Chicago-Style Parking Plan Could Raise $5 Billion Plus for NYC

muni_meter.jpgAccording to a senior municipal bond analyst at a leading Wall
Street firm, New York City could
raise between five and six billion dollars immediately if it privatized its parking meters as Chicago
is doing.

Whether privatization is the right way to unlock New York City’s parking riches is debatable. What’s not in question is that curbside parking in New York and most U.S. cities is grossly underpriced and could potentially be a crucial source of revenue for much needed transportation improvements. Chicago has chosen to outsource the political will to raise meter prices. Cities with the gumption to raise their own meter prices will keep much more of the revenue. That said, at least Chicago is doing something about its parking dysfunction, and will get the very real benefits of reduced cruising traffic and double parking.

The Bond Buyer reports
that Chicago expects to raise more than a billion dollars upfront when it awards a minimum 50-year concession to
operate its curbside parking meter system. Ten corporate consortiums are
bidding for the contract, which is expected to go before the City Council in
the fall. According to Transportation Alternatives’ recent report Pricing the Curb [PDF], Chicago will require vendors to use state-of-the-art parking meters
that monitor parking space availability and adjust rates to ensure an open
space on every block. Chicago
will raise meter rates as part of the deal.

Chicago’s 36,000
parking meters generated $23 million in 2007. New York
City’s 75,900 meters produced $114 million. (New York anticipates $120 million in meter revenue in
2008.)

Chicago leads
the U.S. in
privatization deals or "public-private partnerships." It leased the Chicago
Skyway toll-way in a 99-year deal with a multinational consortium in 2005 for
$1.82 billion. It followed up that deal with another 99-year lease of four
downtown parking garages to a private operator for $563 million in 2006.

Mayor Daley says Chicago
will use lump sums from the privatization deals to create a reserve fund which
will generate interest for long-term infrastructure investments and to pay down debt and
pension obligations. But some Chicago City Council members have expressed
concern about the proposed parking privatization and higher meter rates. "We saw that in the Skyway. Fees went up. If we lose
control of that, the citizens have nobody to complain to. They’re not going to
listen to John Q. Citizen," Transportation Committee chairman Tom Allen
(38th) told the Sun Times.

Photo: jeanphony/Flickr

ALSO ON STREETSBLOG

Chicago Pays the Price for Parking Privatization

|
It appears Chicago politicians who privatized city parking meter operations traded short-term political gain for long-term fiscal pain. Photo: Best Recession Ever Chicago may have left as much as $974 million on the table under the terms of last year’s agreement with Morgan Stanley. A June report from the city inspector general [PDF] blasted the […]

Chicago Outsources Parking Reform to Morgan Stanley

|
The Chicago City Council has approved by a vote of 40-5 a deal to privatize the city’s 36,000 metered parking spots for the next 75 years, trading meter revenues for an upfront payment of $1.15 billion. Under the agreement with Morgan Stanley Infrastructure, meter rates will rise substantially and some meters will operate overnight and […]

T.A. Urges Bloomberg Admin to Take the Lead in Parking Reform

|
A map of the area near Washington, D.C.’s new ballpark. Streets with variable-rate or permit parking are in color. After calling attention last month to the traffic-reducing power of parking reform, Transportation Alternatives has released a follow-up report with a parking prescription for New York. "Pricing the Curb" [PDF] looks to innovative programs underway in […]

Cities Learn From Chicago Parking Meter Debacle. Did Goldsmith?

|
When Chicago Mayor Richard Daley announced that he was striking a deal to privatize his city’s 36,000 parking meters, it was a golden opportunity for transportation reform. If all went well, the deal could have cleared a political path for higher peak-hour meter rates, curbing double-parking and congestion-causing cruising. But Chicago managed to completely bungle […]

San Francisco Launches Ambitious Parking Reform Program

|
San Francisco is lunging out of the parking dark ages. Backed by the mayor and city council, the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency is launching "SFpark," a comprehensive, curbside parking reform project encompassing ten city neighborhoods. Starting in September, the $23 million SFpark program will use an array of new policies and technologies to raise […]