Dedicated to Empowering and Informing the Burlingame Community

Police want 'outdated' parking ordinance repealed
by Mike Rosenberg, Examiner
BURLINGAME (Map, News) – Police are calling a long-standing city ordinance that has prevented overnight parking on city streets outdated? and want it banished by the Burlingame City Council tonight.
The approximately 30-year-old ordinance prevents any car from being parked on a city street or alley between 2 and 6 a.m. The law is only enforced when police are called in, according to a report by Sgt. Dean Williams.
Police said it usually takes just one ornery neighbor for officers to be called in to give $25 tickets to every car on a street, a notion echoed by lifelong resident Gerald Weisl, who used to live in an area where he did not have a parking spot. People ought to be afforded a place to park at least one vehicle overnight on the street,? Weisl said.
Residents can qualify for a $10 overnight parking permit but fewer than 100 people in the city typically acquire one each year, Williams said. Repealing the ordinance would eliminate a neighbor-against-neighbor mentality and allow officers to perform regular duties, said Chief Jack Van Etten.
Some residents, however, said the ordinance can be helpful when driving through Burlingame's narrow streets and a ton? of parked cars, said resident Michael Bohnert, a member of the Traffic, Safety and Parking Commission. He said residents believe driving at night becomes more dangerous as the roads narrow even further with cars lining both sides of the street.
By Burlingame police's count, Menlo Park is the only other city in the county with an overnight-parking ordinance. Police there, however, use two part-time officers to enforce the rule every night between 2 and 5 a.m., Menlo Park police said. Menlo Park's parking ordinance pertains only to cars parked within 300 feet of a residential zone.
Police are not too worried about losing revenue from permits and tickets. The department makes less than $1,000 annually from the ordinance, Williams said.

– Written by Fiona

Posted in , ,

One response to “Overnight Parking Ordinance”

  1. Fiona

    Burlingame weighs parking permits

    City council votes to repeal time limit ordinance; permit idea up for public debate

    By Mark Abramson/Daily News Staff Writer

    Relief appears to be on the way for Burlingame residents who have to deal with those pesky parking time limits in some parts of town and for drivers who received tickets for violating the city’s rarely enforced overnight parking ordinance.

    The city council voted unanimously (5-0) Tuesday night to repeal the ordinance, which required people to get a permit to park on city streets from 2 a.m. to 6 a.m. The council also followed Council Member Cathy Baylock’s suggestion by voting unanimously to re-examine the ordinance back in five years to give city staff time to look at other options to address overnight parking.

    “There are so many instances where I think people can get their cars off the street,” Vice Mayor Ann Keighran said. “I feel if you have an ordinance, either you enforce it or you don’t enforce it.” Keighran added that the city should not bother with it because offenders are not being fined, and all they have to do is buy a permit if they get ticketed.

    Longtime Adeline Drive resident Patricia Gray urged the council to keep the overnight parking ordinance and to enforce it more stringently. “I think that is not wise policy to repeal this long-standing ordinance,” Gray told the council.
    Gray called the tickets a good revenue source and a way to make the streets safer because the roads would not be as cluttered with parked cars.

    Burlingame is addressing other parking issues by developing a residential parking permit program. The program would allow residents who live in areas that have one- to four-hour parking time limits to get a permit that will allow them to stay in one spot. The city is holding a public hearing and meeting on the residential parking permit program at 7 p.m. tonight at the Burlingame Recreation Center, 850 Burlingame Ave.

    “The plan is unless there are a lot of concerns tomorrow night, we would take it to the council Feb. 4,” City Manager Jim Nantell said before the council meeting Tuesday.

    Each household would be able to buy a permit for a $50 annual fee, Burlingame police Chief Jack Van Etten said. The permit program could take effect in mid-March on a six-month trial basis on the 200 to 400 blocks of Occidental Avenue and part of Bellevue Avenue. It could be expanded into 12 or 13 areas of the city, including around Broadway.

    Former Burlingame Traffic Safety Parking Commission Chair Victor James said the residential parking permits are desperately needed. He has to constantly move one of his vehicles parked in front of his Bellevue Avenue residence. “You can be doing things and it is difficult (to move the car),” James said. “It’s a headache.”

    He said the $25 violation tickets are also annoying, especially when he conducts business for his management consulting practice out of his home and when guests are visiting. The time limits also means that the cleaning lady has to move her car while she is working, James said

    Additional article in Examiner

Leave a Reply


The Burlingame Voice is dedicated to informing and empowering the Burlingame community.  Our blog is a public forum for the discussion of issues that relate to Burlingame, California.  Opinions posted on the Burlingame Voice are those of the poster and commenter and not necessarily the opinion of the Editorial Board.  Comments are subject to the Terms of Use.


All content subject to Copyright 2003-2026

Discover more from The Burlingame Voice

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading