Today's Digital Newspaper

The Gazette

Weather Block Here



Private parking operators in Denver face new transparency mandates starting June

The city of Denver this week began imposing new requirements on operators of private parking spaces to be more transparent.

In particular, the city now requires parking operators to clearly post the following information beginning on June 12:

  • Fine and citation amounts associated with violating parking terms. The city said that, for example, the signs must show “all potential penalties” for parking over the reserved time or for parking without payment.
  • The operator’s business license number.
  • Contact information in case customers want to dispute penalties.
  • The parking lot’s address.
  • Specifics of payment instructions, including whether a customer must place a payment stub on the dashboard; whether there is a limited grace period; and, whether a customer will be charged for driving through.
  • Instructions if the payment kiosk is not working.

Officials considered the changes following what they earlier described as a “surge” in complaints from consumers.

In particular, consumers have complained about the lack of transparency and expensive parking penalties, the city’s Department of Excise and Licenses earlier said. 

“Automated enforcement technology used by private parking operators has improved in recent years and has resulted in an increase in citations issued to consumers and complaints received by the city,” Molly Duplechian, executive director of the Department of Excise and Licenses, earlier said. “Our goal is to increase accountability for the parking lot license holders and transparency for consumers as they decide where to park in Denver.”

7b1faada-0b8f-11ee-a98d-93aca3bb92ac

View Original Article | Split View

PREV

PREVIOUS

Under threat by the courts, DACA turns 11 Thursday

Marissa Molina had a secret. As a 9-year-old, her parents moved the family to the Colorado Western Slope from Chihuahua, Mexico in 2001. Having been born in Mexico, Molina would concoct excuses for her high school friends about why she couldn’t attend events out of the country or drive. (She told friends she had juvenile […]

NEXT

NEXT UP

Two injury-causing events 'mar' Nuggets parade and rally

Facebook Twitter WhatsApp SMS Email Print Copy article link Save A decorated Denver Police officer might lose his leg after it was run over by a Denver Fire Department truck as he was trying to keep fans who had breached the gates during the parade Thursday away from the truck. It was one of two […]