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Have you ever gotten a ticket for being a minute over. Why should you pay the same ammount when you're 30 minutes over. The meter would continue to countdown beyond the red. If the officer came back, he could write a second or third ticket.
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I don't have fond memories of parking meters, but to add to your idea I might suggest that the meter counts down the minutes until zero, then displays the value of the fine as an ever increasing number. |
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Using a digital meter, the fine could be varied according to the number of empty parking spots; time of day and so on. |
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I'm bunning it, but I like [Ling]'s version better. |
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I agree. Proportional meter fines will encourage people to move their car sooner. Most times when a driver goes past their time and gets a ticket, 9 times out of 10 they will say, "screw it" and wont bother moving or putting more money in the meter since they already got the $50 ticket. |
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At least if it the cost of parking went from $2 for 30 minutes to $1 per minute they are more likely to take action. |
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This, or at least [Ling]'s variation is a much fairer way of doing things, which is probably exactly why municipal authorities haven't adopted it. Parking fines are a nice revenue stream and I would guess they've worked out that they accrue more money by charging everyone a flat fee, rather than billing offenders proportionally.
Wankers! |
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Really [DocBrown], I'm sure they have your best interests at heart... |
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Puh! [wags]. Double puh and thrice puh! I'm sorry, I got fined the other day and the wound is still fresh. |
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It wouldn't be too hard to modify the charge/min to give a revenue neutral scheme.
Although there may well have to be a small initial step to cover the cost of administration. |
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Ling, cities often change fine rates. Unless there was a simple way to change it on every meter, it would be easier just to let the cops figure it out when they write the ticket. |
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