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You are here: Home / Meters / 6 Parking Policy Priorities For Portland In 2017

6 Parking Policy Priorities For Portland In 2017

January 12, 2017 By TonyJ 3 Comments

In 2016, Portland parking advocates scored a number of important victories: in February, downtown meter rates increased; in April, City Council ordered development of performance parking policy; in July,  a proposal to require parking in NW Portland was defeated; and, at the end of the year, minimum parking requirements from 2013 were effectively repealed. Still, on the ground, the state of parking policy in Portland is in the roughly same place as it was 15 years ago.

In the coming year, Portland’s City Council and the Portland Bureau of Transportation must move forward and make real progress on parking policy. Our ability as a city to take action on climate change and meet our citywide housing and transportation goals depends on the political will of City Council and PBOT to develop and approve effective parking management tools, with the help of Portland’s growing number of Shoupistas.

Stay tuned for more in-depth articles on these parking policy priorities.

 

1. Pass The Residential Permit Program and Parking Toolkit

A parking permit sign in Northwest Portland.

Portland needs a new residential permit program, and fast. One has been in the works for years but it recently got shelved. With residential infill and more apartments with little to no parking on the way, Portland needs to get serious about on-street parking management.

2. Create In-Lieu Of Fee Options For Remaining Parking Requirements

Graphic showing a comparison of a 2 bedroom apartment layout with 675 sq feet and similar sized layout for two parking stalls.

Starting in February, developers of new housing projects with 20 or more units will be required to rent a percentage of those units at a rate “affordable” to people making 80% of the median family income. As part of the incentive package, those apartments won’t have required on-site parking. State law mandates that developers be allowed to pay in-lieu fees instead of building affordable homes, but if they do, they still have to build parking. Arbitrary parking mandates don’t make sense. Let developers pay additional fees in-lieu of parking stalls and use the money to build more homes!

3. Use Downtown Parking Meter Money To Fund Night Owl Transit

People wait for a bus at night.

Last year, Portland increased the hourly cost of downtown meters by $0.40/hour, raising an additional $4 million a year in revenue. Opponents to parking management often oppose reforms on the grounds that late night workers don’t have transit options. Managing on-street parking and using the revenue to extend transit hours is a win-win.

4. Demand That PDC Build Housing Instead Of Parking Garages

Rendering of the PDC parking garage.

The Portland Development Commission is spending at least $32 million in urban renewal funds on a hotel parking garage just steps away from the MAX Red Line and they have plans to build more garages. In 10 years will visitors to Portland really choose to rent a car and drive themselves to the Lloyd District? Long term goals for the city require investing less in cars and building more close-in affordable housing, PDC should support those goals.

5. Require Parking Cash-Outs And Tax Downtown Private Parking

A graph showing that in one study, parking cash out led to 13% reduction in drive alone share.
(Image from ACCESS Magazine)

Federal tax laws allow employers to pay hundreds of dollars a month, tax free, for employee parking, but don’t require equal benefits for employees who use other modes. California requires employers who pay for parking to provide employees with an equivalent cash option. This has been shown to be very effective at producing desirable mode shifts. Portland can do this and would, likely, reap major benefits.

6. Develop, Adopt, and Implement a Comprehensive City-Wide Parking Management Strategy

Graphic showing cars parked.

At the current rate, passing parking reforms and upgrading PBOT’s technology to effectively manage parking may take several more years. Portland needs a comprehensive plan to modernize our parking management policy to ensure we are using the curb lane efficiently and for the highest social good. Big changes are on the way and time is running out to reap the rewards of progressive parking policy.

 

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Filed Under: Meters, Minimum Parking Requirements, Parking Cash Out, Parking Garages, Performance Pricing, Permits, TDM

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Amy Croydon says

    January 14, 2017 at 6:32 pm

    I live in SE, I have for the last 30+ years. Someone purchased a house & now rents out their rooms. The problem is he has enough room for about 4 cars in front of his house but his renters have roughly 8 cars. Therefore they are parking in front of others houses, then those people have to park else where. They are a nuisense, it is not right to inconvenience & put out several of the neighbors. Can anything be done?

    Reply
    • TonyJ says

      January 16, 2017 at 3:01 pm

      It’s a classic tragedy of the commons, Amy. If on-street parking is free (and considered by many people to be a human right, no kidding) then people will use it up without regard to the people around them. Many people think the solution is to build more parking. If parking was free and if cars didn’t bring with them massive negative externalities (climate change, traffic deaths, poor walkability, isolation, air pollution, and unsustainable street maintenance, to name a few) then I might agree with them.

      As it stands, we need to take steps to reduce car ownership rates and to shift to alternative modes of transportation. Fortunately, there are strategies that can help us with those goals and to manage the on-street supply for the convenience of people who need to own cars. Parking permits are the most effective method, if the price is based on the demand for spaces.

      Reply
  2. Marsha Hanchrow says

    January 15, 2017 at 7:32 pm

    The answer that you should already have guessed, since you’re reading this blog, is to charge market price for on-street parking. As we found when Steve Novick changed the rules on disabled parking, many more parking spaces were available downtown when no one could park for free.

    What is market price? I don’t know, but I expect it to start low and keep rising until we start seeing few unused cars stored on the street.

    Reply

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