2-hour parking limit enforcement to expand in Between the Rivers district
by Doug Walker, Associate Editor
Mar 14, 2013 | 3528 views | 10 10 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Two-hour parking spots located in front of First Baptist Church on Fourth Avenue will soon be patrolled and the time enforced starting Monday, according to Rome Police Chief Elaine Snow. (Brittany Hannah / Rome News-Tribune)
Two-hour parking spots located in front of First Baptist Church on Fourth Avenue will soon be patrolled and the time enforced starting Monday, according to Rome Police Chief Elaine Snow. (Brittany Hannah / Rome News-Tribune)
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Complaints about parking violators on East Fourth Avenue between East First and East Second streets have prompted the downtown parking management office to ask police to strictly enforce the existing two-hour parking limit there.

Becky Smyth, manager of the downtown parking office, said she has gotten numerous complaints from people trying to drop off children at First Baptist Church or folks working in the soup kitchen at St. Peter’s Episcopal Church.

“It’s been an ongoing issue that when they come to town those spaces are taken, and the cars stay there all day,” Smyth said. “It just hasn’t been enforced.”

Smyth contacted Rome Police Chief Elaine Snow seeking stricter enforcement.

Snow said the downtown parking enforcement officers typically don’t get beyond East First Street into the Between the Rivers district. She said the city decided to give the community a few days notice before police begin enforcing the two-hour limit.

The stepped-up enforcement of the parking limit will begin Monday.

“We do monitor that area from time to time, but we will be monitoring it on a daily basis beginning Monday,” Snow said. “We will continue to monitor it as time allows.”

Smyth said a lot of downtown Rome business or government employees apparently have been parking there and just not moving.

“We’re going to try to turn the spaces over a little bit,” she said.

People with questions can contact the Parking Services office at 706-236-4458 or email parking@romega.us.
Comments
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Watchingit
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March 18, 2013
Dalton – here it is – with a different headline. This one has Doug Walkers byline. The new one says “staff reports” which is the one in the today’s print edition.
anabelle_lee
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March 18, 2013
Everybody seems to want these "laws" enforced more stringently and maybe even draft new ones. They are not laws. They are ordinances to produce revenue. I've got an idea. How about only writing a ticket when someone's behavior results in harm or an accident. That is actually the law.
commonsense2
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March 18, 2013
I have a new motto for shopping downtown Rome... "Shop Local! Shop Downtown Rome! As long as you can fit it all in within 2 hours!"
dalton75
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March 18, 2013
What gets me is that the 2 hours is cumulative. Even if you move your car to another spot in less than 2 hours, you can still get a parking ticket if the total parking time is over two hours during the day split between multiple parking spots. They use an electronic car tag reader as they drive by. If it hits on a tag that's been anywhere in their parking ticket area for more than 2 hours during the day they will write a ticket.

I don't even bother with downtown Rome anymore. It's not very customer friendly at all. I understand the parking limit of 2 hours in one spot per day but totaling up more than 2 hours added up between multiple spots in one day to get a ticket just makes no business sense for the downtown merchants.

Not exactly a business friendly parking enforcement policy. The old chalk on the tire parking enforcement made a lot more sense. They would make the rounds and mark the tires with some chalk on a stick so they did not have to get out of their scooter to mark the tires. If the chalk mark was still there a certain time later, they would get out of their scooter and write a ticket. You could move from one spot to another to avoid a ticket.

TSpent
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March 15, 2013
Parking violations are not high priority. Sure hope they don't cut important services just to put officers on parking watch. Sounds like downtown should look at adding another ticket man.
richardcranium
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March 14, 2013
How about enforcing the "parallel parking in the direction of the flow of traffic" ordinance? That one is abused quite a bit too.
O'Really
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March 15, 2013
Actually, it isn't a City ordinance.

It's State Code 40-6-200.

http://law.justia.com/codes/georgia/2010/title-40/chapter-6/article-10/part-1/40-6-200/
TheSeer
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March 15, 2013
How does parallel parking on the opposite side of a side street hurt anyone? The law that police should crack down on is the one prohibiting motorists from turning left from a business into those center turn lanes and then moving into the right lanes. That is very dangerous and causes wrecks and should result in a huge fine.
MmmHmm
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March 15, 2013
Umm. Parallel parking on the opposite side of the road means that someone is driving on the wrong side of the road (against the law). Also, it's a possible disruption to the flow of oncoming traffic. Using the turning lanes when pulling out of a parking log or side road, however, isn't against the law, unless you travel for more than 100 feet in the turning lane. I do agree that this is very dangerous and it seems that most many people around here mistake 100 feet with half a mile.
TheSeer
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March 15, 2013
That law also says you can only get into that center turning lane for the purpose of turning left from that lane. It is blatantly illegal to turn left from private property into that lane and then move into the right lane of traffic. Cars on Shorter Avenue, Turner McCall and Dean Street endanger the lives of others every day by turning from fast food restaurants, banks, retail stores and even East Central School into that lane instead of into the lane of traffic when they are turning light. Tickets should be written for every car violating this law.
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