By Mike DeBonis, Published: August 11
District residents living in the city’s densest and most parking-scarce neighborhoods will soon be able to apply for a free visitor parking pass, D.C. transportation officials announced last week. The surprise move has raised neighborhood concerns about possible abuse and further erosion of curbside parking for city residents.
In
recent years, the District’s transportation department has mailed free passes
to all households in some neighborhoods as a pilot project. Under the new program,
households in all areas where residents are required to purchase a permit to
park on the street will be eligible to request a free visitor pass. The free
passes will not be sent to individual households unless a resident requests
one.
D.C.
Council member Mary M. Cheh (D-Ward 3), who chairs the committee overseeing the
transportation department, said she is pleased that passes are no longer being
mailed en masse to residents. But she said she remains concerned that the free
passes easily could be misused, noting, for example, that residents could try
to sell the passes to commuters who want to park on residential-zoned streets
during the workday.
“We
were supposed to have an overarching, comprehensive plan about parking in
general, of which the visitor parking passes were supposed to be a part,” Cheh
said. “The whole thing was supposed to be thought through. That has not
happened.”
Cheh
said she had asked city transportation director Terry Bellamy to delay the
expansion of the free parking passes during a recent meeting. “My concern was
that we’re not ready to make this change, and the change we’re making doesn’t
link up with . . . how we deal with parking in general,” she said.
...
The
new passes will be valid from Oct. 1 through Sept. 30, 2014, and are valid for
use inside the boundaries of the advisory neighborhood commission in which the
passholder resides. The department said in a Thursday release that further
details on the application process will be released in coming weeks.
...
1 comment:
So what does the city do now if someone is misusing a visitors parking permit and will it be changing with the new system.
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