top
Health/Housing
Health/Housing
Indybay
Indybay
Indybay
Regions
Indybay Regions North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area California United States International Americas Haiti Iraq Palestine Afghanistan
Topics
Newswire
Features
From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature

Parking Garage Paranoia Law Stalls Again

by Robert Norse
The Parking Lot Trespass Law as Amended and its Final Passage Again Delayed Until the Next City Council Meeting on May 23rd. It will probably happen at another hard-to-attend afternoon session.
Parking Lot Panic Law Amended and Postponed: Final Reading May 23rd

HORRIBLE LAW LESS SWEEPING--STILL BAD AND OVERTLY ANTI-HOMELESS

After more than an hour of public comment and city council chatter, the “Parking Lot Panic” Law was significantly amended. It now requires another vote in two weeks to assure its final passage. Hence there is still time to educate the community as to how absurd, abusive, and unresponsive to real concerns this law is.

The law as amended removes all surface lots except the Public Parking lot across from the Elm St. Mission from the Trespass law. In that parking lot (Parking Lot #9) and all four multi-level parking garages the new law will still read: “Get out in 15 minutes even if you are parking a vehicle” and “don’t come in at all without a car or bike or unless walking directly through.” Disabled people with placards will get 30 minutes rather than 15 minutes to exit from garages.

On the positive side, all parking lots, except Parking Lot 9 will remain “traditional”. That is, you’ll be able to sit in your vehicle, walk up and chat with others, linger there--even if you don’t have a car in that lot. (It sounds ridiculous that we should be feel grateful or relieved)

The anti-homeless character of the law is shown more sharply now. Parking Lot #9 is the public parking lot across from the Elm St. Mission behind Union Grove Music and the Catalyst. It is the one parking lot most heavily used by homeless people waiting for the Elm St. Mission meal. The inclusion of the lot followed testimony by the Cafe Pergolesi owner. He said he supported the law as originally written (closing all parking lots and garages) and was concerned that a customer had been jumped by a gang in the parking lot.

Best way to deal with that situation? Close all parking lots permanently to anyone not parking a car, right?

After June 22nd, if this becomes law on May 23rd, it will become illegal to do any legal activity in or around your vehicle after fifteen minutes.


WATCHES FOR SALE?

The Coonerty-Mathews-Rotkin forces pushing this law haven’t said if they’ll lend out watches to anyone parking a car of bike so they can accurately judge time and “exit promptly.” Perhaps the City can get a good deal on several dozen small clocks which can be posted at various places in the garages to help people remain “within the law.”

Local ACLU spokesperson Don Zimmermann weighed in against the parking lots, but apparently not the garages. His concerns, reservations from the Downtown Commission (which nonetheless passed the law through on a 5-1 vote), and reservations from the City Commission for the Prevention of Violence Against Women (CPVAW) may have made Rotkin nervous that his “I’m a card-carrying ACLU member” button was in danger of being permanently and publicly tarnished if he endorsed the law as written. Rotkin proposed the amendment to strike “parking lots” from the law, but then voted to add “Parking Lot #9”.


BE ON THE LOOKOUT FOR MISSING DATA!

This anti-homeless addition was done though there was no information at all about police arrests in any of the lots or garages.

No information that any parking lot worker had ever taken any of the many local terrorists to court for the many acts of abuse, vandalism, assault, and sexual perversion--which they laid out to the City in three public hearings.

No comparative data showing a special “crime wave” in the parking lots or garages compared to elsewhere downtown.

No explanation of why 3 incidents per garage per month--by the Public Works’ Department’s own figures--justified such a fundamental reversal of both the right to privacy in your own vehicle and the right to use previously public spaces.

I am still waiting to listen to the CPVAW audio tape, since in spite of repeated requests, I was not informed that the CPVAW was considering the resolution at its early May meeting. The CPVAW after some debate and after adding reservations and removing the surface lots, passed the “get out of the garages” law by a 4-2 vote.

Zimmermann’s position, which Councilmember Rotkin quickly adopted, was also somewhat contradictory. Zimmermann properly pointed out that there was insufficient evidence to indicate a credible security threat from the police “calls for service” or the “parking attendant logs” in either garages or lots.

No councilmember had asked for a specific police breakdown of where real crimes occcurred--which they could still done (call Fitzmaurice or Porter at 420-5020 to request they ask for such a report from the SCPD).


UPSIDE

There were some reasonable suggestions--none of which were incorporated in or substituted for the absurd proposed law. One was to equip parking lot/garage cleaners with a cellphone and a one-button page to the cops plus a previously assured fast response. Another was the more obvious and elementary idea of closing off parking lots and garages when cleaning was taken place and opening them up at other times.

Students from UCSC and Cabrillo College spoke against the ordinance--the Cabrillo Democratic Party Club formally came to announce their opposition. Two of them appeared later on Becky Johnson’s Club Cruz show, which will be taped and probably shown in a week or two. Others were activated to begin organizing on the two campuses against the amended law.

Leslie S., an SEIU official, repeated her National Inquirer-style tales of “masturbation” in the parking lots, in an inflammatory plea for the “safety” of Parking Lot workers. Ryan Coonerty accused Cabrillo College students of “abandoning the workers”.

Mayor Mathews only allowed speakers two minutes each and grew increasingly impatient and threatening as time went on. She did allow Zimmerman of the ACLU and Norse of HUFF to give five-minute presentations on behalf of their organizations. (NOTE: Organizations can have five minutes who ask for the time before hand. Folks are invited to do so on May 23rd when this issue returns).

Peace and Freedom Party activists Mike and Maureen Smith waited several hours for a chance to speak for two minutes each, announcing their principled opposition to the law.

A small pre-Council protest boasted some tasty soup, some literate displays, and a lone guitarist serenading the incoming public.

Shanna McCord, Sentinel reporter, announced she and her editor had decided the Council discussion and vote was "not newsworthy" as she had previously written "two stories" on the issue.

Also apparently beneath notice was the bubbling controversy involving a nasty letter from Councilmembers Rotkin and Coonerty to Tulin Ozdeger of the National Law Center for Homelessness and Poverty [see http://www.indybay.org/news/2006/05/1821934_comment.php#1821939]

More on this later and on my Thursday 6-8 PM radio show at 101.1 FM. Though the issue is one we're all real tired of, it's getting more interesting as more common sense seems to be seeping, however slowly, through the murk of paranoia and offical bureaucratic armoring.
Add Your Comments
We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!

Donate

$140.00 donated
in the past month

Get Involved

If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.

Publish

Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.

IMC Network