January 7th, 2009
Murmurs • Amid The Challenges, A Commitment To Show Up.0 comments
January 7th, 2009
Hot Air | An Oregon chemist tends the fires of global-warming deniers.1 comment
January 7th, 2009
Rogue of the Week • Barack Obama | Partying on our last dime8 comments
January 7th, 2009
Mobile Sten | What’s the man who was City Hall’s biggest deal maker doing in Bend?0 comments
January 7th, 2009
The Weekly Fix • Just Like Starting Over0 comments
January 7th, 2009
Cover Story • Jody De Simone Wants To Kick Your Ass | A Pearl District pr woman takes a “crash course” in mixed martial arts.25 comments
January 7th, 2009
Clearing The Smoke | More fights and outdoor urination, plus other predictions after the new smoking ban’s first week.
January 7th, 2009
The Score • Estate Of Denial | Think prosecuting elder abuse will be easy under Newly passed Measure 57? Maybe not.1 comment
January 7th, 2009
Letters to the Editor • Inbox0 comments
January 7th, 2009
Ask the Editor • What Were We Thinking? | WW Editor Mark Zusman answers your questions about our coverage.0 comments
![]() |
[November 23rd, 2005] City Council will consider an ordinance that would hobble a small business writing $50 parking tickets in private lots, perhaps forcing lot owners to use a worse alternative for consumers: towing firms that charge at least $177 to give you back your car.
The ordinance before the council on Wednesday, Nov. 23, will set a $16 maximum fine for private-lot tickets, the same amount the city charges public parking-meter violators. Backers of the limit sell it as a way to rein in an unregulated private-ticket industry. But some might consider private tickets better than the alternative: towing.
Northwest Parking Control, the city's only private ticketing company, cuts its $50 fine to $25 if drivers pay promptly. And Northwest Parking general manager Brian Thompson says many clients have switched to his service because towing companies won't return cars without payment, even when violators have good excuses. Thompson thinks a lower $16 fee won't deter drivers from poaching empty lots, thus forcing his lot-owner customers back to expensive towing companies.
advertisement
The city collects no money from private ticketers but gets $5 out of each $177 tow; lot owners aren't supposed to get any cut of the $177 (which doesn't include storage fees). City towing coordinator Marian Gaylord says the ticket limit will prevent abuse of car owners.
One last note: The change proposed by Commissioner Randy Leonard and Mayor Tom Potter is part of a larger ordinance from the department of unfinished business. The ordinance will finalize a ban on booting cars, which had been scheduled for a vote last summer.
RECENT COMMENTS ON “Tickets Or Towing”
Tickets Or TowingA quote from a "ticket" issued by NW Parking control: "If you believe the notice has been issued incorrectly and you have already contacted Northwest Parking control and have ...
What really hacks me off is that the very first communication we received from these people was a letter referring to an "unpaid debt," as if we'd been trying to avoid payment or something.
Why can't we be a reasonable state like Wisconsin where you can't be towed without police involvement and private tickets are meaningless. Yes, it may result in you being banned from the company's lo...
The debt collection notices have no state statute nor Administrative Rule permitting their issuance. I gather Portland has stepped up to the plate to permit this. If so, I have an alternative for both...









