If
we want to get cars off of the highways, we need to turn drivers into rail
commuters. But even the most motivated
would-be rail rider faces an immediate problem:
the lack of rail station parking.
Many
stations have wait lists for annual permits of more than five or six
years. And the permits themselves can
cost as much as $1100 a year! Even day-parking
is expensive and hard to find.
Keep
in mind that most station parking is owned by the CDOT but leased to the towns
and cities to administer. It’s those
municipalities that set the rates and handle the wait lists. But there’s the rub: every town’s rules are different.
In
Darien (where I’m lucky enough to live), just to keep your name on the wait list costs
$10 a year. But the prize is a $400 a year permit. Most towns “grandfather” existing permit
holders, meaning that once you have a permit you can renew it.
Because
many permit holders hoard their permits, using them only rarely, towns sell
twice as many permits as there are parking spaces. That makes the permits really just a “license
to hunt”, i.e. if you find a space you can park there, but there’s no guarantee
there will be room. That makes sense.
A
beach permit doesn’t promise you 15 sq feet of sand, just access to the
beach. As with parking it’s first come,
first served.
What
it comes down to is a classic case of supply and demand. The demand for parking spaces is high but the
supply limited. Because CDOT isn’t
adding more parking capacity at stations, towns are left to manage the demand.
And
I have a great new suggestion on how to do that: a Dutch auction.
Parking
spaces would start selling online on a certain date and time with the first
permit going to the highest bidder. The
second space would go to the second highest bidder, and so on. There would be no preference given to existing
permit holders nor by town of residency (all state-owned lots are open to
anyone).
Using
an auction where all bidding is transparent would be like selling an antique on
EBay. The permit should go to the person
who wants it most and is willing to pay.
Is
it fair that somebody can keep a permit they don’t use just because they’ve had
it for years? Shouldn’t that parking
space go to the person who needs it the most, the daily commuter? The days of “hoarding” would be over if we
let the marketplace decide the value of the space, not bureaucrats.
If
an annual parking permit is $400, I’m sure there’s somebody who’d pay $600 or
$700 to be sure they got one. After the greatest demand is met, the average
prices would be much less, maybe even less than $400.
And,
by the way, towns shouldn’t be profiting from parking permits. That money is supposed to be spent on
security, snow-plowing and station improvements.
Of
course, the best solution to the parking mess is to have supply meet
demand. We need to build more parking
lots at all of our train stations. That
will get folks out of their cars and onto the trains, benefiting everyone.
Reposted with permission of Hearst CT Media
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