Downtown Parking Pilot Study

Proposed Parking Pilot Study Area February 10 2025

Vicinity map for proposed Parking Pilot Study Area, as of February 10, 2025

 

informing THE FUTURE OF DOWNTOWN Parking Management

 

 

Project Background: 

In 2004 the City hired Kittelson & Associates, Inc.to develop a Downtown Parking Mangement Plan. While the plan was not implemented, it did precipitate a 2016 parking inventory and inclusion of Parking in the 2016 Comprehensive Plan. You can find these source documents linked below.  

Through the years City Council and City staff have heard continuously from the community about downtown parking with a variety of perspectives and desired outcomes, from building a parking garage to eliminating cars from downtown entirely to better parking management to promote turnover in parking stalls and encourage transit use and active transportation options. In particular, the City has heard from downtown businesses and their desire to implement a fee program as recommended in the 2004 study, prior to performing another study. 

On September 9, 2024, City Council workshopped a possible parking pilot to explore inclusion of the work in the 2025 Budget and Workplan. You can watch and listen to the workshop by clicking on City Council Archives 2024 and go to the September 9, 2024 Agenda for the presentation on parking management options, and you will find the presentation PDF linked below.

City Council has been requesting the development of a parking management program for a number of years and limited staff resources have been a barrier. (See staff resource intensity options, listed below). The City Council recommended Option 3 (Low Resource) as a pilot (trial) fee program to be implemented in 2025 as Step 1 of moving parking management forward. Other options were considered as outlined in the September 9, 2024 presentation:

Option 1 (High Resource): Perform a follow up Parking Management Study (previous was 2004, full document linked below) and Implement Strategic Parking Initiatives with long-term Parking Advisory Committee

Option 2 (Medium Resource): Parking Fee and Enforcement with Task Force or Ad Hoc Parking Advisory Committee

Option 3 (Low Resource): Pilot Parking Fees and Enforcement

Option 4 (No change): Null Alternative – Wait until after Comprehensive Plan Periodic Review

 

Key Takeaway:

Effective parking management programs can deliver strategic community objectives and outcomes. Given public interest in this topic, a study is likely needed following the implementation of a pilot (18-month trial) fee program to get the outcomes the community desires. Determining what the community desires overall requires bringing multiple and diverse stakeholders to the table as well as a tremendous amount of public engagement.

We welcome your feedback on the following proposal. You can submit public comment, email Councilmembers, and/or email staff contacts listed below. 

 

February 2025 Proposal 

The current proposal before the community and City Council was developed by staff with the help of parking management companies to raise public awareness and provide the City Council with the ability to make a decision on implementing a pilot program. 

The first element of any effective parking management program is effective enforcement and data analysis. A parking fee pilot program provides the opportunity to pay for parking enforcement and to collect parking usage data. There is a lot to consider in designing a parking management program. Demand management, climate change, public transit, active transportation, pedestrian and cyclist safety, economic development, supply, turnover, customers, deliveries, residents, employees, enforcement, and so on. Data from a pilot study can help inform the community around a variety of these factors.

Modern parking fee programs provide many options. The parking lot behind 1st Security Bank uses a modern parking fee approach with a QR code or text to pay option. Depending on the vendor a phone call option may also be offered. These automated tools collect fees, provide for effective enforcement, and collect data such as time of day demand, duration of parking stays, and violation data.

A public parking fee of $2.00 an hour between the hours of 9:00 AM and 5:00 PM is recommended for the 18-month pilot. As an effort to promote more activity downtown at slower times of the week, staff recommend free parking on Monday and/or Tuesday. The current parking fine is $15 per violation. An effective enforcement program needs a violation fee significantly higher. Staff recommends a minimum fee amount of $65 per violation. Parking fines in Seattle (public and private) range from $69 to $85. It has been shown that without enforcement and focused data collection, parking management fails. 

Revenue generated by parking fees  will pay for parking management and a future study, if desired by the community. 

 

Project Schedule:

If City Council decides to move forward with the Parking Pilot Study, it would go into effect in May 2025 or later.

The study period is anticipated to be 18 months. Staff anticipate that after the 18-months of collecting and analyzing data, and improving parking compliance through reduced violations, effective parking management strategies can be developed.
 

RESOUCES & CONTACT INFORMATION

 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download
 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download

 

 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download
 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download
 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download
 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download

 

 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download

 

 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download
 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download

 

 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download
 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download

 

 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download

 

 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download
 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download

 

 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download

 

 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download

 

 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download

 

 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download
 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download
 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download
 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download

 

 
 
Opens in new window
PDF Download
Word Download
Excel Download
PowerPoint Download
Document Download

 

 
 
Tomas Olson Thomas A. Olson Chief of Police (360) 385-2322 tolson@cityofpt.us
Steve King Steve King, P.E. Director of Public Works (360) 379-5090 x5090 sking@cityofpt.us