Posted a new Angry Letter today. I’m tempted to tear down a bunch of “Emergency No Parking” signs. But I probably won’t.
Tag: parking
I should have taken a picture
As you know if you were in the DC Metro area last night, it was really, really windy. So windy, in fact, that the plywood sidewalk cover across the street from the house, erected by the construction company to protect pedestrians, blew over into the street. Luckily, there’s a fire hydrant there, and it’s the side of the street where you can’t park during rush hour, so only one car was hit with debris. Well, lucky if that wasn’t your car, I guess. I mean it was lucky that there weren’t more cars parked there.
The police came, and spent an hour or so driving past, and then backing up (the wrong way down our one-way street), and generally making a nuisance of themselves. Then they put up some crime scene tape and tore off down the street.
As of 7AM this morning, the car with a huge pile of plywood on top of it is due a parking ticket. It may be hard to place the ticket on the car, as the front end is entirely covered. But I fully expect DC’s parking enforcement to try anyway.
Take that, DC Parking Enforcement!
Complaint Hub » Blog Archive » I win! I’m a big winner!
We’re still waiting on a response for the big ticket, the $100 ticket. The wife wrote that letter. She’s a lawyer, so she should be better at convincing them, but we had a much stronger case on the one that I contested. So we’ll see.
Yes, I just quoted myself. Shut up. A couple of days ago, we finally got the letter saying that they forgave the big ticket, too. We weren’t sure what was going to happen – the car still had the old Virginia tags then. I’m sure if they tried they could get my SSN or VIN or something from Virginia and track down my DC registration that way, but that involves WORK, and I just wasn’t sure they were actually going to do that. But I didn’t want to contact the DMV after it was taking them forever to get back to us on this ticket, because that would absolve them of doing any work to connect me to the old ticket. Anyway, it’s moot now, because they finally succumbed to my wife’s crushing grip of reason and tore up the ticket. That brings our record on contesting tickets to 4-0, I think.
Im one of those DC snow car people now
When I first moved to the DC Metro area back in 2001, I was living in Fairfax, VA, and working on Wisconsin Ave NW. I used to park on a little un-zoned residential street. One winter, either 2001 or 2002, I forget, we had a big snow that was on the ground for a couple of weeks. We got 4-6 inches, and then it just stayed cold. Most of the cars in the neighborhood just didn’t move. For weeks, they just sat, covered in snow.
Now, today we got our first snow since we moved to the city, and my car is still covered. I expect it will be covered tomorrow. I mean, it’s supposed to get up close to 40 degrees tomorrow, so there’s not much point in clearing the car. In fact, since street cleaning has been suspended for the winter, I don’t expect to touch the car during the week until March or so.
Well, tomorrow we have errands to run in Virginia. But other than that.
It’s funny how quickly my attitude about driving has changed now that, for the most part, I don’t have to do it. Going a day without driving used to be really strange, and now it’s the norm.
Anyway, the snow’s kind of nice. My commute is only outdoors for three blocks to Metro, and then a minute where the Yellow Line train goes over the Potomac into Virginia. So the snow isn’t really a concern. I do have to take some trash out tonight, though.
Letters are easier, anyway
Due process too much hassle for DC dept. of motor vehicles – Boing Boing
Washington DC’s Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) will no longer allow citizens to protest parking tickets in person, reports Thenewspaper.com. Instead, they’ll offer mail-in and e-mail adjudication.
What kind of crazy person would go to the DMV to protest a ticket in person, anyway? As many of you have found via Google, I have a bit of experience protesting tickets via the mail. It actually works. They really do look at your letter, and they really do respond. It sometimes takes a letter to your councilmember to get it all worked out, but the statement in the article to which Boing Boing has linked:
Under the DMV’s plan, motorists will only be able to object to a ticket by email or letter where city employees can ignore or reject letters in bulk without affected motorists having any realistic recourse.
Just isn’t true. Does DC give out too many ridiculous parking tickets? Probably. Is the city too financially dependent on this revenue source? I don’t know, but it wouldn’t surprise me. Should it be easier to contest an erroneous ticket? Sure, but we have to weigh the cost/benefit analysis here. The reason you can’t contest a ticket in person anymore is probably NOT so the DMV can deny you due process (Does the DMV even owe you due process? I’m not sure. Maybe some lawyer can answer.). It is probably to save the DMV some money. If they don’t have to employ someone to sit and listen to how you know it said no parking, but you only had to run in for a minute, and it’s not your fault that your manicurist had a line and you had to wait and the kids were running around and it’s really not fair and you normally park in a regular spot and take the other car that you can usually park but this time you had the big car and gosh don’t you have kids then you understand, right? Then maybe they could put some of that saved money to use for education or increased police patrols or any of the million other things the city could be spending its money on.
