December 21st, 2024

Parking fines may be on the rise


By Al Beeber - Lethbridge Herald on October 27, 2022.

Herald photo by Al Beeber City parking staff check a licence plate Wednesday in downtown Lethbridge. City council has directed administration to examine the present fee structure for fines and return with a schedule to help offset costs in the operation of parking activities.

LETHBRIDGE HERALDabeeber@lethbridgeherald.com

City council is asking administration to examine the present fee structure for parking violation fines and return with a schedule to help offset costs in the operation of parking activities.

Council unanimously passed an official business motion by Councillor John Middleton-Hope on the matter Tuesday. The subject will also be addressed during November budget deliberations.

The motion states that parking fees haven’t increased since 2012 and fines here are among the lowest in comparable municipalities in the province.

Middleton-Hope told council “parking violation fines and parking fees have remained static for several years. Currently many citizens who work in the downtown core decline paying for parking because the fines for parking and relief, if the fines are paid early, act as a disincentive to pay for parking. We currently have some of the lowest parking fines of the largest cities in the province.

“What I’m proposing does not penalize lawful parking but it holds those who are delinquent accountable to a higher standard by way of imposing stricter consequences. Parking fines also generate revenue” that also can be applied to enhancing and improving regulatory services which he says “has been overburdened for some time without much foreseeable relief.”

A council referral item in the draft budget calls for increasing the fee for on-street parking fines from $25 to $50 while keeping the $15 reduction if payment is received within seven days of the date of the offence.

An official business motion proposed by Middleton-Hope regarding Regulatory Services capacity shortage was carried by a 6-3 vote. It also will be the subject of budget deliberations next month.

The motion calls for administration to examine funding sources and a strategy to add capacity to the Regulatory Services department and help offset costs in its operation.

That department has numerous responsibilities including parking violations, utility bylaw enforcement, business licensing, animal control, unsightly premises, snow bylaw and Weed Act enforcement.

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Citi Zen

Yet another reason to never go downtown.

Grumpyguy

Shouldn’t regulatory services generate revenue by writing tickets? Give me a ticket book and I’ll clean up my own neighbourhood. All I ask is for 20% of the take.