Hidden lot behind Town Hall has 18 spaces (2 of them handicapped)
For most of us parking in downtown Amherst is pretty straightforward. You drive around to find the perfect spot closest to a destination and then put money in the machine and hope you timed it correctly to avoid a $10 ticket, which if unpaid quickly escalates many times over in amount due.
Last year Parking Enforcement issued almost 23,000 tickets and the Transportation Fund -- between violations and fines -- benefited by around $400,000.
Some folks of course never have to worry about a parking ticket, and if they use the hidden spot behind Town Hall, probably never worry about finding a prime location to park. And no, I'm not talking about special state issued Handicapped Permits (which also allows free parking).
The Town Manager's office issues parking permits to
some town employees, as well as appointed and elected officials. They are valid at any of the 538 on-street metered and public lot spaces around town.
Both the 5-member Select Board (the town's Executive branch of government) and the 5-member Jones Library Board of Trustees possess permits, although a Select Board member told me:
We do not use them while simply enjoying downtown:-) And we have all
had plenty of parking tickets -- just in case you wondered -- from the
days before we had passes and for when we're currently out and about for
non-Select Board work and guess our meter/machine time wrong.
On Thursday afternoon (4/2) a walk around town center turned up 24 vehicles with the placards displayed on the front dashboard, nine of them in the secret lot behind Town Hall. And on Good Friday I found 26, with nine once again in the lot behind Town Hall.
Naturally none of these prized placards are issued to front line police, fire or DPW workers.
There's a movement afoot to build a new parking garage in town center, although the two most recent study/analysis reports -- one in 2008 and the other being released this week -- seem to indicate there is enough parking overall to meet demand, just not at peak periods.
Kind of like a health club that sees the trendy popular aerobic machines overbooked at 5:30 PM but in the early morning or later at night, not so much. Like most things in life, timing is everything.
At the most recent Downtown Parking Forum, Finance Committee Chair Kay Moran pointed out four expensive municipal major building projects are already in the hopper -- new Fire Station and DPW building, expanded renovated Jones Library and Wildwood School -- so any proposed parking structure darn well better be self supporting.
Another strain on the system is meter feeders who take up prime spots for a full eight hours, or folks like the "top ten" scofflaws who forget to feed the meter and then forgets to pay the fines. Take #1 for instance, with an astounding $18,330 owed.
Downtown business owner gets "the boot", pays the $690 in fines within the hour
Yes, you would think a business owner would not park so near his business preferring to leave that prime spot open for, you know, paying customers. And you would also wonder how the Hell he could rack up $18,330 in parking violations.
Or why the town didn't keep the boot on until those monies (owed from another vehicle) were paid, although I'm told the town had him sign an installment agreement to start making payments. If not, the Select Board could fail to renew his liquor license.
Although, lately, the Town Manager and Select Board have been a tad fawning with the downtown liquor establishments, probably not wanting to fan the flames of an "anti business" reputation that has been smouldering for over a generation.
Just one day after the March 23 booting of the pick up truck, he earned two more tickets in the downtown:
The Select Board is also generous with allowing downtown events -- Taste of Amherst, Extravaganja, The Sustainability Festival -- to temporarily take up prime parking spots as a staging area with no charge.
Yet when the Lord Jeff Inn requests meters be set aside for guests of a wedding reception, they pay $5 per meter bagged.
Meters reserved 3/24 Boltwood Ave for Lord Jeff wedding reception @ $5/bag
Since the town will soon be hiring a $70,000 Economic Development Director, perhaps their first order of business should be to address the parking situation in town center. In as cost effective manner as possible.
And don't give him/her a free parking pass until they figure it out!
$40.00 an hour?
Town Hall SEIU payscale steps 1 thru step 10