A TALE OF TWO CITIES
It was the best of parking meters, it was the worst of parking meters.
December 3rd, 2008
Murmurs • Lights! Cameras! News!1 comment
December 3rd, 2008
The Score • Big Dam Fight | The Legislature may end a long-festering dispute affecting one billionaire, a half-million Oregonians and more fish than you can count.0 comments
December 3rd, 2008
Rogue of the Week • TMT Development | Bully in a bar fight.3 comments
December 3rd, 2008
An Old Addition | A manager twice accused of date rape is back at a Southeast bar.0 comments
December 3rd, 2008
Letters to the Editor • Inbox0 comments
December 3rd, 2008
Scrooged! | Doesn’t matter if you’re naughty or nice. Here’s who the economy is causing to get scratched off gift lists. 0 comments
December 3rd, 2008
Hoop Dreams | Can the Blazers really be this good?0 comments
December 3rd, 2008
Uneasy Riders | Ticket to gripe: Trimetdown.com.0 comments
December 3rd, 2008
Cover Story • The Naked And The Dread | The Recession has knocked everything but our socks off.1 comment
December 3rd, 2008
The Weekly Fix • Our Spin On 7 Days of News 0 comments
![]() IMAGE: CHAD CROWE |
[August 10th, 2005] When solar-powered parking pay stations popped up on Portland sidewalks three summers ago, residents examined them with a wary curiosity befitting alien artifacts.
A handful of Portlanders wrote annoyed letters to The Oregonian, but most seemed to accept the machines' benevolence. Now, jump forward to 2005 and New Orleans, where similar circumstances have generated a scene worthy of War of the Worlds.
The city of New Orleans installed the same green, electronic, "smart" parking meters on its streets this summer. But upset residents are making it clear the meters are as welcome in the Big Easy as crabs in a French Quarter brothel.
A group of New Orleanians sued the city last month to remove the meters, saying their "ultramodern" aesthetic doesn't mesh with the historic French Quarter.
"They're much too large and the color is much too garish," says Stuart Smith, one of the plaintiffs.
The lawsuit goes beyond an ugliness argument to contend the new, electronic meters are illegal because city code requires parking meters to be "mechanical" (Portland code has no such stipulation).
advertisement
Smith and company want refunds on all parking tickets from the new setup. And one plaintiff is demanding that the city pay him $250,000 because a meter blocks his driveway.
Neighborhood groups are crusading against the meters and the lawsuit has created a quagmire. "It's a big 'ol mess," drawls Kenneth Waguespack, an attorney for the plaintiffs.
It was a different story in Portland, where there were no quarter-million-dollar lawsuits, no concerted opposition and no incensed citizens' groups (other than one creative vandal commenting on the stations' phallic character by altering a handful of them to look like giant, erect penises).
The transition went "better than we expected," says Ellis McCoy, Portland's parking-operations manager. "Given that single-space meters have been around for 50 years, I was surprised that people adapted."
RECENT COMMENTS ON “A TALE OF TWO CITIES”









