High-tech parkingmeters rake in cash for cities that need it
PACIFIC GROVE, Calif. (AP) In this seaside town, parkingmeters don't 
grant those magical few minutes on someone else's dime. Each time a 
car pulls away from a space, the meter automatically resets to zero.
 
  In Pacific Grove, Calif. parkingmeters don't grant any extra time 
on someone else's dime. Each time a car pulls away, the meters reset 
to zero.   
By Eric Risberg, AP 

Little is left to chance in the brave new world of parking 
technology: Meters are triggered by remote sensors, customers pay 
for street time by cell phone and solar-powered vending machines 
create customized parking plans for the motorist.

Oh, and forget about rubbing the traffic officer's chalk mark off 
your tires on the streets of cities where short-term parking is free 
but overstays are punished by fines.

If you're in Monterey, Calif., or Chicago, you're apt to be foiled 
by parking officials who drive minicarts outfitted with GPS-enabled 
cameras that scan your license plate and know how long a car has 
occupied the given space.

Coin-operated, single-spaced meters were banished years ago from 
such major metropolises as New York and Toronto. But smaller cities 
including Aspen, Colo., and Savannah, Ga., have now ditched them, 
too.

Advanced parking technologies can lower a city's operating costs, 
reduce staffing needs and increase ticketing accuracy, resulting in 
fewer challenges in traffic court. Bill Francis, a vice president at 
the Los Angeles-based Walker Parking Consultants, says technology 
can also help local officials more smoothly collect on outstanding 
tickets, which for several cities he's familiar with added up to $4 
million in just five years.

Pacific Grove, a coastal resort town where visitors to the nearby 
Monterey Bay Aquarium and Pebble Beach golf course compete with 
locals for the few oceanside spaces, went for the gold when it went 
digital last year.

It installed meters that increase parking fees over time, so that 
quick errands remain relatively inexpensive but long stays become 
more costly.

A wire grid under the pavement triggers a sensor whenever a car 
pulls in. The information can be sent wirelessly via radio signals 
to traffic enforcers so they'd know when time runs out on any 
parking spot in town. The meter resets itself as soon as the car 
pulls away, so the next car has to pay the full fee.

"Today's meters are little computers," said Ross Hubbard, a former 
Pacific Grove city councilman who advocated for the switch. The city 
now leases 100 meters for $45,000 per year from Duncan Parking 
Technologies Inc.

And after examining the data, the council realized it could bring in 
still more revenue by shifting the enforcement schedule to include 
Saturday afternoons, "when the likelihood of nabbing people is 
statistically much higher," Hubbard said.

The official enthusiasm isn't shared by all drivers in Pacific Grove.

Sue Shenkman said she wasn't happy about shelling out $4 to keep her 
spot for the fifth hour, after spending $1 for each of the first two 
hours and $2 for each of the next two.

But she really wanted her son to see the aquarium.

"At home, we're always trying to get someone else's meter that has a 
little time on it," said Shenkman, who was visiting from Boston.

For Officer Tony Marino, it's a question of changing attitudes, 
showing people the benefits of a system that can no longer be gamed.

"I just wish people would go with the flow," said Marino, whose 
three-wheeled cart is the center of the town's enforcement 
operation. "I mean, a parking meter is like a restaurant table: We 
have to turn these things over."

In Sacramento, officials solved the turnover problem by booting cars 
that repeatedly overstay their street time. There, officers drive 
around in minicarts made by Autovu Technologies Inc. that take 
infrared pictures of license plates.

That program and other efforts to collect on unpaid tickets have 
increased revenues by more than $300,000 in the past year, said 
Howard Chan, who runs the city's parking division.

Not all the meter technology is aimed at better enforcement.

Convenience is the mantra in Coral Gables, Fla., where residents 
have quickly learned to feed meters by cell phone, using a system 
made by Canada's Mint Technology Corp. After registering online, 
giving credit card information and getting a user ID, subscribers 
can dial an 800 number and punch in the code assigned to their 
meter. Their cost for each "parking session" plus a $7 monthly fee 
is billed directly online.

Sacramento is also piloting three solar-powered multi-space meters 
that can be configured to accept coins, credit cards, bills and 
stored-value smart cards, allowing motorists to pay for the time 
they wish to stay without being restricted to the change in their 
pockets.

But local governments considering upgrades still need to do their 
research.

Chris Quick, the lead parking officer in Palo Alto, said the city 
decided against buying carts similar to Sacramento's four years ago 
because at the time, the infrared cameras appeared to have wandering 
eyes.

"On rainy days especially, for whatever warped reason, the device 
seemed to like to take pictures of trees," Quick said.

Instead, the city bought handheld devices that can tell whether a 
car has been in the same spot for too long. Officers manually enter 
license plate numbers and return an hour or two later to re-enter 
the plates. When the machine gets a match, the officer can issue a 
parking ticket.

Louise Gilman figures she spends $600 per year on parking tickets 
because she doesn't like to move her car from a shady two-hour spot 
near her office in downtown Palo Alto.

Gilman is still trying to figure out how they catch her, because she 
goes out every few hours to check whether the police have chalked 
her tires, an indicator of whether she's exceeded her parking time 
limit. She hasn't heard about the handheld gadgets.

"You're sitting there saying 'I know I just went out there and 
looked for chalk. How could I have been ticketed?'" Gilman 
said. "They're very sneaky."



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