Anyway, I know I only link to BoingBoing when they piss me off, so I want to state here that I read and enjoy the site every day. And I really don’t just read it waiting for them to say something that bugs me. I really recommend the site. They usually have smart, interesting things to say. Sometimes they say ridiculous things, but don’t we all?
I win again!
That’s two more parking tickets adjudicated. I guess that means forgiven. I leave looking that up as an exercise for you, the reader. DDOT got back to me, and said that the Zone 1 parking restrictions were not supposed to be enforced until August 27th, so both of my tickets will be forgiven. So, if you live on the 1400 block of Harvard Street, NW, and you received a ticket for failure to display a Residential Parking Permit for Zone 1 before August 27th, 2007, you still have time to contest it. Contact the DMV, or contact Councilmember Graham’s office if that doesn’t work. Just don’t pay that ticket.
All you need to know about DC parking tickets
To the person who found me by searching for “can you get a parking ticket in dc for having va tag where there are no sign”:
Yes. If it involves a non-moving car, you can get a ticket for it in DC.
If you remember that rule, you may save yourself a few parking tickets. I won’t say that you will save yourself from getting any parking tickets, because that’s impossible. But you can perhaps minimize them by assuming that you will always be ticketed. You will usually be right.
Anyway, I suggest you contest any ticket you might receive. It makes you feel better, and you can do it by mail, so it hardly costs anything.
Lets get the Councilmember involved
I wrote to Jim Graham today. I’m looking for a little help on my parking ticket problems. I figure that taking up Graham’s time is more efficient than taking up the time of a clerk in the DC traffic courts – Graham’s time is billed at a much higher rate, and it will take less time to reach the $60 they’re trying to take from me.
When I hear back, I’ll let you all know. And then I’ll contest my tickets.
Those heartless, inflexible bastards
I got another ticket today. Right on top of the note I left explaining the situation. I understand that the parking enforcement people are doing their job. But if I can get a ticket for failure to register my car because they’ve noticed it parked there for a while with non-DC tags, why can’t they also notice that it’s been registered for a few months, they’ve suddenly changed the rules for parking without telling anyone, and cut me a break?
Apparently paying attention from day to day only works when you’re trying to bleed the taxpayers. This is now six tickets in DC, including one before I moved here that was my fault (I misread a sign that was pretty clear, I’m not really sure what my problem was). Do you know how many parking tickets I’ve gotten in the entire rest of the planet? One. I went to Blacksburg to pick up my brother from Virginia Tech and got a ticket on campus. I parked illegally, figuring I wouldn’t be there long.
So, on one hand, we have twelve-plus years of driving and parking in Maryland and Virginia. One ticket. In less than two years of parking in DC, I have six. It is abundantly clear who is at fault here.
I don’t park illegally. I don’t double park, I don’t block hydrants, I don’t park in front of driveways. But six tickets. It’s mind-boggling.
I’m going to ask the wife to help me contest these two tickets, and I’m going to send a copy to our councilmember. He’s all about the ineffectual but flashy solutions to problems. Maybe he’ll give me a “get out of parking tickets free” card or something without addressing the underlying problem that this city needs to figure out a new way to combat parking and revenue issues.
Well, were Zone 1 now
I just got back from the DMV. Once again, I have nothing but good things to say about the DMV at 95 M St. SW. Polite, quick, effective – it’s one of the nicest DMVs I’ve used, and I’ve used them in Maryland, Virginia, and DC.
Anyway, we are Zone 1. According to one of my upstairs neighbors, they did it earlier this month, because she just got a new car and they gave her a Zone 1 sticker. Apparently this same thing happened to the woman who helped me at the DMV, although it was before she worked there, and she couldn’t get out of the ticket. I’m still going to give it a shot. And I’ll give it a shot on the ticket I’ll probably get today before I get home with my new sticker.
I have no idea why we weren’t notified. I mean, who checks the parking signs on the street where they live? I checked when we moved in, and now I know what they all say, and I don’t check any more.
I’m still pretty mad. But I should probably do some work or something. I think they’re paying me.