Parking in Atlanta

Moderated by Rick Badie

Parking in downtown has long been a nightmare. Now it can be quite costly, too, if you stay past your allotted time or park illegally. City Hall was flooded with complaints after it contracted with ParkAtlanta, a unit of Duncan Solutions, to manage enforcement. An Atlanta city councilman writes that it’s time to terminate the contract and start anew, while I give a synopsis of how the city reached this juncture.

By Kwanza Hall

Once again, the city of Atlanta’s decision to privatize parking enforcement is in the news. This time, everything from the reliability of parking meters and the accuracy of signage to the ethics of ticket writing has been questioned. In July 2009, the Atlanta City Council authorized the department of public works to enter into a contract with Milwaukee-based Duncan Solutions to enforce the city’s parking code. Between July and September that year, an agreement was worked out without council input. The agreement gave sweeping authority to Duncan Solutions to increase the number of metered spaces in the city and locate them where they pleased as long as the city received $5.5 million dollars annually. Seventy percent of the 2,500 parking meters were placed in the district I serve. Some of the city’s most popular small business corridors are there: Sweet Auburn and Edgewood avenues, Little Five Points, Fairlie-Poplar and Midtown.

These are corridors where entrepreneurs with a unique vision attract consumers looking for a unique shopping or dining experience. The businesses have a loyal following. Many of these corridors grew up before the automobile and have no interior or surface parking. On-street parking is the welcome mat to their businesses. A change in on-street parking enforcement, not done thoughtfully, can have as great a financial impact as a national recession. Each time a parking ticket is incorrectly issued or a boot is improperly placed, I worry about collateral damage to the city. We may have outsourced parking enforcement but we cannot outsource our leadership responsibilities. The city retains oversight of our parking enforcement program. It has the authority to reassess its relationship with the company that represents us.

As we approach the third anniversary of our contract with Duncan Solutions’ local affiliate, ParkAtlanta, it is time to admit some truths. This contract is not working. It is not working in the interests of our residents or small businesses. It is not working in the interests of the hundreds of thousands of commuters, out-of-towners and international visitors who visit the city.

If I had my way, we would cancel the contract with ParkAtlanta and start a new conversation about on-street parking enforcement. But I am only one council member of 15. Most council districts have no parking meters. They may not feel our citizens’ pain like we do in District 2. It will cost the city approximately $8 million to end our contract with ParkAtlanta. I believe that the short-term financial hit is worth it in the long run.

If we lack the will to void the contract, then we should start planning for the future of parking enforcement after the contract expires in 2016. Do we want to return parking enforcement to the city’s public works department, continue to outsource enforcement or explore a managed, fee-for-services model that allows for more flexibility? We have a little more than three years before the end of our current contract for parking enforcement, about the right amount of time to research best practices in other cities, consult with citizens, and determine next steps. Let’s get started.

Kwanza Hall is an Atlanta city councilman.

By Rick Badie

Nowadays in Atlanta, it really pays to feed the meter.

Three years ago, Duncan Solutions of Milwaukee signed a seven-year contract to handle parking enforcement in the city. The contract included parking meter collections, right-of-way enforcement, parking citation processing, booting and towing.

The company’s unit, ParkAtlanta, installed hundreds of multispace parking-meter pay stations around town. Get-tough measures for parking violators didn’t go over too well with some city dwellers and visitors.

Here are some highlights of what has transpired since the city outsourced parking enforcement:

 • July 2010: The Atlanta City Council votes to increase the time limits of metered parking in certain areas and to eliminate overnight parking restrictions in certain metered parking areas altogether. Those restrictions have an impact on revenue projections.

• Oct. 2010: ParkAtlanta issues refunds to drivers of 28 vehicles that haved been towed for illegal or improper parking from areas around the Georgia Dome. The reason: Parking signs in those areas were deemed inadequate.

• Oct. 2011: An independent arbitrator rules that the city may have to pay back the parking enforcement company nearly $3.5 million and see its share of parking tickets and towing fees reduced monthly. ParkAtlanta, which agreed with the arbitrator’s decision on revenue adjustments, had been working with the city to amicably settle the matter.

•  June 2012: The Atlanta City Council approves steeper fines issued by ParkAtlanta to ensure the city pockets the $5.5 million annually it was to receive from ParkAtlanta. That amount was jeopardized when city officials, as a response to residents’ complaints, limited ParkAtlanta’s enforcement. Fines for illegal parking jump to $35 from $25. After 14 days, the fines would jump to $70. And 45 days after the ticket is issued, the fine would hit $95.

