When I spoke before the On
Street Enforcement Association in Australia the Q and A session was more
interesting that the speech (If you can believe that.)
One of the officers, having
sat patiently through my “Shoupista” talk, raised his hand when the discussion
moved to enforcement, without which, nothing works.
“Let’s tell the truth,” he
said, “ninety percent of all citations are never written.” You could have heard
a pin drop. Of course he was right.
Only about 10 percent of the people
who violate the parking rules and regulations ever get caught. I used myself as
an example. I know that when I scoff at putting a quarter in the meter or park
in a “resident’s only” space, my chances of getting a ticket are about 1 in 10.
Proof? Only my personal, non scientific
experience.
This week I had lunch with
Don Shoup at UCLA and he showed me a graph which was the result of a test done
by the City of Los Angeles on Hollywood Boulevard. They were testing in street
monitors that collected length of stay statistics.
The entire graph was the
total amount of parking available in the test area. The bottom about 25% was
green – that depicted space that was legitimately taken by car’s that were parked
legally. The top about 25% was blank, space not taken by cars. The middle 50%
showed space that was taken by cars parked illegally.
Two thirds of the cars parked
on Hollywood Boulevard were parked illegally; it certainly says something about
enforcement. Let’s face it. Those people knew absolutely their risk in getting
a ticket was nil.
Before you ask, my guess is
that the monitoring system simply tracked length of stay and those that stayed
longer than legally possible were considered illegally parked. I don’t know
whether or not these monitors were connected to the meters. It makes little
difference for the purpose of this blog.
What this shows is that the
city of Los Angeles is losing a whopping big number when it comes to 1) monies
placed in meters and 2) citation revenue. It would seem to me that stationing a
dozen enforcement officers in this 8 block area would return the investment
many fold.
This doesn’t mention the “cruising”
issue. Just think if all those spaces that were filled illegally were opened up
how many people cruising around looking for convenient parking in front of the
Chinese Theater or the Pantages would be off the street and many a traffic jam
would be eliminated.
Ninety Percent aren’t
written. Think back on your personal experience. How many times have you “run
in” to the dry cleaners or Starbucks and not put any money in the meter? How
many times have you come back to your car and seen that little red flag in the
meter window? How many times have you parked in the “residential parking zone”
in a neighborhood and not taken the time to go back to your car with the guest
permit? Then think about the number of parking tickets you got last year. Gee,
maybe it’s more than 90 percent.
JVH
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