City doles out 2,297 street-sweep tickets
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HUNTINGTON BEACH -- After returning from a holiday vacation last week,
resident James Gallagher found an unwelcome surprise from the city on the
windshields of his cars -- two parking tickets.
The city began issuing the tickets this month to enforce new parking
restrictions to allow additional street sweeping.
Gallagher wasn’t the only one caught. Between Jan. 3 and Friday, the city
issued 2,297 tickets to people who failed to move their cars, Deputy City
Administrator Rich Barnard said.
At $32 each, the money adds up quickly.
Gallagher, for one, doesn’t want to be “gouged” by the city, he said.
But City Councilwoman Shirley Dettloff said the benefits of clean streets
outweigh the cost of additional tickets.
“It’s not a money grab,” she said. “It’s just that everything comes with
a price tag.”
For about the last four years, the city swept the streets only once a
month. But now the sweepers roll by twice a month, allowing the city to
better control the problems of “standing water” and urban runoff, said
Don Noble, the city’s maintenance operations manager.
Considering the beach contamination the city suffered through during the
summer, no one needs to be reminded of the danger posed by urban runoff,
which includes chemicals, fertilizers and animal droppings found on lawns
and often washed onto the streets and into storm drains that flow into
the ocean, Noble said. Standing water is an issue because the city is
basically flat, he said. Water that remains stagnant attracts algae and
mosquitoes. It also endangers bikers and skaters who might slip and fall
on the slick surface, he said.
But what angers Gallagher most is that his street is kept clean, so even
if the sweepers have to go around parked cars, there’s no need for a
ticket, he said.
“They don’t use reason in enforcing [the new parking restrictions],” he
said.
But the city can’t efficiently run a program that has to evaluate
cleanliness on a street-by-street basis, Noble said. Besides, “clean
means different things to different people,” he said.
Residents had plenty of warnings before tickets were issued, Dettloff
said. More than 30,000 warnings were posted on illegally parked cars
during November and December, according to a city memo.
While there still may be a “difficult” transition period, Dettloff
expects people to fall in line eventually. That appears to be the case,
as the number of tickets issued dropped from day to day last week,
Barnard said.
If tickets keep coming, though, Gallagher suggested that residents may
lose their patience and look for a different solution to the parking
dilemma.
“It might get to the point of wanting to see new faces on the City
Council,” Gallagher said.
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