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Roslindale shocker: City proposes parking meters in the Square

The Boston Transportation Department has proposed installing parking meters along the streets of Roslindale Square as a way to help remove the area's current parking lampreys, who suck up spaces for hours at a time as they commute downtown or wherever, making it harder for people who want to actually visit the square's stores and restaurants to find a space.

Based on a study and survey it conducted in 2021, the department concluded that "drivers are parking their vehicles for seven hours or longer" sucking life out of the square, even as spaces in parking lots, including the municipal one on Taft Hill Road off South Street, go empty.

Parking meters, the department says, are the answer:

Parking meters are a parking management tool that encourages parking turnover and discourages long-term parking. Enforcement of a parking meter is more efficient than non-metered time restriction parking and results in better compliance. This increases turnover, increases available parking spaces, and allows more drivers to use those spaces to access their destination.

The department's initial proposal calls for meters that would limit parkers to just an hour along Washington, South and Corinth streets and Belgrade Avenue right in the square, with four-hour meters on stretches just outside the square, including along Washington and Poplar streets south of the square, Robert Street and Belgrade Avenue past Robert.

Poplar Street along Adams Park would retain its current bus stop and get a new 15-minute pickup zone; other streets would also get 15-minute pickup zones.

The Taft Hill municipal parking lot would go from its current two-hour maximum parking to four - but without meters:

The intent is to attract drivers that will be parking for longer durations to the municipal parking lot rather than have them occupy on-street parking spaces. This will reduce the number of vehicles circling the block looking for on-street parking, resulting in a reduced volume of vehicles, reduced congestion, and safer streets for all road users.

The plan does not say anything about the two parking lots at the commuter-rail station, which require payment during the week and which often have empty spaces, but which are free to visitors to the weekly Saturday farmers' market in Adams Park.

The department continues that as Roslindale Square has become more of a destination over the years, it's also time to extend parking restrictions from weekdays to Saturday, again with the goal of increasing the number of people who can park by reducing the number of space hogs.

Streets in the ‘commercial core’ including Corinth Street, Belgrade Avenue, South Street, and portions of Washington Street were at or above 100% occupancy for most of the day, making it challenging to find parking in areas with the greatest demand.

The department is accepting comments until Friday. It will then issue a revised proposal based on that feedback.

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Comments

Cannot even enforce the existing parking rules around the City ie: Resident Parking, fire hydrants, crosswalk etc.
Good luck for not throwing a quarter in the meter.

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Much easier and cheaper to enforce meters rather than "free" parking with time limits. The latter takes repeat inspection visits and tracking. The former can be done instantly with one pass. Also, people self-police much better with meters than merely posted time limits.

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Good. We should charge a market-clearing price for street parking. It's incredibly valuable and wildly underpriced.

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Charge like $10/hr and I’d happily pay while always getting VIP parking.

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but only if you charge the same amount for leaving a crappy looking bike locked to a light pole or street sign.

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And then use the revenue to build an actual mass transit system in this town.

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Brookline has had metered parking in neighborhood commercial zones for a long time. If it works there, it can work in Boston. Rozzie Square is a great choice for piloting the idea.

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Really should have meters on centre street and the municipal parking lot in JP too. I wonder if it would help cut down on double parking.

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Of Uber, Lyft, Uber Eats, Doordash et al will solve (ok drastically decrease) double parking. Nothing less...

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Good.

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Magoo ‘members a time when folks would stick match sticks in meters along Bay State Road to cause such meters to malfunction and therefor not have to pay. Magoo considers this destruction of city property and would put notes on the folks car explaining how naughty they were. Magoo.

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I'd have to check on a day off but it seems like a lot of cars are under the bridge on both sides of the street. Might be a good way to keep it a bit clearer for the people actually shopping on the square.

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I can shop and have a leisurely lunch in Brookline, Jamaica Plain and other surrounding communities without risking tickets and incurring additional fees. Roslindale has struggled to become more popular and has slowly gained ground. I'm not sure how meters can be justified based on the lack of spaces due to overtime parkers as I am always able to get a space now to stop by the library, go to the hairdresser and get a bite to eat. It seems like this solution will actually just create one more problem for businesses in the Square.

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I don't know which Roslindale Square you're going to, but the one I go to is a really compact three- or four-block area with a municipal parking lot within easy walk of all its stores - and where the city is proposing to give people four hours of free parking.

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Resident parking stickers are free.

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Another impediment for the poor and underserved.

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How far up Belgrade and Washington are they talking? Belgrade becomes general residential pretty fast once you're past the bank and the funeral home, respectively. A lot of those houses don't have parking.

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Has a map showing just where meters would go.

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How about we remove all parking on Corinth except handicapped parking?

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