The Norwalk Hour

Conn. tow truck companies seeking higher fees

- By Ken Dixon

Connecticu­t’s towing companies, citing rising costs to run their businesses, want a 60 percent increase in fees for removing and storing vehicles towed from crashes or violating private parking rules.

Under a proposal by Michael Festa, who owns Watertown-based MyHoopty.com and Piggie Back Towing, LLC, and supported by other tow operators, including the Towing Recovery Associatio­n of America, the basic towing charge of $105 plus $4.75 per mile would increase to more than $167 and $7.58 per mile.

The tow operators said they need higher rates to keep up with rising costs. They cited utilities, employee pay and maintenanc­e of wreckers, which now ranges from over $100,000 to $1 million for huge wreckers capable of removing overturned tractor-trailer trucks involved in crashes on interstate highways.

The outside, gated storage fee of $26 a day for five days or fewer would rise to $41.48 for vehicles under 20 feet in length, under the proposal, which comes four years after the last price increase.

But residents and tenant representa­tives from Hamden and New Haven brought grievances to the four-hour public hearing Wednesday on the industry’s proposals to change the rates on so-called nonconsens­ual towing. They complained about a rogue industry in which some tow operators patrol residentia­l parking lots for even minor infraction­s, then gouge vehicle owners when they try to reclaim their property.

In particular, they said Festa’s operations aggressive­ly enforce parking rules that result in expensive vehicle seizures and storage costs.

A legal-aid lawyer and an attorney for the state insurance industry said the claimed economic hardships of the wrecker industry were over-blown, and the towing companies do not need such a high price hike.

“Quite honestly, we have been driven crazy by this tow company,” said Greta Blau, one of several resident advocates who attempted to refute claims of tow operators of the need for higher prices.

Blau alleged instances of companies towing vehicles for minor infraction­s in private parking lots, including for not backing into spaces and not parking totally within the lines. She added that the towing has also come without warning.

Speaking in the Legislativ­e Office Building before Brian Carey, a private attorney who is a veteran Department of Motor Vehicles hearing officer, Festa and other wrecker company owners said about 80 percent of their business comes from police calls after crashes or motor vehicle stops where damaged, unlicensed, unregister­ed or uninsured cars are ordered towed away and stored. The rest come from private calls.

During 90 minutes of testimony, Festa portrayed the industry as crucial to Connecticu­t’s commerce, with his four wreckers available around the clock in all types of weather when motorists are speeding and more reckless than ever. “We don’t want people sitting in their car, waiting for a tow truck to get hit,” Festa said. “We don’t want [state] troopers to get hit, and we don’t want people to cause accidents.”

State law allows wreckers to recover “just and reasonable” expenses and a profit determined by the DMV. The average wrecker will participat­e in about 550 tows per year, 75 percent of which are nonconsens­ual, Festa said. “Many of my friends, learned people, are going to tell you that raising the nonconsens­ual rates adversely affects lowerincom­e families,” Festa said.

“Sounds like a good argument, and I am sure they are affected. But they have also gotten a 39 percent increase with the minimum wage through today?” Festa asked. “They’ll have a 48 percent increase as of June 1, 2023. Now that they have this increase, many of them can afford the $38 a year to have the insurance company provide towing for them when their vehicle breaks down, instead of having a nonconsens­ual tow.”

“We need a leap in our rates for us to keep providing public service at an acceptable level,” said Paul Hilario, whose Hilario’s Service Center in Danbury and Newtown focuses on towing large trucks that get stranded or involved in crashes.

Opponents of the proposed rate hikes portrayed an industry that they say is predatory, alleging it can sometimes operate outside state regulation­s.

“As rates go up, it becomes harder and harder for people who have a car that is towed to get their car back, and that is a major concern to us,” said Raphael Podolsky, an attorney with Connecticu­t Legal Services, which represents low-income state residents and renters in a variety of civil matters. “The [state] statute talks about ‘just and reasonable,’ ” he said. Regulation­s protect vehicle owners, particular­ly from the daily accrual of storage fees, he said.

“The longer it takes you to compile the money in order to be able to bail your car out of storage, the more the cost becomes,” Podolsky said, stressing the distinctio­n between the act of towing and the storage of vehicles. “Fifteen days of storage is about $600 under the proposed rate,” he said. “The cost is not insignific­ant for a person trying to get their car back. It’s my understand­ing that sometimes cars that are towed off public property are towed to lots that are a very great distance away, which creates a major inconvenie­nce for the owner of the vehicle.”

Brooke Foley, general counsel for the Insurance Associatio­n of Connecticu­t, said that while towing companies serve essential roles in clearing roads after crashes, nonconsens­ual tows are an entirely different matter, with car owners unable to negotiate prices or comparison shop. She recalled that it was historic allegation­s that created the existing pricing regulation­s set by the DMV commission­er. Foley opposed the rate-hike proposal and contested Festa’s claims of some increased costs.

“The data in the petition is incomplete as well as inaccurate,” Foley said. “These proposed increases in towing and storage prices would disproport­ionately harm low-income Connecticu­t residents. Many municipali­ties tow vehicles as a way to collect unpaid parking tickets and property taxes. When low-income citizens’ cars are towed, they may be losing their only means of transporta­tion to get to work, to get the money that they need to be able to pay for the towing cost as well as the storage costs and release of their vehicle from a cashonly towing yard.”

 ?? Alton Telegraph ?? Towing companies owners said at a hearing Wednesday that about 80 percent of their business comes from police calls after crashes or motor vehicle stops where damaged, unlicensed, unregister­ed or uninsured cars are ordered towed away and stored.
Alton Telegraph Towing companies owners said at a hearing Wednesday that about 80 percent of their business comes from police calls after crashes or motor vehicle stops where damaged, unlicensed, unregister­ed or uninsured cars are ordered towed away and stored.

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