• Aug. 2012: ParkAtlanta collected in 2011 more than $8.5 million and issued more than 200,000 citations, according to records obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. The company keeps whatever money it collects beyond the $5.5 million. Anderson Moore, regional vice president with Duncan Solutions, told the AJC: “We have to be accountable to the city everyday. This is what we do for a living and we are proud of that… We knew because of the history of the parking program in Atlanta there were going to be challenges. I’m very satisfied with our relationship with the city. The city did a good job flushing out the issues.”

By Anderson Moore

Jeremiah McWilliams’ recent article about parking enforcement in Atlanta addressed the importance of effective parking management to promote vehicle turnover and local commerce. As the city’s partner, ParkAtlanta is committed to delivering responsive, transparent service to the residents, businesses and visitors of Atlanta. We see ourselves as part of the Atlanta community, and while our business is probably not high on the popularity list for some, we want to do what is right and be accountable to the citizens of Atlanta and the city as a whole.

The nature of any scarce resource such as on-street parking is that there are many users with different views of how that resource should be allocated. It is the responsibility of city officials to sort out these conflicts and, once they have done so, it is ParkAtlanta’s job to implement the city’s policies. To do so, ParkAtlanta employs a combination of technology, parking management expertise, and trained staff to ensure that ParkAtlanta performs in accordance with the city’s ordinances, standard operating procedures and contract terms.

In order to maximize the accuracy, accountability and quality of our service, ParkAtlanta:

• Has enforcement officers capture images of illegally parked vehicles during the ticket writing process.

• Has enforcement officers record signage problems into their hand-held devices for overnight work-order generation.

• Records all customer telephone calls for quality assurance.

• Retains images of all payment documents and customer correspondence sent to us.

• Provides comprehensive reports to the city about program performance.

Since ParkAtlanta’s contract started in late 2009, city administrators, Atlanta city council members, and concerned citizens have worked to improve the city’s parking program and make it more responsive to the needs of motorists. As a result, parking zones have been established with days and hours of meter operations customized to local needs.

ParkAtlanta continues to work with the city to enhance the parking program and is working on the following improvements over the next few months:

• Adding credit card payment capability to 600 current coin-only spaces.

• Adding pay-by-cellphone/smartphone convenience for motorists.

• Adding “How To” videos to explain the operation of multi-space meters.

ParkAtlanta works hard to avoid errors, but we are not perfect. We regret when there are errors of any kind. When motorist confusion arises or ticketing errors occur and are brought to our attention, we pledge to handle them quickly and with as little hassle for the motorist as possible. The rate of such errors is low (fewer than 1.5 percent) and consistent with the best-run parking programs in the country, and over half of the tickets that are brought to our attention are dismissed before the motorist even has to go to court.

Other facts about the city’s parking program that people may not know are:

• In 2007/08, prior to enforcement layoffs, the city issued 13.3 tickets a month for every metered space. Last year, ParkAtlanta issued 7.7 tickets a month for every metered space.

• Enforcement officers cannot see how much time is left on an unexpired multi-space meter so they have no idea when a legally parked vehicle will expire.

• Two-thirds of all tickets issued in Atlanta are issued to vehicles registered outside the city limits, including nearly a quarter issued to out-of-state vehicles.

• Half of all motorists who receive tickets pay their tickets within 14 days – one of the highest compliance rates in the country.

• ParkAtlanta employs 80 people.

• ParkAtlanta staff includes 30 sworn police officers on a part-time basis who increase the police presence on streets.

• Half of the work under ParkAtlanta’s contract is performed by local minority and women-owned businesses.

On a personal note, before arriving at ParkAtlanta, I was the public parking director in both Denver and Kansas City. I’ve spent my career as a parking professional. With my team, we strive to run the best parking program in the country for Atlanta.

On the days when we fall short, I encourage any motorist who has a complaint about a ticket they received, a concern about some aspect of the parking program, or any other question, to reach out to ParkAtlanta at (888) 266-1360 or at www.parkatlanta.org. I promise we will do our best to resolve your issues or refer you to someone who can. Thank you for your patience as we work every day to make our program better and fair for everyone within the community we serve.

Anderson Moore, regional vice president, Duncan Solutions.

28 comments Add your comment

joe

August 29th, 2012
11:45 am

My company did some work near the high museum a few months back. We were ticketed twice in two days. Both times it was a vague matter, and the meter personnel were extremely rude. It cost my company lots of $$, it is a terrible system. We were not in the wrong either, but you cannot argue with “the man”>…

Joey

August 29th, 2012
11:33 am

No discussion of Atlanta parking is complete without a discussion of Public Transit. To my knowledge every city that has a successful public transit system has a significant shortfall of parking spaces at one end of the system at a minimum. This parking shortage occurs at retail centers, offices, government buildings, hotels and residences.

