One Rhode Island City Removed Parking Meters and Business Flourished

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

One Rhode Island City Removed Parking Meters and Business Flourished

Parking meters were once in Central Falls -- and Mayor James Diossa said he has no plans to revisit them anytime soon. Photo: Flickr/Wilmot
While the City of Providence is grappling with the rollout of an expanded parking meter plan, the City of Central Falls dealt with the issue of pay-for-on-street-parking — by removing its meters.

“The decision [to remove the meters] was made probably twenty years ago,” said Central Falls Mayor James Diossa, who was elected to the helm of the state’s smallest city, and one of its poorest, in 2012. “One reason was maintenance issues, the city wasn't doing a good job, and businesses had been complaining about them.  That's what I'd heard from folks who were around then.”

Diossa noted that Central Falls, which emerged from bankruptcy just before he got elected, is currently witnessing a resurgence of commercial business occupancy rates, and said that considering parking meters is not something “currently on the table” as a source of revenue of the city. 

GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLAST

“Our backbone's been the ‘moms and pops’,” said Diossa of the city’s culinary scene which has played host to a now-annual Restaurant Week. “There’s barely any empty storefronts.  If one happens to close, someone else goes right in.  Central Falls is back in recovery — I don’t think at this point that meters are something we’d even consider." 

Outspoken Providence meter critic Harry Adler with Adler’s Hardware on Wickenden Street spoke to the Central Falls’ example. 

“Central Falls has obviously decided to not punish people who want to patronize its shops,” said Adler.

Money, Neighbors, Opposition

Wickenden Street merchants plan to meet with the City on Tuesday, following Hope Street getting a parking meter reprieve. Photo: Adler's Hardward
According to Providence City Council members, the Elorza Administration projects a $2 million increase in this year’s budget from the new parking meter program.

On Friday, the City announced that it was scrapping plans to place meters in the Hope Street shopping district, following meters being placed on Federal Hill and Wayland Square — and still facing staunch opposition from both businesses and customers

“It's hard to react to any of this, because it doesn't fall into a category of logic,” said Adler. “If you try to apply logic to this -- as misguided as it is -- if it makes sense to not have [meters] on Hope Street, then it makes sense to not have them on Wickenden Street.  So it’s possibly a precedent to then not have them, where they’re clearly not needed.”

“So if the city’s logic is that meters are ‘good for businesses’ in that they address parking availability issues — again, ‘for businesses,’ then why does the city float parking meter holidays during the holiday season downtown, if they’re so ‘good for business?,” quipped Adler.  “My sense of parking meters is that they're an absolute deterrent, and my customers are beside themselves.  I had a customer volunteer to collect signatures for our petition, who went up and down the street and collected hundreds of signatures.  Because they were that outraged.”

Adler said that since learning that Xerox — who administered a Providence parking feasibility study while standing to benefit from increased parking meters — that his argument has taken on a new angle. 

READ: Xerox and Providence: GoLocal’s “Are Red Light Cameras Benefiting Rhode Islanders?” from 2013

“I mean, it would be like Adler’s doing a study on what paint Providence residents must use.  There’s no objectivity at all it seems,” said Adler. “It calls into question everything.”


10 Biggest Issues Facing Providence in 2016

Enjoy this post? Share it with others.