Funk Zone Parking Poll

By edhat staff

On Tuesday (4/23), Santa Barbara’s City Council meeting will vote on whether the Funk Zone should have metered parking.

Santa Barbara released their Funk Zone Access and Parking Assessment Study which recommends strategic actions to improve access and optimize the use of parking resources. 

According to the study, it found that “while the existing parking supply is sufficient, utilization is unbalanced. The most convenient parking is free, and often congested, while parking that is farther away requires payment. In addition to prioritizing parking needs, local stakeholders want to create a safe and inviting neighborhood that retains its funky character and encourages use of alternative transportation.”

The study recommends action items such as metered parking, removing illegal signage of public parking for private parking, extend nighttime parking hours, add employee parking permits and new employee parking spaces, add a downtown shuttle stop, add pickup/dropoff zones for ride sharing, and more. The council’s agenda report can be found here.

Do you think parking in the Funk Zone should be metered? Vote in our poll below:

 

Past Articles

Edhat Staff

Written by Edhat Staff

What do you think?

Comments

3 Comments deleted by Administrator

Leave a Review or Comment

19 Comments

  1. I have one for you. Today the parking enforcers wrote multiple tickets on Salsipuedes Street. One of them told me that if a vehicle is chalked on the tire, it necessary to move the vehicle to another block in order to not get a ticket. Moving it to a nearby space will get you a $96. 00 ticket. Is this a new regulation? You have been warned.

  2. Don’t mean to wet your Cheerios, but that ruling only applies to the Federal Court District 6 which covers the states of Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee.
    The rest of have to wait for the Appellate ruling.

  3. That’s the charm of local politics, REX. Parking freedoms while restricting what your neighbour can do are what the local denizens really care about… oh, and shipping the homeless to concentration offshore camps.

  4. Next will be the Waterfront Department raising the parking fees, the hourly ones and the annual pass that is so popular with the funk zone employees. One of the arguments will be that the city has raised the cost of parking so the waterfront lots should keep pace. Just watch….

  5. In my 50 years of licensed driving, I only ever received two parking citations. The first was when I was in my late teens and I had parked in Ventura and didn’t notice the parking meter. Surprise. (We never had meters in my hometown of SB.) 2nd ticket was in Westwood, when I was in my early 20s. My friends and I got back to our car to see we still had a few minutes left on the meter, but there was the citation, slipped under the windshield wiper. Parking meters are ugly and odious.

  6. I parked my car in the funk zone for free all day to catch the train when the 101 was closed after the debris flow. That was probably a big pain for the merchants in the area as a lot of people were doing it. The meters would have cut down on that action.

  7. it started there and is already in the california system working its way through. it’s a domino effect….
    they have also stated that use surveillance equipment is just the same as marking a tired. 🙂 this makes me happy. i receive unwarranted tickets for parking in front of my home. even with a parking sticker! They constantly harass us. Juanita has torn up countless tickets because her goon squad likes to mess with locals. we live and work here…go after tourists and leave us alone!

  8. NOTREALLYDAVE. Nothing new about this, Dave. I think it was back in the 70s that my then 50-year-old Mother saw a chalk mark on her tire on Cota St. She proceeded to move her vehicle up to another space and got an even heftier citation. She was pretty bent out of shape about it, but I don’t believe she ever argued it in court.

Scammers Pretend to be Social Security Administration

Suspected Gang Member Arrested with Narcotics