Lethbridge Herald

Montreal boosts parking fines

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — MONTREAL

Amid ongoing debate over the place of the automobile in urban centres, the City of Montreal has announced it is following through on a plan to boost fines for parking and traffic violations.

Mayor Valerie Plante’s administra­tion, which has been praised and criticized for policies to limit cars, says fines for parking in a disability zone will double to $300, while tickets for double parking and blocking traffic will increase by $20 to $60.

The fine for a basic parking violation will be $62 including fees, compared to $30 in Toronto, $68 in Calgary and $100 in Vancouver, according to figures supplied by the City of Montreal.

The increases are expected to be approved at April’s city council meeting.

A city spokesman said the measure will improve traffic flow and make roads safer by removing obstructio­ns to visibility.

“Car drivers who commit infraction­s hurt traffic mobility by double-parking and blocking lanes, therefore punishing thousands of other drivers,” Philippe Sabourin said in an interview.

He denied the measure is anti-car or intended solely to fill city coffers.

Plante’s administra­tion announced earlier this year it expects to collect roughly $12 million more in revenues from fines this year despite ending a widely hated ticket quota system for police officers.

The city says the parking ticket increase is the first since 2009 and brings fines in line with those doled out by other major North American cities.

But the leader of the opposition sees it differentl­y, saying it amounts to a “disguised tax” and an example of the administra­tion’s anti-car agenda.

Lionel Perez said Plante campaigned on a promise to represent all Montrealer­s but has since shown her true colours.

“What we see here is a concerted effort through different public policy decisions that are clearly demonstrat­ing their tendency to be anti-car,” he said in a phone interview Friday.

On the streets of Old Montreal, some citizens who spoke to The Canadian Press said they believe the bigger fines are more about discouragi­ng car use than increasing safety.

“It’s an agenda to push the (subway)” said Jordan Duguay, who was standing at a street corner talking to a friend.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada