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Paying parking tickets is now optional.


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2023 Jul 26, 9:42am   538 views  6 comments

by Eric Holder   ➕follow (5)   💰tip   ignore  

EssEff losing another revenue source...

SAN FRANCISCO - Towing cars that have accrued unpaid parking tickets without a warrant -- a common practice in San Francisco -- violates the California Constitution, the California Court of Appeal decided Friday.

The city implemented a practice of towing legally and safely parked cars if they had five or more unpaid parking tickets and the owner had not responded within 21 calendar days of issuance.

After a car is towed, car owners must provide proof that they paid the outstanding tickets. In the case that the tickets go unpaid, the city would sell cars at junk auctions.

The court found that the practice violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects against unreasonable searches and seizures by requiring warrants, the appeal read. The city argued that their towing practice qualified for an exception from the warrant rule because the cars presented a threat to public health, an argument that the court rejected.

The Coalition on Homelessness, a nonprofit organization focused on advocacy for impoverished and houseless people, filed an appeal against the city over their towing practices, claiming that it targeted low-income individuals.

"In San Francisco, thousands of households are on the brink of homelessness, where a single adverse event can thrust them out of housing," said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness. "Poverty tows are one of those events, where the loss of a car leads to the loss of the transportation needed to get to work, and suddenly the household can't make rent."

Advocates call the practice "poverty tows" because they can have a disparate impact on people who cannot afford to pay parking tickets.

The tows oftentimes cost the city more money than they bring in, according to a press release from the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area, one organization that pursued the appeal on behalf of the Coalition on Homelessness.
These tows are not unique to San Francisco, according to the press release. Other cities in the Bay Area, including Oakland, also engage in these practices.

Legislation banning "poverty tows" for unpaid parking tickets has cleared the California Assembly. The bill, Assembly Bill 1082, would prohibit towing or immobilizing a vehicle with outstanding tickets and would increase the number of unpaid tickets someone can have before the DMV can place a registration hold.

A spokesperson for the San Francisco City Attorney's Office said they are "disappointed" with the decision.

"While our advocacy during oral arguments helped shape and narrow the final decision, we are disappointed by the overall decision and believe it further impedes the city's ability to maintain safe and healthy streets," said city attorney's office spokesperson Jen Kwart. "We are reviewing the decision and considering any appropriate next steps."

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1   stereotomy   2023 Jul 26, 10:22am  

Great, this will solve the problem of break-ins. Only the "homeless" in their shitmobiles will take up all the downtown parking. Try stealing dirty underwear and crank from the bums, you thug scum.
2   mell   2023 Jul 26, 11:41am  

I agree with this. This is law in many countries. You can go after the delinquent, but you can't tow and auction their car just because they have unpaid tickets. For once CA gets it right. It was govt overreach.
3   fdhfoiehfeoi   2023 Jul 26, 12:31pm  

I never pay non-moving violations. But the trick is to make sure you don't get a tax refund, otherwise they'll take it out that way. Good call as parking tickets are pre-crime bullshit to start with.
4   RWSGFY   2023 Jul 26, 1:19pm  

NuttBoxer says

I never pay non-moving violations. But the trick is to make sure you don't get a tax refund, otherwise they'll take it out that way. Good call as parking tickets are pre-crime bullshit to start with.


In CA unpaid tickets are eventually tucked on the reg. (Ticket amount only, not "penalties" accumulated during the non-payment period). It takes couple of years though. Not sure what happens if car is sold before that.
5   fdhfoiehfeoi   2023 Jul 26, 3:07pm  

That may have happened to me once. Good thing I moved my registration to Arizona some time ago. Funny thing is Cal DMV has tried sending me letters threatening wage garnishment for non-payment of registration. They want me to register the change in their system even though the car is now title out of state. But since I have no incentive to do so, fuck 'em. I probably would have gotten these letters first time I registered out of state if I left a forwarding address, but I never do.
6   stereotomy   2023 Jul 26, 3:13pm  

NuttBoxer says

That may have happened to me once. Good thing I moved my registration to Arizona some time ago. Funny thing is Cal DMV has tried sending me letters threatening wage garnishment for non-payment of registration. They want me to register the change in their system even though the car is now title out of state. But since I have no incentive to do so, fuck 'em. I probably would have gotten these letters first time I registered out of state if I left a forwarding address, but I never do.

^^^^ Like a BOSS

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