fact, using parking violations as a "revenue generator," except in the sense that this is a normal activity of government that does, in fact, generate revenue (one of the few).
The City's "incentive to try to meet projections" is based entirely on what you have already mentioned - "programs and salaries." Fees and fines cannot be used as a way to artificially inflate the budget - that is part of what accounting ethics and audits prevent. Somerville's spending is not based on what it generates via fees and fines - if it were, there would not be much of a city government. Contrary to some of your sensationalist commentary (oh no we better park next to fire hydrants!), it would be against standard accounting practices for the City to base the bulk of its operating budget on projected fines.
Here's the summary version: Facts about governmental accounting practices matter more than feelings in this discussion.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-28 11:27 pm (UTC)The City of Somerville does not rely primarily on fines and fees for revenues, but it has boosted them in this budget cycle to help fill the gaps. The proof is in the budget itself, linked from my post above as well as the Mayor's May 4th budget presentation (http://www.somervillema.gov/cos_content/documents/SpecialBOAMeetingMayorsPresentation5-4-2009.pdf) (see slide 13).
In this Jun 30th SJ article (http://www.wickedlocal.com/somerville/news/x1885874713/Somerville-aldermen-split-on-citywide-permit-parking) about the city's plan to make resident-permit parking city-wide, Ald. "Roche said if the plan, recommended by the Traffic Commission, does not go into effect by Aug. 1, the city would lose $10,000 to $15,000 a month in much needed revenue." Clearly, these parking changes are being made for financial reasons, not primarily to improve our parking system. Now that you have the facts, how do you feel about them?