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City Park paid-parking pilot reports $61,000 in first-month revenue; vendors, permit verification and LPR rollout remain in progress
Summary
Parks and parking staff reported more than $61,000 collected in the first reporting month of the City Park paid-parking pilot, roughly 3,900 resident permit applications in the system, a vendor transition from FlowBird to IPS for permits, and a near-term installation of license-plate readers with a planned warning period before citations.
City staff reported that the City Park paid-parking pilot program generated more than $61,000 in revenue in its first reporting month and that the city is continuing a registration and education period before full enforcement begins.
Charles (parking staff) told the board the dashboard included a day-by-day revenue breakdown and that the “first month in revenue generated was over $61,000 in revenue.” Jamie Lee Case (Director Case) said the program has registered about 3,900 resident permits to date and that staff are still manually reviewing permit applications. Case said staff are not issuing citations at present because they are in an education-and-enrollment phase: “We are not issuing citations yet. We are still actively registering people.”
Staff described key operational details and near-term actions: - Vendor and system changes: the city is transitioning resident permits from FlowBird to IPS (IPS charges a flat…
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