Why? Because in order to persuade people to tolerate the inconvenience of transit they must be forced to give up the convenience of their cars. High parking fees and high gas prices will work for a short time but only until the driver determines that the convenience of the car is worth the additional cost.

Until Atlanta is willing to eliminate parking spaces it will not, can not, have a successful public transit system.

LaTasha

August 29th, 2012
11:32 am

Adults are like children in that we’ll do whatever we think we can get away with, whether it’s parking illegally, underpaying our taxes or driving too fast, and we resent enforcement that reins in our behavior. So these whiney comments aren’t surprising.

You think ParkAtlanta’s tickets are bad? I lived in a city in KY where you automatically got towed if your meter expired. No ticket, no warning, nothing – if the cops came by and you were parked on an expired meter you could retrieve your car @ the impound lot.

Zen Galacticore

August 29th, 2012
11:29 am

There’s a simple solution for most people when it comes to parking hassles in Atlanta:

TAKE THE TRAIN you rubes!

Oh, that’s right, Cobb and Gwinnett opted out of MARTA because you didn’t want those “colored” people riding the train into your sub-bucolic Shangra-La! So, no rapid rail for you! I hope you like the hell you’ve created for yourselves.

Any real, world-class city (as we Atlantans aspire to be), has an extensive rapid transit infrastructure. But nooooo, rubes and bumkins, and selfish, hypocritical yuppies in suburban an exurban counties want to all drive their congestion and traffic-causing cars into the heart of Downtown and Midtown in order to enjoy the amenities of a great city!

Since we had no geographical barriers and since the advent of the automobile, we all decided to spread out in every direction from the city heart, and for scores of miles. Now that we’ve done that incredibly stupid and short-sighted thing, we need rapid rail extending all the way north to Cumming and to Cartersville, and south to Peachtree City!

We need High Speed Rail east to Athens, west to the Alabama line, north to Tennesee line and northeast to Dahlonega, connecting at transfer terminals at metro-area rapid transit stations.

You voted down TSPLOST, now you can suffer the consequences in your cars. I think they should charge $20 a day to park in any public parking space anywhere in the heart of the city. You want to have the luxury of using your car in a dense urban area? You pay for it!

Sonny Jackson

August 29th, 2012
11:22 am

Guys, it’s all about the profits… Park Atlanta and the city really don’t care what you think or what you do. You are revenue – nothing more.

Bob Foster

August 29th, 2012
11:22 am

So they guaranteed the City 5.5 million dollars and collected 8.5 million in parking violations. How much did they collect from the parking meters? why is that number not published? Probably because it’s in the neighborhood of another 5 to 10 million dollars. Not a bad deal to make 14 to 19 million for just a measly 5.5. million guaranteed to the city!

Dear Mr. Moore

August 29th, 2012
11:10 am

Words mean nothing. The actions of your company and employees, who are compeltely incompetent and rude in my experience, speak much louder than your statement. I’ve lived in other cities and peopled don’t like parking enforcement but here people literally don’t spend money in the city of Atlanta because your pathetic excuse for a company has made parking a literal nightmare. Oh but you “Record all customer telephone calls for quality assurance”? Thank god for that. Keep up the good work.

WORST PART OF THE CITY. PERIOD.

August 29th, 2012
11:04 am

I live and work around Midtown and this is genuinely the one thing I loathe about this city. ParkAtlanta isn’t about reasonable parking enforcement… it’s about squeezing every penny possible out of locals and visitors alike. It really just makes me wonder how utterly incompetent/stupid/corrupt everyone in the local government is. This has a huge impact on the local economy because it’s just a big hassle to even consider trying to eat/visit somewhere in these areas.

Sluggo

August 29th, 2012
10:56 am

Recently, I parked on the street in Midtown.The city parking meter would not accept payment. I tried cash and then credit card to no avail.Next I flagged down a ParkAtlanta meter reader to assit me. She was also unable to operate the meter. She then suggest that I move my vehicle to another spot to avoid a ticket. I did move…30 miles up the road and spent my money outside the City Of Atlanta.

Ray

August 29th, 2012
10:52 am

It’s single-handedly reminded me that I don’t want to do business in Atlanta. I hate their heavy handed ticketing approach. Been burned twice in two months. Once for parking where there was a broken meter. You would think I shouldn’t have to pay? Hmmm. Lesson learned, if a meter is broken, don’t park there. Second time was using a spot to pick up my wife, waited for no more than 15-20 seconds in a parking space and the Park Atlanta meter maid slapped a ticket on my car as it was still running. I don’t think that these things should be outsourced. It makes the contractor act in a way that would be totally different than a city that would run parking enforcement. They are heavy handed since they have to get their 5.5 million back for the costs paid to the city.