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Sandpoint staff outline paid-parking proposal for City Beach and boat launches; public raises concerns about resort parking waiver

2228559 · February 5, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

City planning staff presented a preliminary paid-parking and boat-launch fee proposal that would add hourly and annual passes, with a multi-step public-review process; residents and speakers questioned a parking waiver granted to a proposed resort and asked why an in-lieu fee appeared smaller than code math suggested.

Sandpoint officials presented an early-stage paid-parking plan on Feb. 4 that would add hourly fees, annual passes and boat-launch charges at City Beach and other off-street lots, while public commenters raised concerns about a recent parking waiver issued for a proposed resort and the amount of the in-lieu fee it paid.

Jason Welker, the city’s Community Planning and Development director, told the Planning and Zoning Commission the proposal is a work in progress. “This is in the development stage right now,” Welker said, and he emphasized the city has no timeline to bring a final proposal to City Council: “There’s gonna be no rollout of a policy in the next year. This is something we’re looking at for the future.”

Why it matters: Sandpoint’s off-street parking inventory is heavily used during peak season, and staff said a paid system would both manage demand and create a revenue stream for maintenance. Welker said the city currently spends taxpayer dollars to resurface lots and that a parking-management revenue stream would fund long-term upkeep rather than relying solely on property tax dollars.

What staff proposed and why: Welker said the plan would add resident and nonresident annual passes, extend free pass hours at City Beach (from two hours to four for resident passes), and add boat-launch fees benchmarked to other North Idaho jurisdictions. The draft includes a $50 annual boat-launch pass for Idaho…

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