Vancouver's busiest parking meters about to get pricier - Action News
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British Columbia

Vancouver's busiest parking meters about to get pricier

City council voted in favour of changes to the parking meter system that will see the cost of parking on Vancouver's busiest streets increase by $1 per hour.

Council votes to increase rates in areas where meters are occupied at least 85% of the time

Vancouver city council has approved changes to its parking meter program in an effort to free up some of the city's on-street parking spaces. (CBC)

Vancouver city council has approved changes to its parking meter program that will make it pricier to parkon the city's busiest streets.

The new parking program will hike meter rates by $1per hour in areas where meters are occupied at least 85 per cent of the time.

In areas where meters are occupied less than 60 per cent of the time, the rate will be lowered by the same amount.

The city will collect data four times a year to determine the occupancy rates on different streets.

Currently, rates range from $1 per hour to $6 perhour for the city's roughly 10,000 parking meters.

Under the new plan, parking meters will also be rounded up to the closest dollar. For example, a meter currently costing $1.50 per hour will soon rise to $2.

Aiming to increase turnover

Vancouver engineering manager Jerry Dobrovolnysaid the plan will free up on-street parking spacesby increasingturnover.

"We hope people park, run into a business for 15 minutes, and leave. If they're parking for a longer period of time, we'd preferthey use a parkade," he said.

The City of Vancouver currently generates $50 millionin parking meter revenue and $20 millionin ticket revenue every year.

Dobrovolny said he isn't sure whether the changewill increase or decrease that income.

But in a report to council, city staff have already indicated that a rise is expected.

"Overall revenues are expected to increase," reads page six of the report. "An estimate will form part of the 2017 annual budget process."

The new rates will come into effect in 2017.

With files from Lien Yeung