Los Angeles Times

Whose job is parking reform?

- Nyone who has

Adriven in Los Angeles knows the frustratio­n of dealing with its broken parking meters, sparse parking spots and occasional­ly inane parking rules ( assuming they were lucky enough to find a parking spot at all). So California Assemblyma­n Mike Gatto ( D- Los Angeles) will no doubt find a lot of fans for his grandiosel­y named “California Parking Bill of Rights.”

Under Gatto’s reform package, cities around the state would be prohibited from ticketing motorists who park at broken meters. A 2013 state law, authored by Gatto, already covers this, but it is due to expire at the end of this year. Gatto’s law also bars valetparki­ng operators from commandeer­ing metered parking spots, requires cities to free up parking spaces as soon as street sweeping is done ( rather than having hours- long restrictio­ns on street- sweeping days), and mandates that cities with high- tech “smart” meters allow the price at the meter to vary by time of day and demand for spaces.

But as reasonable as some his proposed reforms are — of course no one should be ticketed because they couldn’t feed a broken meter — these rules and regulation­s of street parking are not issues for the state legislatur­e. They’re classic local issues which different cities might want to handle differentl­y. And if problems arise, they’re best fixed by local government­s. Most members of the Los Angeles City Council opposed Gatto’s 2013 bill restrictin­g ticketing at broken meters, arguing he had oversteppe­d into the realm of local lawmaking. They were right.

Interestin­gly, L. A. had been ticketing at broken meters, on the dubious argument that not doing so created an incentive for motorists to break them. But the council changed that unpopular ( and unreasonab­le) policy after the Gatto bill passed. In other words, Gatto successful­ly forced the city’s hand.

In the last few years in Los Angeles there has been such an outcry over confusing parking regulation­s and increases in parking fines that Mayor Eric Garcetti created what he calls the Parking Reform Working Group, which delivered a report last year on how to reform the system. Councilman Mike Bonin incorporat­ed a number of its suggestion­s into several motions that are now winding their way through council committees.

But the city needs to get moving on this. The working group was formed in June 2014 and reported back last February, yet none of its changes have been implemente­d to date. No wonder it seems like good politics for Gatto to declare himself the defender of drivers’ “rights.” Neverthele­ss, the fact remains that City Hall is the place to enact any parking reforms for city streets.

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