Parking
Streetsblog LA
Eyes on the Street: DIY Parking Spaces
Many Streetsblog readers are likely already familiar with the myriad
accomplishments of Los Angeles' intrepid Department of Do-It-Yourself.
If you haven't read all about the Dept of DIY, follow the links on the fifth paragraph of Damien's April 1, 2010 article.
May 6, 2010
Boston Endorses Parking Reform as Key Green Policy
"Folks,
you ain't seen nothing yet," Mayor Bloomberg told an Earth Day crowd
yesterday. "The best and greenest days are yet to come." The PlaNYC
update coming in 2011, he implied, would have a slew of new initiatives
to make our city more sustainable, and he's taking suggestions.
April 23, 2010
Parking Rock Star, Donald Shoup Blasts L.A.’s Parking Policies
It's no secret that Livable Streets advocates are big fans of the theories of Donald Shoup. The Shoupista that introduced him on Saturday referred to him as "Shoup Dogg," and Streetsblog prefers to sing "Shoup there it is." These kind of salutations for an Economics professor who dresses the part of the academic activist from his tweed jacket to a t-shirt that reads "All may park, ALL MUST PAY" may seem silly; but his message for Angelenos is not. Our parking policy doesn't just make bad economic sense, it's also playing a major role in holding our city back. The UCLA professor is considered one of the foremost expert at parking policy, and when it comes to his host city; he doesn't like what he sees.
March 24, 2010
KTLA Shocked at Suggestion to Bike or Take Transit to Marathon Finish
About half way through the above video, KTLA's Eric Spillman talks to the L.A. Marathon's Peter Abraham about the transportation plan for people wishing to be at the end of the marathon. Under KTLA's banner of "Parking Problems," Abraham rationally explains that you should probably bike (free bike valet!) or take transit to the end of the race. That's when things go off the tracks if you will.
March 18, 2010
Want to Foster Walking, Biking and Transit? You Need Good Parking Policy
The high-water mark for American parking policy came in the early
1970s, when cities including New York, Boston, and Portland set limits
on off-street parking in their downtowns. They were compelled to do so
by lawsuits brought under the Clean Air Act, which used the lever of
parking policy to curb traffic and reduce pollution from auto
emissions. This level of innovation went unmatched over the ensuing
three-and-a-half decades. Only now are U.S. cities implementing
effective new parking strategies that cut down on traffic.
February 23, 2010
City’s Plan to “Privatize” Publicly Owned Parking Garages Leaves Some Experts Scratching Their Heads
LAist and the Times both report that the Los Angeles City Council Budget and Finance Committee approved a plan to partially privatize city-owned parking garages, but not meters, for the next fifty years to help fill a massive budget hole in the short term. The city is hoping to raise $189 million from the transaction which would basically be a 50-year outsourcing of the garages’ management and
profits. Some of the management and profits would remain with the city, and some experts are pointing to other aspects of the plan which could lower the city's $189 million asking price and hamper efforts to bring major reform to our city's already wasteful parking strategies.
February 4, 2010
Parking Reformer Lowenthal Continues to Get Attacked in the Press. Let’s Help Him Out
As news continues to spread about Senate Bill 518, Senator Alan Lowenthal's legislation that passed the State Senate last week and would encourage municipalities to curb their addiction to free parking or lose out on state planning and transit grants; the reaction from the press has been almost uniformly bad. And it's not just the conservative outlets such as Fox News that are piling on. As we detailed yesterday, the Times is almost gleefully promoting the most inflammatory comments from their article. Yesterday, the Long Beach Press-Telegram, Lowenthal's local paper, took an editorial stand against the legislation.
February 3, 2010